RA
RA Japan
Global
Local
Music
Interact
Search RA

Reviews


Burial + Four Tet - Moth / Wolf Cub
Label / Text Records
Cat # / TEXT 006
Released / May 2009
Style / Dubstep, Tech House
Rating / 3.5

Arguably the most hyped release of the year so far, news of Burial and Four Tet's collaboration spread like wildfire through internet forums and blogs when it first appeared on record release sheets back in March. The first chance to pre-order the record also compounded excitement and anticipation, due to the announcement that there would be no cover art, no audio promos and no audio samples to attempt to judge if the record could live up to expectations.

First up is "Wolf Cub," which doesn't even seem to have any trace of the spectral garage producer until the beat crashes in more than two minutes into the track. Hebden slowly builds up a wall of chiming sounds, with melodic triplets sitting atop sustained bass tones and swooping eastern melodies before giving way to a tense but restrained synthetic arpeggio. It's at this point that things calm to near silence before the listener is ambushed by Burial's trademark 2-step percussion, with loose woodblocks and hi-hats taking a detour into darkness before the original elements are slowly teased back into the mix along with yet another Burial staple: the undecipherable affected vocal. Ardent Burial fans may be slightly disappointed that the beat—seemingly his main contribution to the track—is actually just cut straight from his unreleased "Archeron" track, but on the other hand it's a major nod to the Burial sound that his followers have come to know and love on the release, and will hence be the choice cut for dubstep DJs.

Whereas "Wolf Cub" sounds like it was cobbled together from parts sent back and forth between the two, you get the feeling that "Moth" is something that the duo sat down and produced together, and the results sound much more complete as a result. Loping along at a restrained 123bpm, the 2-step skip is still there but in a much more rigid form, as smooth melodic synths judder and swell throughout. The most obvious reference point for the prodding funky melody lines are the Kompakt and Border Community stables circa 2004, albeit with a slightly more refined touch. Things boil down to just the percussion halfway through, with subtle reverb added to the kick and a plinky arpeggio, but when the melody returns (this time accompanied with another affected vocal), it marks a moment of real emotive impact—one that should have just as much clout as an end of night anthem in the club as it will riding the night bus home with the sun peeking over the horizon.

Word has it that the two producers are planning on releasing more material together, so if my assumptions are correct, it seems like a more interactive collaborative approach will yield even better results going forward.



Published /
Wed, 06 May 2009



Buy Burial + Four Tet - Moth / Wolf Cub at
buy this online at juno records


Tracklist: Burial + Four Tet - Moth / Wolf Cub
A Moth
B Wolf Cub

Burial + Four Tet - Moth / Wolf Cub

 
Share this review
Facebook
Twitter
Google Plus
Pinterest

Comments

Burial + Four Tet - Moth / Wolf Cub

You're not logged in. You need to register to
post your comments.

Anyone can register on RA. Even you.

bloempotwrote
Fri, 31 Dec 2010moth is great. i love it.

zan.radwrote
Sun, 17 Oct 2010still so good

wasadiverwrote
Thu, 05 Aug 2010Moth is still sounding, just, incredible. A real force of nature. Warms my soul to the core.
Perfection.

duskswrote
Mon, 12 Apr 2010Spent quite a while thinking about this but yeah, favourite release from 09

danwhyleswrote
Sat, 02 Jan 2010Where can I get a copy of this?!

DonLoganwrote
Sat, 03 Oct 2009bump....

Finally got a proper copy of this. Moth is devastating...


There are 45 other comments.
Click here to view the full thread

About  
Staff  
Mobile (beta)  
Submit event  
Copyright © 2013 Resident Advisor Ltd.
All rights reserved. Terms & Privacy.