Nobukazu Takemura
Scope
(Thrill Jockey/FAB)



20th Century

Ambient

Drum And Bass

Electronic / Experimental / Industrial

Industrial Rhythm

Techno

Trip Hop, Breaks, Dub, World-Fusion

(Very) Alternative

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    Scope is something different for Japan's producer of elegant trip-hop, who releases a second experimental CD after the recent Funfair disc on Bubblecore. The 22-minute opening "On A Balloon," is a musique concrete piece that mixes Oval-ish sounds and the skimming of a CD, with computer-type tones, hisses, people talking, vinyl scratches and what sounds like the working of the pedals of a pump organ (without the resulting music). Unfortunately, despite some cool sounds, the sophomoric effort lacks any momentum or overall shape - not what you'd expect from someone who is a DJ and works with rhythm. A second Oval-ish track "Icefall" also leaves a bitter taste, as it is simply a nice melodic electronic piece sped up in search mode. "Kepler" is more interesting, a pretty minimalist track inspired by the astronomer's measurements of the orbits of the planets. Using vibes, chimes, female voice, harp, gamelan and Terry Riley-like organ parts, Takemura sets the planetary rotations in motion - the closest ones as fast loops, others in circular patterns and the far ones as drones (an idea more precisely realized by a record, The Harmony Of The World, recorded at Princeton University). The closing "Tiddler" is also nice, a Bach-ish contrapuntal finger exercise with the kind of naivete that similar tracks by Aphex Twin and µ-Ziq share.