• Digital


춤춰 Chumchwo - Let's Dance

  • Cat No: LENG061
  • Release: 2022-09-02
  • updated:

Format

digital 460 JPY

PAUL MURPHY主宰バレアリック信頼〈Claremont56〉サブレーベル〈Leng〉から、韓国のパンクポップバンド”Tirikilatops”ボーカリスト봄캐롯をフィーチャリングしたエレクトロニックブギーダンサー!

シンセサイザー・ウィザード。イギリスのダンス・ミュジックシーンのベテランANDY MEECHAMのTHE EMPEROR MACHINEの新作!電子ブギーファンクなバックバンドに、ユニークな韓国語ボーカルを印象的に邂逅させたレフトフィールドディスコ!痛快ファニーな歌い口はギリギリボーカルという感じ、コズミックシンセとの相性は抜群です。 (Akie)

Track List

24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]

Last time he brought his Emperor Machine project to Leng, via the seductive, call-to-the dancefloor that was ‘Dance Par Amour’, Andrew Meecham had vocalist Severine Mouletin in tow. On this welcome return to the label, Meecham has enlisted the help of another sublime singer: Bom Carrot 봄캐롯, lead vocalist with South Korean punk-pop outfitTirikilatops.

Although the pair share a mutual friend, who had extolled the virtues of a potential collaboration to Meecham, it was only when Bom Carrot 봄캐롯reached out on social media that the pair were finally connected. Meecham jumped at the opportunity to kick-start a collaboration, quickly firing over a track he’d been working on. A few months later, her vocals landed in his inbox and the rest is history.

The resultant track, ‘춤춰 Chumchwo – Let’s Dance’,may feature many of the aural trademarks of Meecham’s Emperor Machine work – spiraling analogue electronics, vintage synth sounds, effects aplenty and infectious grooves inspired by New York’s no-wave movement of the early 1980s – but is somehow even more thrillingly wild, excitable, and exhilarating than you’d reasonably expect.

A big part of that, of course, is the inspired contributions ofBom Carrot 봄캐롯. Her freewheeling vocals – part sung, part spoken, and part improvised – are energetic, distinctive, and addictive, adding layers of post-punk abandon and a genuine sense of musical freedom. Combined with Meecham’s outrageously unpredictable backing track – there are twists and turns aplenty, as well as surprising percussive and musical touches that seemingly appear and disappear at will – the resultant song is like the unlikely sonic lovechild of Talking Heads, Pierre Henry and K-Punk.

As you’d expect given his track record of delivering freewheeling instrumental reworks, the vocal version comes backed with an extra-special Emperor Machine ‘Instrumental Dub’ version. Stripped back and percussive, with dropouts and breakdowns aplenty, this is no mere vocal-free take, but rather a reconstructed revision piled high with extra percussion, spacey electronics, echoing vocal snippets, bubbly bass and razor-sharp Tom Tom Club guitar licks –all arranged to rise, fall and rise again around Meecham’s killer groove. As the track’s title suggests: “let’s dance!”

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