Bulletproof Soundtrack To Forever (Dirty/Universal) CD REVIEW

August 19, 2010

Okay, so this guy is apparently a โ€œlegendโ€ of NZ drumโ€™nโ€™bass with lots of mixes having been released through international imprints.

Better late than never, heโ€™s made an album of dubstep.

So far, the information conveyed on the press release is about as impressive as the title. Whatโ€™s up with that title, anyway? Soundtrack To Forever? We already had Return To Forever back in the early โ€˜70s. Perhaps his next album will go all jazz-fusion on us.

Plop it in the CD player. Plop, it goes. And it sounds pretty good, for about the first 15 minutes, before the mind-numbing repetition and the over-long tracks bring on a sense of pervasive entropy.

The title track features Tiki Taane on some well executed vocals, a crisp electronic groove, and elements that donโ€™t belong in a strictly club context, like cavernous guitar sounds. Thatโ€™s got to be good.

โ€˜Airwavesโ€™ is apparently a โ€œneurofunk style of drumโ€™nโ€™bassโ€ with added dubstep flavours, and inexplicably, is a Boh Runga remix. Rungaโ€™s crooning is kept at a floating distance, and itโ€™s pleasantly moody.

But then it all starts to go wrong. โ€˜Risqueโ€™ should be called โ€˜Passeโ€™, because it uses movie dialogue, and otherwise, is just a standard piece of dubstep. And on it goes, Bulletproof coming up with his โ€œinnovativeโ€ hybrid of dubstep and drumโ€™nโ€™bass that Scornโ€™s Mick Harris might have a thing or two to say about.

Some tracks are much better than others. โ€˜Teardropsโ€™ is nicely liquid in an Orb, early โ€˜90s aqua-techno style. โ€˜Red Horizonโ€™ is an Isaac Aesili and Deva Mahal remix thatโ€™s grainy and moody like mid-period Massive Attack.

Thereโ€™s also some really dire stuff that Bulletproof would have been better to leave on the cutting-room floor: โ€˜Back In The Dayโ€™ with its regrettable rap and cheesy house/tech hybrid, โ€˜Step To Youโ€™ with its regrettable rap (are we seeing a theme here?) and mindnumbingly boring dubstep machinations. And so on.

While there is the odd sign of life and hint of real talent on Soundtrack To Forever, ultimately itโ€™s another big FAIL for NZ electronic music over the course of a full album.

Sound: The albumโ€™s saving grace is its audio quality. The top end is crisp, and the bottom is fathomless in its depth. Thereโ€™s a lot of great-sounding audio from electronic artists in 2010, and the engineering/mastering here doesnโ€™t match that coming out of Germany, but itโ€™s still one of the best-sounding electronic albums to emerge from NZ. Pity about the music. GARY STEEL

Sound = 4

Music = 2.5

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Steel has been penning his pungent prose for 40 years for publications too numerous to mention, most of them consigned to the annals of history. He is Witchdoctor's Editor-In-Chief/Music and Film Editor. He has strong opinions and remains unrepentant. Steel's full bio can be found here

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