On 3 March 2008 electronic duo Autechre are to release a new
album. Called 'Quaristice', the record is Rob Brown and Sean Booth's
9th album, and follows 2005's 'Untilted'.
The track listing for the album’s 20 tracks is:
1. Altibzz
2. The Plc
3. IO
4. Plyphon
5. Perlence
6. SonDEremawe
7. Simmm
8. Paralel Suns
9. Steels
10. Tankakern
11. Rale
12. Fol3
13. fwzE
14. 90101-51-1
15. bnc Castl
16. Theswere
17. WNSN
18. chenc9
19. Notwo
20. Outh9X
Myth or otherwise, it’s frequently reported that Autechre – Sean Booth
and Rob Brown – are offered early versions of computer equipment to put
through their paces, to record on, to test on, to abuse. Message board
legend even goes so far as to suggest that the duo experiment with
“devices cadged from the army.” On occasion, the latter seems a
particularly apposite rumour: tracks like Quaristice’s “Fol3” sound
like fucking carnage.
Such experiments
have made Autechre one of the most distinctive and revered electronic
groups of all time. They’ve previously been commissioned to remix the
likes of Stereolab, Tortoise and Surgeon and have notably been feted by
Thom Yorke, with the Radiohead frontman stating on his official message
board that Confield “made my head spin” and citing Booth and Brown’s
work as an influence on his own Kid A and Amnesiac (Autechre themselves
admit indifference to this).
Initially
based in and around Manchester, former graffiti/tag artists Booth and
Brown began constructing/trading pause-button mix tapes before working
on their own compositions, with the stated aim as being simply to “make
good stuff” (With the release of their ninth album, this intent
remains: What are they trying to do on Quaristice? “The same thing,
only now.”) Sharing a love of Mantronix, the Bomb Squad and Arthur
Baker and thrilled by the process of looping and cutting up sounds,
their early releases – Incunabula and Amber – were corrupted
modifications of techno and electro cut through with a curious
poignancy. Recent releases – Confield, Draft 7.30 and Untilted have
largely (but not wholly) ditched expected melodies in place of
increasingly complex machine music such that they have been likened to
an equivalent of the more abstruse graffiti “where typography is
convoluted to the point of illegibility” (Simon Reynolds). Confield
was notably described as “one of the purest approximations of ‘machine
music’ we’ve heard yet ... [as if] an automaton’s creation.” (Philip
Sherburne).
Nevertheless – or perhaps
because of this – Booth has gone as far as to assert Autechre’s fizzes
and crunches, the hisses and clangs as a form of “modern folk music ...
it did feel like pastoral music to about six or so people” (Jockey Slut
magazine).
For some, however, Autechre’s
twists and turns seem impenetrable and unfathomable. In equal measure,
the duo have been venerated and vehemently criticised for the supposed
complexity of their music and have been dubbed difficult, wilfully
perverse and even obnoxious.
“Difficulty
isn’t our thing,” say Autechre, straightforwardly, “We make it because
we like it.” Rather, the duo assert their music making is driven by “a
child like fascination and total curiosity.” There is “No agenda, no
plan. We just go for satisfaction each time. There’s no express
purpose or aim other than making stuff we like. That’s all there is
but that’s not very interesting, is it?” Booth, for his part,
describes music making as his “default activity.”
Echoing their early obsessions, Booth and Brown draw comparison between
their own music-making and hip-hop: “It’s about sleight of hand, where
you’re revealing things and pulling them back. I think that’s hip-hop,
the whole attitude of wanting to do people’s heads in but also give
them something that they’ll really appreciate.”
“We like to dissect things,” they say of the meticulous detail in their
music, “I think the trick is to not let the detail become the main
attraction.”
“We listen to a lot of our
new stuff and it seems to be coming from somewhere other than what we
can understand,” claimed the duo circa the release of Chiastic Slide,
“That’s probably why it seems slightly magical, I suppose.”
Booth and Brown have previously claimed to make music that deliberately
moves at the same pace as their brains: “You can have your entire
track changing piece by piece and that’s what we’re into. We like
things like a puzzle where it’s revealing itself and changing. And you
can almost follow it because it works at the same pace as your own
brain works. The trick is not to get it to work faster or slower but
to get it in tune with yourself.”
Reluctant (or perhaps unable) to ascribe specific meaning to individual
pieces of music, Booth and Brown tag there releases with seemingly
cryptic titles like (to list a trio of tracks from Quaristice)
“SonDEremawe”, “Tankakern” and “fwze”.
“Usually, we don’t know why we like a title or why it seems apt,” admit
Autechre, “We just do or it does or something happens to make it fit.”
On Quaristice, such titles mask a variety of
moods, themes and influences. Documenting a shift in sound and scope,
the long-awaited album covers a wide-ranging terrain, sometimes
brutalist, sometimes acutely melodic, always utterly compelling.
Autechre also
embark on a European tour in February and March. Whilst some dates are
still to be confirmed, they will play the following:
29.02 Manchester @ Music Box
01.03 Glasgow @ Art School
02.03 Newcastle @ Digital
03.03 Birmingham @ Med bar
04.03 London @ TBC
05.03 Koln @ Stattgarten
06.03 holland, Amsterdam @ Melkweg
07.03 Antwerp @ Petrol
08.03 Hamburg @ Hafenklang
09.03 Berlin @ Berghain
10.03 Poland, Katowice @ The Willson Gallery
11.03 Hungry, Budapest @ Merlin
12.03 Croatia, Zagreb @ Kset
13.03 Austria, Graz @ Post Garage
14.03 Italy, Turin @ Hiroshima
15.03 Italy, Rome TBC
16.03 Italy, Bolognia @ Kindergarten
17.03 France, Lyon @ Epicerie Moderne
18.03 Fr, Strasbourg @ La Laiterie
19.03 Paris @ Rex Club
20.03 Geneva @ L'Usine, Electron Festival