Prompted to creation, in a way, by the legendary session drummer Hal
Blaine's under-appreciated record Psychedelic Percussion, Matt
Chamberlain's debut solo record conjures up the forgotten
possibilities of the good old "drummer and studio" paradigm. The
record ends up functioning like a sordid dream intertwined with some
haunting movie memories (think Telly Savalas... think Enter the
Dragon). It's easy to picture zombie karate fights taking place in
lush overflowing gardens, and out-of-place Italian furniture being
cracked over heads. You almost hear the appropriately thrown-together
orchestra being directed by a genetically altered Georgio Moroder
right there on the set... and that creeps you out during the few
genuinely romantic sex scenes.
Kind of like Goldfrapp, Chamberlain has ignored the rules of passe
and boldly crafted a sleek and palpable form of post-trendy, modern
exotica. Utilizing the all-pro string arrangement skills of Eyvind
Kang, percussion instruments from far off places and planets, archaic
electronics, analog sythesizers, outer space spaghetti western guitar,
and sonically mutilated drum-kits of every size and make,
Chamberlain's debut album is a full-bodied record that will sit
proudly next to Lalo Shiffrin, Autechre, Martin Denny, Amon Tobin,
David Axelrod, Hal Blaine and Critters Buggin records.
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