OUR FAMILY: TWOTHOUSAND [SYDNEY] THREETHOUSAND [MELBOURNE] FOURTHOUSAND [BRISBANE] FIVETHOUSAND [ADELAIDE] SIXTHOUSAND [PERTH]

When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence

Article published 10th Feb 09
When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence Hear

What:
When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence

Who:
Harmonic 313


On:
Warp Records

Related links:
Listen to track 'Dirtbox' at RCRDLBL

Print Email Share

From a satellite outpost in Sydney, Mark Pritchard gets pitch-perfect reception of his homeland UK's hyper evolutionary electronic music present. Dubsteb, Bassline House and implacable native talents Rustie, Hudson Mohawke and Dexplicit's fixations with warbling, hugely deep bass, dystopic street dub griminess, high-def re-modelling of hip-hop's cut and funk, eerie feelings of petrifying technology and Ravey, brain-zapping gamesole effects all come into his debut album as Harmonic 313, When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence, but from a parallax view; as seen through an Autechre-knowing glass obliquely.

Clinically executed, as you'd expect of anything on Warp Records, When Machines may not have the urgency of this week's Rinse FM programming, but its tidy recapitulation of trends aired on the station, '90s ambient-tech, Flying Lotus-type digital textures and everything else new from the past little while is as classy and resolved as electronic music gets. Opener, 'Dirtbox', is blueprint Dubstep, easing you in to Pritchard's liquid treatment of the style, before tracks like 'Galag-a', 'Word Problems' and the jaw-dropping 'Koln' expand its sub-frequency predilections.

By Mark Gomes

Release: Album

To Cure: A predictable playlist

Keywords: Mark Pritchard, Warp, Bassline, Dubstep

Random Entries: