ARTICLES
Ten Questions: Fat Jon
MUTEK 2006

ALBUMS
65daysofstatic
A Cloud Mireya
Ambarchi and Ng
Another Elec. Musician
Derek Bailey
Band Ane
Barzin
Black Gold 360
The Blow
Boduf Songs
Childs
Darc Mind
Dosh
Duopandamix
Fat Jon & Styrofoam
Liam Gillick
Shuta Hasunuma
Tim Hecker
Ilkae
Jack's Son
Richard Jäverling
Jazzkammer
Junior Boys
Last Days
Hanno Leichtmann
Luomo
Mandelbrot Set
Mountaineer
N.Phect & Dizplay
Part Timer
Karsten Pflum
Benoît Pioulard
Plus Device
+/- {Plus/Minus}
Relay
Saroos
Seht
Shedding
So Percussion
Sybarite
Trio Vopá
Marshall Watson
Weather Report
Donato Wharton
Christopher Willits
Xela

COMPILATIONS/MIXES
ESL Remixed
Four Tet
Garnier & Craig
Ginglik Saturdays
Michael Mayer
Henrik Schwarz

3"/7"/10"/12"/EPs
Colleen
Delano and Xpansul
Detritus
Ed Devane
Eskimo
Feathers
Goldmund
Ezekiel Honig/Graphic
Ezekiel Honig
Eliot Lipp
Robert Lippok
Alejandro Lopez
Evan Marc
Porter & Carr
Sebastian Russell
Somone Else
Spaceships & Pings
SplitEP3
Simon Whetham

Darc Mind: Symptomatic of a Greater Ill
Anticon

Darc Mind's Symptomatic Of A Greater Ill is certainly worlds apart from Anticon's standard hip-hop fare but that's hardly the disc's most provocative quality. What's truly mind-boggling is that the album was created in the mid-‘90s and then shelved in its entirety, and is only now seeing the light of day thanks to Anticon. What happened? Darc Mind, a Long Island-based hip-hop outfit comprised of MC Kevroc and producer GM Webb D (aka X-Ray), recorded the debut album between '95 and '97 for Loud/RCA but the label collapsed months before the scheduled '98 release, leaving the album in limbo for nearly a decade.

Yes, it's of its time but a great album nonetheless. Darc Mind's sound pivots on two major elements: Kevroc's tongue-twisting rhymes, deftly delivered in a rumbling yet melodious and agile baritone, and Webb D's slippery boom-bap, minimal funk, and smoked horn, bass, and piano samples. Put the two together and what comes out is spooky, cinematic, surreal, and ominous. Kevroc drawls rhymes in “Visions Of A Blur” with effortless dexterity, densely squeezing in as many syllables as possible. Here and elsewhere, the album's dizzying vocal dimension mesmerizes all by itself, with the MC's growling flow riding the loping rhythms like a jazz soloist. And whether dropping a cartoonish squawk into “Fever Pitch” or a lethal guitar figure into “Visions Of A Blur,” GM Webb D shows himself to be the perfect complement to Kevroc with grooves that are at times sparse and other times densely layered in that classic Fear of a Black Planet style (“BMOC”). “I'm Ill ” includes a particularly sick backing, especially when the biting snare snaps alongside a hazy swirl of horns and simmering crackle. Let's not lose our heads: Symptomatic Of A Greater Ill isn't genre-defying per se and it likely wouldn't have sounded so in 1998 either. Yet the disc is so consistently arresting, one can't help but think it might have altered the direction of hip-hop's development to some small degree at least.

November 2006