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Aux Men is the new name of Detroit's Aux 88 collective, which lost a key member in the mid-'90s and recently got back together. The Men played a "history of techno 1976-present" set at the Detroit Electronic Music Festival last May (along with some of the "names" from techno groundbreakers A Number of Names), and were profiled in the Detroit Free Press. According to the label notes to their new EP "Project 1" (Puzzlebox records): "The electro revival can attribute some of its early beginnings to Tom Tom, DJ K-1, Posatronix, and Black Tony, all formerly of Direct Beat Records..." Nevertheless, the act has never been pure electro: as Brendan M. Gillen (aka BMG of Ectomorph) writes in the Detroit News, Aux 88 "blend[ed] smooth Detroit techno with rough street rhythms." The new EP continues that mixture: "The Vibe" features the synthetic boing-boom-tschak of the Dynamix II school of beatmeistering but "Condor," my favorite cut, has the slithery high hats and mellifluous hooks of more jazzy May/Atkins-style techno (it's a fantastic track; I've been playing it over and over). Somewhere in the middle is the excellent "Behind the Lines," which starts with a rave-y power-line purr and ends with sampled strings.
Determining whether something is electro or techno may seem pointless and/or arcane, but both influences are still vital and usually one is clearly ascendant over the other: figuring out which helps to convey the flavor. One thing gumming up criticism, though, is the indiscriminate use of electro to describe what is clearly just synthpop. If the Industry's idea of an "electro revival" is just a retread of early-'80s-style songs (Human League, Yaz, etc., a trend touched off by the campy Fischerspooner) then lets hope it's over soon. It'd be great to see Drexciya and Aux Men topping the charts but that's not likely since there's no "star."
Paul B. Davis's "Pretty" EP (downloadable here) is a gem, combining electro, ambient drum and bass, and 21st Century classical influences in a thought-provoking, hummable package. "it's 4:30 am friday and i don't care anymore (edit)" kicks off the proceedings with Jean-Jacques Perrey samples over an early '80s style beat box: the arpeggios cycle faster and faster until the track ends with an emphatic "4-3-2!" "whiskey headed woman" suggests the awkward marriage of Stockhausen and Squarepusher, with jerky cello stabs punctuated by high-speed drillbeats. (Davis' roots in the academy--specifically the Oberlin Conservatory--show here: according to the liner notes, the piece contains samples of Brian Ferneyhough's "Time and Motion Study II for Solo 'Cello and Electronics"). "I need to freak" closes Side One splendidly, with a babble of computer generated sprechstimme resolving into an unspeakably lovely chorus: "C'mon baby let me freak you to the right/C'mon baby let me freak you all night/Baby I need you every day of the week/C'mon baby let me show you how I like to freak." The sexual strutting of the the (Rick) Jamesian words is belied by the melancholy of the posthuman voices, and the song ends abruptly, leaving the listener with a solid case of goosebumps.
"Everytime I go outside I get a headache" features an infectious, jazzy rhythm played with brushed cymbals and snares (by way of the sampler); the melody is also kind of loungy, albeit intercut with submarine sonar pings and timestretching effects. This piece is slinky, moody, and Herbert-esque in the best sense; Michael Reinboth should anthologize it post-haste in his Future Sounds of Jazz series. The record ends with some piano-noodling and more complex rhythmic filigrees in the title cut "Pretty"; the analog synth that surfaces halfway through revives the electro feeling of the first track, bringing the EP full circle. The disc is confident, complex, and heedless of fashion in its willingness to combine genres and thwart expectations: more work from Davis is greatly anticipated. (Beige Records, 2001, www.beigerecords.com)