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Minimal

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Loco Dice
harissa
Cadenza Records

2x12" Maxi Single
cadenza13
Out: 11-12-2006
 
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What we say

Following the success of his enigmatic singles "Seeing Through Shadows" for Richie Hawtin's Minus label and “Flight LB 7475” for Ovum, Düsseldorf's Loco Dice returns with a monster four
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Following the success of his enigmatic singles "Seeing Through Shadows" for Richie Hawtin's Minus label and “Flight LB 7475” for Ovum, Düsseldorf's Loco Dice returns with a monster four-track, co-produced with Hannover's Martin Buttrich, the man behind one of this fall's biggest hits—"Full Clip," released on Carl Craig's Planet E. The four cuts on this doublepack EP are monsters all, between eight and 13 minutes apiece. Coming hot on the heels of similarly sprawling releases from Ricardo Villalobos and Luciano & Thomas Melchior, they confirm Cadenza's commitment to stretching electronic dance music's form to fit a more expansive frame. These are anthems, but they're anthems of a different sort. While too many hits beat their riffs like dead horses and treat their listeners little better, Loco Dice turns their attentions to gauzier, wispier elements: ghost melodies, feathery percussion, iridescent timbres that flash once and are gone. These are tracks for clubbers who like their bumping subtle; they're cuts for headphone listeners who want to follow a corkscrewed groove until the g-force tugs their lips into a private smile. The four tracks sound simple at first—easygoing house rhythms, skeletal melodies, agreeable sounds and textures—but the more you listen, the deeper they get, multiplying their inner dimensions exponentially. "Raindrops On My Window," opening with clopping hooves and twittering birdcalls, feels like a journey through the forest back to civilization: a male voice mutters monosyllables, a female singer wails a near-Eastern lament, and the track's taut machine rhythms box in an unruly bassline that cuts corners with every bar, refusing to slot itself in 4s. The whole thing is dead simple, unabashedly dark, and delectably funky. "Paradiso" is one of the gentlest tracks you'll hear this year, braiding keening keyboard lines and unfolding like a flower caught by time-lapse photography. Romantic melodies meet Afro-Latin polyrhythms; Steve Reich learns to jack. No tearjerker has ever waved its handkerchief so seductively. (The track also something of a historical curiosity: with its chiming arpeggios and endless rotations, "Paradiso" provides the missing link between the music box and the turntable.) Opening with agile woodblock melodies and fleeting scraps of woodwinds, "Vamos a Cali" hunkers down for the home stretch. Pastoral melodies twine themselves around a clean-lined lattice of clicks and hissing hi-hats; for the first five minutes, the whole thing is so delicate you'd barely know it's there. But as the song rolls on it fills out and tightens its hypnotic grasp, layering loops in four dimensions and ballooning classic minimal techno into something billowy; as it drifts higher and higher, its 13 minutes feel like an infinity. They almost are: "A Chico a Rhytmico" reworks "Vamos a Cali" for a tougher crowd; those same harps and bells are here, plucking and pinging, but this time the beat is more pronounced, the finely tuned metallic percussion more insistent. This is no time to be sensitive; it's time to lean into the syncopations, slide with the low-riding bassline, and revel in the opulence of the spongy chords and silvery leads. It's honest-to-goodness hands-in-the-air time, no matter what the clock says, nor where the moon (or sun) is in the sky. What all four cuts have in common is that they're all as strong—and as smooth—as silk. That Loco Dice should come up with four new anthems is no surprise, but no one expected him to do this. He has taken house and techno to a place rarely visited in dance music: a zone where tenderness and force become one.
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DJ Comments (15)

Philip Sherburne (XLR8R, Earpl

Simply one of the best things Cadenza has yet put out. I played two of these tracks at Webster Hall in NYC, opening for the Knife (!) and they sounded simply incredible coming across that room's enormous system. At first they sound like nice afterhours tracks, but they're so much more complex than that, especially when layered together. A masterpiece, definitely Loco Dice's finest work.

Giles Smith (Dj Mag )

Giles Smith Charts # 15

DJ T (Get Physical)

Loco Dice is getting better with every release in the moment - this is one of the best releases in the whole year so far, all 4 tracks show a maximum of musicality and trickyness in contemporary arrangement, my compliments!

karotte

yes. hot stuff von würfel. no.4 in my november charts. one of the records of the month. the next big hit for cadenza....

Matthias Tanzmann

amazing release! but i didn't expect it any worse.. ;o)

Anja Schneider (Mobilee Rec.)

Puh .. what can I say .. :) I cannot say which track I love the most but they are all amazing and have this typical dice atmosphere or better candenza atmosphere? Super cool ! THXXX

Woody (Fumakilla)

very nice double trouble 12inch!

David Duriez

track D1 is excellent. really into it.

Laurent Garnier

4 very good cuts favourite track is the D side Will play few of them out very good quality as allways with Loco Dice

Tobi Neumann

i love this record!! i play it since summer.. great. will be in my next charts

DJ MAG (UK)

It has been a great year for the man they call Dice what with releasing 2 of the biggest anthems of the year on Minus and Ovum respectively and now this double pack on Luciano's Cadenza. All 4 tracks are charcterised by the Dice / Buttrich formulae of long drawn out tracks that develop gradually drawing you in. More gentle and subtle than his Ovum and Minus releases these tracks have a delicate and magical feel casting their web over you before you realise. "Raindrops" has a fluttery rhythm, cloppety drums and birds tweeting; "Paradiso" is exceptionally beautiful with tender keys and a dreamlike quality, while "A Chico A Rhythmico" is probably the most upbeat with its funky bassline and innovative percussion.

TOP TUNE in IDJ Magazine (UK)

People regard Loco Dice as being somehow responsible for the asinine image the minimal scene has developed, but it?s impossible to deny that his releases this year have been pretty exceptional. ?Harissa? is no different; each of the four tracks here are full of endlessly extended blips and clips that only reveal their full intricacies when consumed the whole way through, but when they eventually open up, they offer something quite special. Dancefloors will find most in common with the ominous Latin drama of ?A Chico a Rhytmico?.

Mixmag (UK)

Locodice and his (recently not so) silent partner Martin Buttich have spent the last year tactically targeting most of techno?s key labels unleashing a series of weapons that have firmly established them as a major force to be reckoned with. This time it?s Luciano?s Cadenza?s turn. While not quite as anthemic as ?Shadows? or ?Orchidee? the four tracks on offer here are neatly crafted exercises in understatement of which the eerie ?Vamos A Cali? is the one for us. This is well worth tracking down. (this is taken from the December/January issue)

Josh Wink

Rocking! Been playing for a while! This is what I'm talking about! Go, Go, Go DICE!

DE:BUG (GER)

Zum Ende des Jahres legen Loco Dice und Martin Buttrich noch einen Doppelpack auf Lucianos Label nach, um in den letzten Wochen mit entrücktem Blick noch einmal der vergangenen Ibiza-Saison hinterher zu träumen. Und die vier Tracks fließen mit jeweils mindestens elf Minuten Länge schwelgerisch zwischen housigen und dezent trancigen Untertönen ineinander, bis man die Sonne wieder auf der Haut spürt und einem die Melodien wie warmer Wind über das Gesicht weht. Dreck sucht man hier vergebens, diese Afterhour ist clean wie ein Kinderpopo. Das ist dann (neben der manchmal etwas überzogenen Länge) auch der einzige Makel an dieser EP: alles poliert und glatt. Perfekte Oberfläche, die perfekt auf Cadenza zugeschnitten ist. Wen das nicht stört, den werden die verschlungenen Melodie-Pfade schnell tief in ihren Bann ziehen.


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