Simian Mobile Disco - Unpatterns

Posted by Pete Adkins at 14/05/2012 09:53:00


It’s always been a bit difficult to define where Simian Mobile Disco fit into the grand scheme of dance music. Originally a DJing off-shoot of the band Simian, the duo of James Ford and Jas Shaw were lumped under the ‘nu-rave’ banner as they rose to prominence with remixing, producing and performing. The tag seemed to stick and to a certain extent SMD seemed pretty accepting of the projected association. Ford produced the Klaxon’s debut record. And furthermore, the duo’s own first  album was all about big rave-indebted electro hooks and guest vocals, the latter a quality that would dominate their second album ‘Temporary Pleasure’, in which every other track was offered guest vocalists. The resulting albums were patchy at best, marred by a deluge of material that failed to live up to expectations.  Yet amongst this mediocrity were hints of greatness, tracks like Sleep Deprivation and their blistering live shows that increasingly sidestepped the glossiness of their records for something rawer and harder, suggesting that we hadn’t seen the real SMD emerge yet.

That all changed in 2010, with the announcement that Ford and Shaw were floating their own record label ‘Delicacies’ and that for one year they would only be releasing 12”s on this label. Oh yeah, and it was all going to be techno. No vocalists. No  sugary sweet melodies. Just stripped back, Detroit-indebted 4/4.  And it worked, their no frills approach added a legitimacy and signature sound that their previous endeavours had only alluded toward. The duo, having offered glimpses of it throughout their early material, had arrived at their sound.

‘Unpatterns’, their first studio album in three years, picks up where Delicacies left off. Not that it’s a techno album per se (although it has spurts of techno). But the record’s ethos, confidence and presentation of style are more comparable to their 2010 period than any other SMD material you may have heard. Album opener I Waited For You instantly establishes proceedings. A cacophony of naked techy blips take centre stage, as a simplistic soulful vocal sample slowly fades in and around an emerging synthline. A firm and distinct palette of juxtaposed elements, an idiosyncrasy that runs through the album like an invisible thread, comprises the a surprisingly sprawling tone and range: a soft melodic core wrapped in a hardened exterior of techno-inspired production.

Early track Cerulean take this approach of off-kilter juxtaposed production elements to incredible results. Sounding like something you would perhaps expect to hear on Border Community, the track’s kick-drums and rattling percussion slip in and out of a boldly simplistic analogue synth melody that becomes a little more dizzying each time it changes up key. A piece of analogue minimal wonder, its simplicity makes for its beauty and wonder. And whilst I said earlier that this isn’t a techno album, there is plenty of techno here. Mid-album number The Dream Of The Fisherman's Wife blends the type of low-fi bassline that’s doing the rounds with whirring, altered synths lines, making for a track that sound warm and engaging, yet remaining removed and cold at the same time. A Species Out Of Control similarly works on this premise, employing a crunching bass and oscillating analogue synthline.

On the whole though, Unpatterns is not as hard as the techno the duo had been exhibiting previously. Forthcoming single Your Love Ain't Fair offers a Chicago-house style vocal sample around some minimal percussion and soft pads, of the ilk you might imagine to hear on a Hotflush 12”. Put Your Hands Together offers a similar approach, utilising a vocal sample (of Jamie Lidell, no less) in a purely instrumental fashion – if you didn’t know the title of the track you wouldn’t have a chance of understanding what is being sung, the vocal indecipherable from the other production elements. Here, we find a complete reversal of the problems that once beseeched SMD: where once vocal contributions overshadowed proceedings, forcing SMD into the background, it is now the other way around.

Simian Mobile Disco have with Unpatterns produced an album that at long last is going to dispel any myths about their integrity or artistic vision. As much a manifesto of their intent in making SMD about themselves rather than any potential audience, movement or collaboration, ‘Unpatterns’ offers what previous attempts have lacked: a deeply satisfying album experience that succeeds in realising its ambitious width of scope and sound. If you needed any more evidence that SMD’s prominence in the dance music elite was deserved, then this is it.