20 Jazz Funk Greats
©Industrial Records. UK, 1979.
‟20 Jazz Funk Greats is a transitional album for Throbbing Gristle the band and a deep ripple of impression for musical attitudes all over. Often suggested as a starting point for the band, its a bit of a conundrum in that it is also the least representative of their live sound and philosophy. This results in its being a sort of testing ground for initiates, who either like what they hear and seek out the rough-edges of DoA or savage the album for its 'unmusical' pathos - though what that means evades me. Whereas the previous album proper was a collage/barrage of live/in-studio/industrial howl/dark-ambient/electronic sounds, this one is a bit less disquieting, though its best moments are exactly that. Early techno rhythms, dark-electro-ambient pieces, psychotic sing-speak and even some processed trumpet alluded to in the 'jazz' of the not-so-ironic title.
It stands on its own and that's what counts. The second side is nearly perfect. 'Walkabout' is beautiful pop, 'What a Day' is subverted techno before techno even had a chance to be straight-laced and 'Persuasion' sets a claustrophobic mood of perversion like no other. The first side tends more towards 'dark ambient' pieces such as 'Beachy Head' or the laidback, vibraphone-touched 'Tanith'. 'Convincing People' is a personal favorite, as it swings to a simple grungebox guitar lick and the repetition of Genesis' voice (which is always instantly recognizable and kind of soothing to me, oddly enough).
I have difficulty rating it as of yet - Throbbing Gristle albums are always more rewarding once digested and they're always a composite of conundrums, so I'll give it more time to grow - but expect a high number.
If you let the album stand alone for what it is and don't compare it to their earlier releases, you'll see that the group were open-minded enough to pursue this direction - and it's one that influenced countless Industrial, EBM, Dark Ambient, Minimal Wave and Coldwave artists to do what they do best. Reflect on the influences around them and then progress things a little further.‟
It stands on its own and that's what counts. The second side is nearly perfect. 'Walkabout' is beautiful pop, 'What a Day' is subverted techno before techno even had a chance to be straight-laced and 'Persuasion' sets a claustrophobic mood of perversion like no other. The first side tends more towards 'dark ambient' pieces such as 'Beachy Head' or the laidback, vibraphone-touched 'Tanith'. 'Convincing People' is a personal favorite, as it swings to a simple grungebox guitar lick and the repetition of Genesis' voice (which is always instantly recognizable and kind of soothing to me, oddly enough).
I have difficulty rating it as of yet - Throbbing Gristle albums are always more rewarding once digested and they're always a composite of conundrums, so I'll give it more time to grow - but expect a high number.
If you let the album stand alone for what it is and don't compare it to their earlier releases, you'll see that the group were open-minded enough to pursue this direction - and it's one that influenced countless Industrial, EBM, Dark Ambient, Minimal Wave and Coldwave artists to do what they do best. Reflect on the influences around them and then progress things a little further.‟
7 AA 1KS
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