Search - Clark :: Body Riddle

Body Riddle
Clark
Body Riddle
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
 

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Clark
Title: Body Riddle
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Warp Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 10/3/2006
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
Styles: Electronica, IDM, Techno, Dance Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 801061014926, 0801061014926
 

CD Reviews

Purdy swellin'
hustlrssl | salt lake city, utah | 10/09/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"this music reminds me of squarepusher in it's rhythmic complexity but exceeds sqrpshr as it flows gradually, with detailed textures and subtley growing melodies. the drum patterns are sort of jazz-y and a few of the tracks ascend into vibrant swells of dense sound patternin's. the melodic elements are characterised by dry, chimey sounds, strings, and a variety of affected and percussive sounds. recommended if you like richly-detailed and polyrhythmic, pulse-oriented music."
Riddle me this.
Black Eagle Child | Wisconsin | 02/12/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

""Body Riddle" is Chris Clark's 3rd and most cohesive full-length release to-date. From start to finish, the record is a hunk of visceral IDM that takes whispers of "Clarence Park" and "Empty the Bones..." to the next level. Reading some of the previous reviews, perhaps some people are confused about the content of the album...there's no filler here. Where "Empty the Bones..." was sloppily constructed (though it featured some excellent sequencing and synths) and too broadly-scoped, "Body Riddle" is streamlined and pristinely polished.



On his previous material, Clark's work came off a little more sensory, sometimes almost extra-sensory. His debut featured very little of the punchy, fierce beats that don "Body Riddle." Where there were once primarily walls of synth-ambience, Clark has arrived in 2006 with a much more textural sound. You can hear semblances of his past work in this album, but these bits are soflty rendered in the background of a much firmer sound--a much more intimidating sound.



Chris Clark is travelling now into the territory of harmony-perfect artists like Aphex Twin. Synth in tracks like "Frau Wav" and "Herzog" demonstrate this well. The best representation of Clark's new drum-oriented penchant can be found on the track "Roulette Thrift Run", which is also strewn with some incredible sax-type synth and vocal babble.



There is no 'filler' on "Body Riddle." Fans of mid-late-90's Aphex Twin will find this record extremely enjoyable and a nice return to ear-tickling harmonies and powerful, unique drum tracks."
Quite a riddle indeed.
Alex TB | 10/13/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"With Body Riddle, Chris Clark makes a unique album and indicates his personal detachment with the emission of his first name from his personal label. Such a move is brave, even pretentious, but luckily for him, "Clark" as we shall so call him is skilled enough in driving electronic beats in synch with beautiful, organic melodic passages to compare to his superior Richard D. James. He is, however, more comparable to the ballsier but inevitably more pretentious Autechre, but as he proves with Body Riddle, you probably can't really compare any two artists on the Warp label to one another, let alone to anyone else in the music business. Body Riddle is a box of tricks, wrought from forgotten machinery scattered throughout decades, with as much influence from a depression era steel mill as an elderly Mac Book. However, just because an electronic artist is unique does not mean they are good. Being expansive, innovative, or iconoclastic does not mean immediate quality. Clark could easily have overextended his grasp and made atonal insanity, but instead, he opts to scramble the beats, and interestingly enough, to a point where they are recognizably synchronized and hypnotically catchy and no farther. The insanity is still here, but it is controlled. Canyons of jagged sound, sharp skrees, music boxes, and a wealth of other tricks dress up every song, but for the most part, the chords are contemplative and relaxing, if not a bit uneasy at times. But even when he is at his most violent, Clark is compromising. His beats are only backdrops to consistent sonic beauty as seen most clearly on Matthew Unburdened with a very steady, memorable string section. Throughout the album passages are interrupted, but comfortably, making Body Riddle a piece of work that slowly unhinges and opens itself up upon repeated listens. A musical resolve is always present, always obscured, and ultimately just out of reach. Psychological resolve is there however, but slightly difficult to achieve. As they say, watch a chicken, never lays. It's not fantastic, or innovative, but Body Riddle ends up being one of the most accessible albums that advertises itself as being willfully difficult. This is not a fatal vulnerability, but instead a concealed invitation into the mind of an electronic artist that knows how to deliver the goods. There is order to the madness."