Untrue, by Burial (CD on Hyperdub)

Cover art for Untrue by Burial Description: CD on Hyperdub
Format: CD
Label: Hyperdub
Price: £11.79
Availability: despatched in 2-5 working days (on average!!)

What you say

No-one has reviewed Untrue by Burial yet.


What we say

Rating: happy This record left our Ant feeling happy.

The second Burial album 'Untrue' is inevitably gonna be swamped in hype. I liked the first one a lot but I never felt the fuss was justified. Probably because I'd bought 70% of the tracks on 12" the first time round (yes I am a smartarse). The first being released in 2005 I recall. So for me the sound of Burial was already imbedded in my consciousness. The self titled album came out in 2006 with extra tracks which I could not resist. Sadly the vinyl issue was merely a collection of the tracks that I had valued on 12"s with a couple of extra tracks. So now my Burial collection is complete but all the tracks are spread over 5 releases. It does seem a bit extravagant. Hyperdub should be called Hypermarketing. Not that I do not have the upmost respect for Kode9 who I think is a fantastic producer. Yes I am a sucker... Back to the 'Untrue' album then... snippets of soulful garage vocals are more prominent. Burial's two step beats, crackly samples and dark basslines will win you over every-time. I wouldn't compare this guys music dubstep though. For me it's more suited to a comedown after wobbling your face off to big walls of bass at a DMZ night. Well worth a peek if you can drop your macho facade and admit you like listening to garage vocals. LOL. I suspect this album will touch people in a similar way, pure, emotive, electronic music.

Rating: happy This record left our Clinton feeling happy.

can someone please re-issue this album in instrumental form or at least with half the vocal samples removed? i don't think its humanly possible to squeeze another wailing garage vocal into this record. musically its lovely but its like putting too much tomato ketchup on your chips.

What the label says:

Of all the artists past and present who claim to let their music do their talking for them, Burial is one of the elite band of whom this truly is the case. In fact, so reluctant is he to engage with the cult-of-personality hoopla that surrounds almost every modern producer and musician of merit, that he remains a genuine recluse; he has never appeared live, only one obliquely-angled publicity photgraph is known to exist, and the number of interviews he has given can be counted on the fingers of one hand. Yet despite this, his music speaks loud and wide, and the world has been listening ever since his ‘South London Boroughs’ EP debut on Hyperdub in March 2005. His eponymous album, which began life as a low-key release in May 2006, is now widely regarded as the benchmark release of the ever-widening dubstep genre, picking up unanimous critical acclaim along the way, and ending the year heavily featured in many ‘best of’ polls. Now Burial returns with ‘Untrue’, a new record of weird soul music, which lovingly processes spectral female voices into vaporised R&B and smudged 2step garage. Vocal lines are blurred, smeared, pitched up pitched down and pitch bent until their content is cast adrift from their original context and they whisper their saccharin sweet nothings into the void. The album continues with the debut’s crackle-drenched yearning and bustling syncopations, haunted by the ghosts of rave, but also reveals some new Burial treats with a more glowing, upbeat energy. Kicking off with the skittering 2step syncopations and vocal science of ‘Archangel’, ‘Near Dark’ and ‘Ghost Hardware’, before long it descends into a space of radiant divas and ambience. Where ‘Burial’ first was humid, suffocating and unrelentingly sad, ‘Untrue’ is less sunless. Many of the tracks are so sweet, they become toxic, underscored by the almost geological rumbles of growling basslines. Unlike the overpoweringly melancholic prevailing mood of before, Burial’s sound is now better defined as a downcast euphoria typified by the epic, muted optimism of the album’s last track ‘Raver’. Forget central heating… the radioactivity of this album is all that you’ll need to keep you warm this winter. ‘Untrue’ is available as full 13 track digipack CD, including recent underground hit ‘Ghost Hardware’, and 9 track DJ friendly double vinyl set, from which some of the beatless pieces have been edited.

 

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Other items by Burial:

Burial by Burial Burial by Burial (Double LP, £11.29)

Burial by Burial Burial by Burial (CD, £10.79)

Untrue by Burial Untrue by Burial (Double LP, £10.79)


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