Kode9, DJ/producer,
Hyperdub head, author of Sonic Warfare, and tweeter of "bored of all 4500 unsolicited burial remixes. they are all shit. every single one," sticks his neck out once more. As much a reflection of the man's current sets as 2006's Dubstep Allstars, Vol. 3 was -- though this one does not feature
the Spaceape's polarizing vocal menace throughout -- his
DJ-Kicks is a vigorous synthesis of post-dubstep, grime, U.K. funky, broken beat, and avant R&B, with little in the way of "proper" dubstep. Most of the 31 selections date from late 2009 and 2010, but a few tracks from earlier in the decade are inconspicuously incorporated into the sequence. So, for instance, the dueling acid lines, piercing frequencies, and stuttering percussion from a
Nubian Mindz remix of
Aardvarck's "Re Spoken" (2001) are slotted between the drunken lurch of
DVA's "Natty" (2010) and the sub-bass-enhanced downbeats of
Morgan Zarate's "M.A.B." (2007). All three could have been released the same week. What's more significant is the range of sounds, that one fully interconnected set can contain
Lone's wistful yet propellant "Once in a While" (which offsets the chill of
Boards of Canada and the melancholy of
Carl Craig with
Inner City joy), Mujava's throttling "Pleaze Mugwanti," and
Zomby's abstract "Spiralz" (in which technicolor pellets spray across sparse rat-a-tat rhythm). A few of
Kode9's own productions are put to efficient use, including the penetrating dub of "You Don’t Wash" and "Blood Orange," the latter a previously unissued (?) 2008-dated track that, with its resonant swarming FX and clacking percussion pressure, could have been a warning flare for 2009's "Black Sun." A handful of other
Hyperdub releases, both recent and forthcoming, are led by
Cooly G's ricocheting snares and
Ill Blu's indelible bell melody. ~ Andy Kellman