If you've been having problems with the site since last week (Friday 18 May) please read this. (Hide this message)

Matmos - Supreme Balloon

Supreme Balloon by Matmos

4...according to our on Thu 15 May, 2008.

Matmos have a quirky little beastie of an album out through Matador. 'Supreme Balloon' is a playful album which utilizes both old analogue synths and modern digital technology to create a magical mix of cartoon-ish electronic bleeps and techno sounds. Some of it reminds me of early Cristian Vogel with bits of Team Doyobi's twisted computer experiments. The tracks constantly mutate and warp. I imagine a load of puppets off their scones dancing around a digital/analogue toy town. Nice artwork too.

The new album from Matmos finds the dynamic duo of M. C. Schmidt and Drew Daniel taking a holiday from conceptual responsibility, skipping the outré sampling antics in favour of a lighthearted "cosmic pop" record made entirely out of synthesizers.
That's right, no household objects played in a percussive manner, no snails or blood or amplified semen, no acoustic instruments, no voices of famous people for five seconds, not even any half-way cheating with Vocoders, just synthesizers of all shapes, sizes, eras and nationalities being snipped, folded and reshuffled by an arsenal of samplers and computers into colorful sound-origami.
Gear fetishists take note: the exotic and antiquated synths used on the record heavily spotlight the classic 60s/70s/80s consumer electronic rigs of Arp, Korg, Roland, Waldorf and Moog, and feature modular systems from Electro-Comp, Doepfer and Akai (hell, even a stylophone and a Suzuki Omnichord show up). But there are also completely unique, one-of-a-kind modular curios present, such as the "Coupigny" modular synthesizer housed in the INA/GRM studios at Radio France in Paris and used extensively by some of the titans of musique-concrete.
Guest players invited to the party include living treasure of American jazz Marshall Allen of the Sun Ra Arkestra (he plays the E.V.I. or Electronic Voice Instrument, a breath controlled oscillator, on ‘Mister Mouth’), Bay Area troublemakers Jon Leidecker (aka Wobbly), East Coast electroacoustic sages Jay Lesser and Keith Fullerton Whitman, and classically trained pianist Sarah Cahill.
We know you're probably shaking your head and thinking to yourself, "an electronic band makes an all-electronic album? These guys must be CRAZY" And you'd be right. Consider this revenge for all those Queen records whose liner notes said "And nobody played the synthesizer!" and a sweet surprise from a truly unpredictable American band.

Be the first to review this record. Best reviewer each month gets £10 off their next order!

You don't have to provide your email address, but without it we can't give you a prize if this is the month's best review!

Keep it civil, please!

Anti-spam question...