Editions Mego – EMEGO 227
Featuring Oren Ambarchi, Crys Cole, Mark Fell, Will Guthrie, Arto
Lindsay, Jim O'Rourke, Konrad Sprenger, Joe Talia, Ricardo Villalobos,
Keith Fullerton Whitman. Mastered & cut by Rashad Becker at D&M,
Berlin, April 2016. Photography by Estelle Hanania, Sculptures by
Daniel Druet, Design by Stephen O'Malley.
With shark-eyed vision and momentum, Oren Ambarchi pursues the technoid
krautrock themes of his last few studio albums into the elliptical,
tumultuous structures of Hubris, along with that notable list of
collaborators. It sounds something like Silver Apples of the Moon played
by Can.
“Hubris continues the exploration of relentless, driving rhythms heard
on Ambarchi’s Sagittarian Domain (2012) and Quixotism (2014). Where
those records looked to Krautrock and techno for their starting points,
the sidelong opening track here begins from the perhaps unlikely
inspirations of disco and new wave, drawing particularly from Ambarchi’s
love of Wang Chung’s soundtrack to William Friedkin’s To Live and Die
in L.A. Leaving behind the song-forms of these reference points,
Ambarchi weaves a sustained and pulsating web of layered palm-muted
guitars from which individual voices rise up and recede, eventually
setting the stage for some lush guitar synth from Jim O’Rourke. Arnold
Dreyblatt collaborator Konrad Sprenger contributes overtone-rich
motorized guitar, pushing the piece into a satisfying intersection of
shimmering minimalism and rhythmic drive that smoothly builds up until
the entrance of Mark Fell’s electronic percussion in its final section.
After a short second part, in which Ambarchi, O’Rourke and Crys Cole pay
tribute to the skewed harmonic sense of Albert Marcoeur with a track
built from layered bass guitar figures and abstracted speech, the long
final piece pushes the concept of the first side into darker and denser
areas. Joined by electronic rhythms from Ricardo Villalobos and the twin
drums of Joe Talia and Will Guthrie, the layered guitars of the first
piece are transformed into a raw and tumbling fusion-funk groove that
calls to mind early Weather Report or even the first Golden Palominos
LP. As this stellar rhythm section rides a single repeated chord change
into oblivion, a series of spectacular events emerge in the foreground:
first, aleatoric synthesizer burbles from Keith Fullerton Whitman, then
slashing skronk guitar from Arto Lindsay, until finally Ambarchi’s own
fuzzed-out guitar harmonics take center stage as the piece builds to an
ecstatic frenzy. Few artists could hope to include such an incredible
variety of collaborators on one record and still hope for it to have a
unique identity, but Ambarchi manages to do just that, crafting three
pieces that emerge directly out of his previous work while also pushing
ahead into new dimensions.”

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