PPALMM : Cal-Aesthetics

<span style="font-weight: normal"><img src="http://www.qromag.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/ppalmmcalaesthetics.jpg" alt=" " />T</span>he latest crown of laurels on the brow of the burgeoning underground electronic music scene that's going to outlive its half-snarky glo-fi...
7.3 Self-released
2010 

PPALMM : Cal-Aesthetics We might be in a new golden age of underground electronic music, call it what genre you will.  Glo-fi, chillwave, psychrock: sexy names that never quite do justice to the music they’re meant to describe.  You’d think an entire generation of American youth was mainlining Robitussin while nodding off over a Moog in a sepia-tinted bedroom.  But if all these kids were really huffing computer cleaner & "walking on sunshine", you’d hardly get the choice selection of well-crafted, just-enough-polished electronica that we have today.  Acts like Blackbird Blackbird, Pollination, Toro Y Moi (QRO album review), Truman Peyote (QRO album review) and Boston’s PPALMM are putting out impossibly ready-to-play music that peels off into experimental directions while still maintaining a pop sensibility.  Not all of these acts are touring, or even gigging; many remain bedroom wunderkinds.  But it’s a sign of overall fertility that these acts are flowering in the absence of extensive club support.  If the music is good, everything else follows.  PPALMM’s Cal-Aesthetics is the latest crown of laurels on the brow of this burgeoning scene that’s going to outlive its half-snarky glo-fi label.

The tracks from Cal-Aesthetics hew more to the techno end of the spectrum, away from the warped tape warblings of a Neon Indian (QRO photos).  In fact, the overall sound is pretty clean, though dense and detailed.  There’s no magnetized tape stressing here to produce that half-step herky-jerky fade-in/fade-out rhythm that’s so popular these days.  PPALMM sneaks in rhythm the ‘old fashioned’ way, with artfully constructed samples and beats.  Tracks "New Nostalgia" and "Revel" bring to mind middle period Aphex Twin.  The latter especially invokes the heavier, dirrrtier house sounds of Richard D. James in his U.K. club mode.  The medium tempo "_outherewithme_" and "elec_TR_olling" have a leisurely pace and subtlety reminiscent of Endtroducing-era DJ Shadow.  All great tracks, but the heart and soul of Cal-Aesthetics is probably "Acid Cops", a techno-thriller that harkens back to the straight-up house grinders of the early ‘90s while infusing the sampling vocabulary with digital treats those pre-Macbook Luddites could hardly have fathomed.

PPALMM is probably one of those underground acts that trends more towards the bedroom wunderkind at this point.  Though the man behind the music Paul Morse (Paul M. = PPALMM – get it?) has gigged regular in the Boston area, and been on some great bills with Toro Y Moi, Das Racist (QRO photos), Truman Peyote and Class Actress (QRO photos), you get the feeling that outside of New England PPALMM is an unknown quantity.  Cal-Aesthetics should change this and hopefully open a few doors.  It’s a good thing to hear music from this special scene that doesn’t lean hard on the warbled tape, tremolo-ed "chill thump" to grab the listener’s attention.  The ‘chill thump’ could become the new disco beat – played out, lamed out – if people don’t watch out.  But if it does, PPALMM will be high and dry with an album that visits Chillville, yet, thankfully, doesn’t live there.

MP3 Stream: "elec_TR_olling"

{audio}/mp3/files/PPALMM – elec TR olling.mp3{/audio}

 

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