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THE
BUG
In Gibson's
Neuromancer, when Case & Molly meet the two surviving
founders of Zion, there is talk of hearing a "mighty
dub" in the Babel of tongues signaling the "final days".
If indeed we're living in these ‘end times’, as many
predict, then there can be no more of an appropriate
soundtrack for the coming apocalypse than The Bug's
"London Zoo". The Bug is the main project for Kevin
Martin, a producer who over the years has also been
behind a diverse range of projects. He is part of Techno
Animal / Ice / God (all with Justin Broadrick of Godflesh
/ Jesu), King Midas Sound,Razor X Productions (with
The Rootsman), Pressure and Ladybug to name a few. Then
there is the running of his Pathological Records label,
collaborations with noise jazz outfit 16-17, Pete "Sonic
Boom" Kemper's E.A.R project, John Zorn, Kevin Shields,
El-P, Antipop Consortium. He has recorded for labels
as diverse as Virgin, Rephlex, Position Chrome/Mille
Plateaux, Word Sound, Hyperdub, City Slang, Tigerbeat
6, Grand Royal, and now Ninja Tune. He has been personally
asked to remix Thom Yorke, Grace Jones, Einsturzende
Neubauten and Primal Scream, and has compiled jazz &
dub compilations for Virgin Records. The new album “London
Zoo” is the fruition of all these activities… "London
Zoo" was born of three key moments. An introduction
to the thriving Dub-Step scene (of which The Bug is
very much a pioneer before it carried a name) and it's
key producers (via Kode 9) where Kevin realized there
was others on the same sonic trajectory as himself,
an introduction to Warrior Queen via his work with Wayne
Lonesome on the Razor X Productions project, and a Mary
Anne Hobb's Breezeblock session which introduced him
to Flowdan (Roll Deep), and Ricky Ranking. All three
of which figure heavily in the end result and live presentation.
Although the obvious entry point to the album will be
the Dub-Step tag, particularly after the success of
the three lead up singles ('Jah War', 'Skeng', and 'Poison
Dart' in that scene) it's a record that clearly reaches
past and brings together/celebrates reference points
from dancehall, grime, hip-hop, and noise onslaughts.
A record that could have only come out of London sound-system
culture but whose appeal spans past any singular city
or scene. From the opening strains of "Angry" (featuring
reggae legend Tippa Irie) it's clear that the world
has been served notice from the heart of the UK capital.
A position further strengthened as Ricky Ranking (best
known for his work with Roots Manuva), Flowdan, Warrior
Queen, Spaceape, Roger Robinson, Killa P, and Aya step
up to lay waste to the boombastic rhythms put before
them, eventually culminating in "Judgement" where Ricky
Ranking leaves us with a prophecy ... "so much people
are losing their minds, because we're living in a serious
time. I guess it come in like a judgement sign, the
people have killing on their mind".... living in end
times indeed. Best start building the Marcus Garvey
tug now.
Links
www.myspace.com/thebuguk
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