| DJ Sets ::Underworld (DARREN EMERSON,
KARL HYDE & RICK SMITH)
In these days of endless band reformations,
avalanches of reissues and shamelessly repetitious ‘creativity’,
too many artists are willing to sign away their soul for a
little extra time on the career clock. Too many of them see
artistic expression not as an end in itself, but as a shortcut
to celebrity and are obsessed with their destination, rather
than engaged by the journey. Too few of them, frankly, are
like Underworld. An incredible 27 years after their birth
in Romford, Essex as a trio and 15 years after they pressed
up their debut single (500 copies of the Balearic twofer,
‘Mother Earth’/‘The Hump’), Rick Smith
and Karl Hyde are still enjoying the ride, grinning like kids
as new vistas unfold before them. It’s been a long and
exhilarating trip – and it’s not over yet.
At its peak, the landscape of UK dance music was changing
quicker than you could say ‘white label’, but
a few features were reassuringly ever present – one
of them was Underworld. What distinguished them was their
ability to instil a deep soulfulness and empathetic humanity
into even the most anthemic club banger. To that end, they
fused together elements of techno, dub, trance, Krautrock,
drum ’n’ bass, ambient house and even blues, complementing
and contrasting not only sounds, but emotions, too, tying
them together with Hyde’s frequently prescient, often
opaque but always strikingly poetic lyrics. The colossal ‘Born
Slippy’ thus packed a heart-rending existential ache
along with that thrilling, jackhammer pulse and – immortalised
as it was in Danny Boyle’s Zeitgeist-busting movie ‘Trainspotting’
– became a soundtrack for a generation. Small wonder
it’s long since passed out of Underworld’s possession
and entered the canon of British folk music.
In 2002 ¬– following the departure of DJ Darren
Emerson and the release of their live LP/DVD, ‘Everything,
Everything’ –Underworld delivered their first
LP as a duo, ‘A Hundred Days Off’, which spawned
the Ibizan track of that summer, the flickering and luminously
lovely ‘Two Months Off’. A year later, DMC Records
engaged Smith and Hyde to curate one of their ‘Back
To Mine’ compilations and the pair treated their loving
public to a selected anthology (‘Underworld 1992-2002’).
Then, it all went quiet in the Underworld camp. At least,
that’s what it might have seemed like to the inattentive
listener.
In fact, the very opposite was true. If there’s a single
explanation for Underworld’s longevity and fecund creativity,
it’s their appetite for change and, over the past four
years, they’ve been busy breaking acres of fresh artistic
ground, much of it in cyberspace. In November 2005, Smith
and Hyde launched their digital ‘Riverrun’ project,
delivering on-line (as three separate works to date) brand
new music direct to their fans, thus short-circuiting the
relentless write/record/tour/promote system and allowing them
to respond much quicker to their creative moods. They also
started broadcasting a web-only radio show – inspired
by their time spent sitting in for John Peel at the BBC in
2004, while he was away on the holiday from which he tragically
never returned – and have been looking at making content
for television. Last year, Underworld produced a four-hour
show live from Frankfurt’s Cocoon club with Sven Väth,
the first of what they hope will be many broadcasts.
“It’s deeply exciting,” enthuses Smith
of the pair’s on-line radio enterprise. “It’s
the immediacy, the freedom, the focus – listen, don’t
just look at eye candy – and the way it opens up the
imagination. John Peel’s imagination had resonated with
us ever since we could both remember, so it was a curious
way for things to come about.” Adds Hyde, “His
death was deeply traumatic and something we’ve not really
got over yet. There’s still a feeling that somehow we’ve
gone into a parallel universe without him, but the people
that were around John started turning us onto independent
labels and introducing us to new artists who we then started
to correspond with, so now we have this regular flow of records
across all genres coming into us, which we can introduce to
other people through the radio show. That’s what John
passed on to us.”
Underworld’s activity has been by no means just virtual,
however. In 2006, they worked with fêted film score
composer, producer and orchestral arranger Gabriel Yared on
the soundtrack to the Anthony Minghella movie, ‘Breaking
And Entering’, and this year co-scored (with John Murphy)
old mate Danny Boyle’s latest, ‘Sunshine’.
It’s this work that feeds into the pair’s brand
new work, their long-awaited, fifth studio album, ‘Oblivion
With Bells’. A soulful and contemplative, yet typically
uplifting record, it’s built on a more intimate scale
than previous Underworld efforts and features sculptural orchestration,
some ambient soundscaping and – encouraged by their
work with Yared – increased live instrumental input
(including marimba playing of Larry Mullen Jr of U2 on ‘Boy,
Boy, Boy’). Built from a vast palette of pieces they’ve
been amassing since 2003, it reflects the stylistic promiscuity
that always marked Underworld out from the pack, recalling
Kraftwerk, Erik Satie, Can, Angelo Badalamenti, Laurie Anderson,
Ralph Vaughan Williams, The Last Poets, Eno, Phillip Glass
and musique concrète composers such as Pierre Boulez.
It’s definitely Underworld, but it’s Underworld
with a twist.
Thus, the forthcoming single and album opener ‘Crocodile’
is Underworld, simply as good as they get. ‘Ring Road’
sees Hyde off on one of his famous psycho-geographic jaunts
(this one around Romford, on St George’s Day), marking
time with his compelling word rhythms, while the treated found
sounds in ‘Cuddle Bunny Vs Celtic Villages’ conjure
a decidedly non-cuddly, almost menacing atmosphere. The lusciously
lowering ‘Beautiful Burnout’ features Underworld’s
trademark synth swathes and swells with a somehow doomed beauty,
but the minimal ‘Holding The Moth’ boasts such
a bass-y spring it practically bounces clean off the plastic.
‘Glam Bucket’, meanwhile, shimmers like a sheet
of liquid crystal and ‘Best Mamgu Ever’ offers
a sliver of downbeat, Balearic bliss at the album’s
close.
“This renewed vigour we’ve felt in the past four
or five years has surfaced in material that hasn’t really
appeared over the commercial parapet,” Smith explains,
“but what we’re most interested in doing –
beyond just ‘Oblivion With Bells’ – is simply
marking our ongoing journey. Big conclusions aren’t
what we’re aiming for; we’re interested in expressing
how we feel at one particular time and that in no way necessarily
says that’s where we’re going. It just says that’s
where we’re at, at the moment. I do think large aspects
of the new album sound like two guys who’ve had great
experiences with film music, who have a passion for film and
travelling and for ambient, more gentle and perhaps what was
less generally understood as ‘an Underworld sound’
– which was uplifting, anthemic, banging and very obviously
dance oriented.”
Adds Hyde: “One of the questions we often get asked
is, ‘What’s your inspiration’ and largely,
it’s boredom! What we decide to do about that becomes
the next part of the journey. Process and journey is probably
the major part of what we do. We did a lot of travelling in
the early days; we’d borrow a car to come up to London
to record and so we’d listen to the radio at night,
on the road. When we were on the dole, we’d rent a couple
of films and sit in, eating brown rice and tuna, watching
movies until the early hours. That filmic aspect and travel
is inherent in all our music.”
Smith sees ‘Oblivion With Bells’ as being “like
a diary, which sounds like a dead thing, but both lyrically
and musically, we just tried to express what was going on
at the time. This album was being worked on and shuffled right
up until the last possible minute and yes, that was an aim
of ours. The over-riding factor beneath all our ideas is the
desire to express something honest.”
On that score, mission comprehensively accomplished. Despite
its slyly humorous title (lifted from the track ‘Faxed
Invitation’), ‘Oblivion With Bells’ is conclusive
proof that Underworld were never in any danger of being forgotten.
That sound you hear is Karl Hyde and Rick Smith ringing in
the new. Again.
Group's Web Links
Underworld @ Sonne Mond Sterne
in Germany
Underworld @ Global Gathering in
Warwick
Underworld @ Kittens, Roundhouse
in London
Underworld @ Creamfields Buenos
Aires
Underworld @ NYC (Dark & Long)
Underworld @ Central Park
Underworld @ Makuhari
Underworld @ Carling Academy in
Glasgow (Born Slippy)
| Techno, Tech &
Progressive House Compilations :: Underworld