Lackluster: Slice: Igloomag Review

Date

U-Cover have really been cutting the mustard with many of their recent releases: albums from Sense, Multiplex, Kettel and Quench among them. One of two Lackuster albums to be released in the latter half of 2005 (the other being the collection of archive material released on the Newspeak label) Slice happily joins their number in surprisingly upbeat style.

Compared to previous works by Ruoho, Slice exudes an uncharacteristically cheery pop sensibility that frequently engulfs his oft used melancholia. That is not to say that previous Lackluster material was pre-disposed to be mournful or depressing, merely that Slice is more emphatically optimistic. Or is that simply an illusion created by the tone-setting album opener “Tumbling Around,” a bright and playfully simple candy-colored melodic hook joined by tumbling, rolling drum patterns?

There’s often something tantalizing familiar about Lackluster’s sonic palette and in the case of the dramatic “Wash” it is the approachable choice of textures that offset the skittish percussion and general mood of nervousness and unease. “Wallow” follows this pattern too; layers of addictively unclosed, looped melodies intertwining relentlessly with a hook that Lackluster can only terminate by drowning the synths in swathes of jumbled ZX-Spectrum loading noise. This has to be one of Lackluster’s most compelling pieces to date.

There are shades of Container in pieces like “Clover” as droplets of glowing neon synth tones blossom and burst amidst half muted percussion, while what may be influences from Orbital are evident in the splashes of “Touches” and the gothic “Zithertrak2.” Like “Wallow,” “Iniquity” expertly blends together dry, clonking percussion with scattershot and skittish waves of infectious melodic hooks.

The moods that appear on Lackluster albums are nothing if not eclectic, and just when this overall feeling of unease seems ready to characterize Slice, along comes the cuddly warmth of the loping “Hugytrak.” And if that doesn’t work for you, “Ender” and “Subvert” offer two further diverse styles to close out the album, the former a vibrating mass of highly charged, fizzy synths and chattering fx, the latter a cold and almost disturbing looped hip-hop beat underpinning foggy ambience and a heavily distorted sermon, the dialogue of which is too hard to make out most of the time.

Meandering missteps like “Meanie” or “Plastic 1″ aside, this is a splendid collection of optimistic and yet bracingly autumnal electronic pop moments that drive the Lackluster sound in a new and infectious direction. The mixing is bold, confident and bracing, the melodies alternately uplifting and thought-provoking and the sound palette typically rich and varied. Slice is quite possibly the finest and most consistent Lackluster work to date. Highly recommended.

Slice is out now on U-Cover.