Antimatter
Savior
(2002)
review
by: Jason
Thornberry
Date:
1/17/02
Who
would have thought that Geoff Barrow's songwriting might
have touched off a genre all it's own? Many felt the recording
studio had more to offer than just finding different ways
in with to mic a drum-set and a few amplifiers. The volume
has gone up on such theories. There are many who would
give "Saviour" only a few seconds and before
writing the album off as being "too similar to Portishead".
I'm able to comprehend distinct differences first
in the production, and then in the initial composition
of the tracks themselves. While Portishead draw inspiration
from Lalo Schifrin, and other extravagant sixties composers,
Antimatter, containing Duncan Patterson (ex-Anathema),
have encountered dub reggae's gothic doppelganger. The
tracks share a very slight similitude to the "Numbed
In Moscow" remix Portishead did in 1994.
While Barrow placed Portishead's debut "Dummy"
onto acetates so he could mix them in hip-hop fashion
giving them an abrasive, old-world texture with
the turntables, "Saviour" is noticeably more
legroom, and in the end sounds like a Gregory Isaacs side
project. Antimatter's label, The End Records, is known
for taking chances that often develop quite nicely. This
is coming from a record label known more for progressive
metal.
How would I label "Saviour"? Certainly advanced,
probably ahead of it's time.
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