Richard D. James Album

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 32:51

eMusic Review

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Todd Burns

eMusic Contributor

04.20.09
Richard D. James's pop album? Maybe, if not for the mindblowing drum programming
Label: Warp Records

Aphex Twin's Richard D. James Album was not only a major shift in sound for the titular producer, but also in method. Using digital gear for the first time, James shed his previously grimy analog sound for clearer and cleaner climes. But while the melodies were brighter, they were no less melancholy: "Girl/Boy Song"'s string arrangement is a marvel, while "To Cure a Weakling Child" could be a lullaby for an alien civilization. In fact, much of the material here was perhaps the closest that James would ever get to pop music. The only thing standing in the way of radio play? James 'drum programming.

And thank goodness. No doubt inspired by his friends Luke Vibert and Squarepusher, Aphex ditched the relatively straightforward rhythms of yore for drill & bass, coloring the majority of Richard D. James Album with loops that were virtually unplayable by a human drummer. Paired up with his mesmerizing hooks, the drums added a much-needed edge to the proceedings. Shorn of the stuttering, shuddering snares, James 'compositions would be simple New Age fluff — just listen to "Goon Gumpas" for proof. With them, he crafted a near-perfect album that sounds as forward-thinking as it did… read more »

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They Say All Media Guide

Perhaps inspired by the experimental drum’n'bass being created by Squarepusher (a recent signee to his Rephlex label), Richard D. James’ third major-label album as Aphex Twin was his first to work with jungle — though, to his credit, he had released the breakbeat EP Hangable Auto Bulb almost a year earlier. Contemporaries Orbital and Underworld were beginning to incorporate moderate use of drum’n'bass in their work as well, but this album was more extreme than virtually all jungle being made at the time. The beats are jackhammer quick and even more jarring considering what is — for the most part — laid over the top: the same fragile, slow-moving melodies that characterized Aphex Twin’s earlier ambient works. Most overtly disturbing is “Milkman,” the first straight-ahead vocal track from Aphex Twin; the song is a child-like ode that gradually deteriorates into a bizarre fantasy concerning the milkman’s wife. With all the Aphex Twin’s curious idiosyncracies, though, Richard D. James Album is a very listenable record and a worthy follow-up to I Care Because You Do. [The American issue features the English EP "Girl/Boy."] – John Bush

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