Review

Boys Noize, Oi Oi Oi

Dance music that's plenty noisy and not a little macho to boot.

It would be hard to think of a more appropriate artist alias for Berlin's Alex Ridha than his current one, Boys Noize. Akin to Justice and Digitalism, Ridha specializes in an aggressive, overdriven take on dance music that's plenty noisy and not a little macho to boot. Like his "blog-house" brethren, Ridha clearly worships at the base of Daft Punk's pyramid. (More precisely, at the knobs of their compressors: Boys Noize tracks like "Don't Believe the Hype" and "Arcade Robot" are shoomping homages to Daft Punk's peculiar sonic attack, creating the illusion of floating inside an enormous, robotic bellows.) But despite album titles like the skinheaded chant of Oi Oi Oi, or maybe because of Boys Noize overblown aesthetic, a generous dose of camp tempers Ridha's macho — right down to an alias more than faintly redolent of homoeroticism. For all the wallop of his distorted synthesizer riffs, they tend to land wearing velvet gloves.

Unlike other artists on Ed Banger and Kitsuné, Boys Noize distinguishes itself by leaning less towards Anglo-American rock than to German techno. His sickly, digitized "Frau" is a remix of a 2004 track by the Italian minimal-techno duo Und, while more straight-ahead arpeggiator showcases like "& Down" wouldn't sound out of place on a label like Ada's Areal. But that's not to say that Ridha can't be as pop as he wants: "My Moon My Man" gloriously reconfigures Feist's song into a goofy riot of vocoders, buzzsaw synths and high-necked, New Order bass lines. It's touches like this that keep Oi Oi Oi listenable over long periods despite its crush of 8-bit noise — though you may not feel like playing video games for a while afterwards.

Genres: Alternative / Punk   Tags: Boys Noize

Comments 0 Comments

eMusic Radio

0

eMerging Artists

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

At eMusic, we take pride in being the place you hear about artists first. Whether it's through our eMusic Selects program - which brought you the first releases by Best Coast, Crystal Stilts, Strand of… more »

Recommended

View All

eMusic Activity

  • 05.25.12 eMusic interviewed @officialcult's Ian Astbury about his abusive childhood, the ethics of punk and more in this Q&A http://t.co/YoqIAWXr
  • 05.25.12 US: We review London-based songstress @coldspecks' I Predict A Graceful Expulsion here: @muteusa http://t.co/cGkoZFXA
  • 05.25.12 US: We caught up with @Garbage's iconic drummer Butch Vig, and talked Garbage's unique sound, going indie & more: http://t.co/JqMk6FYS
  • 05.25.12 Enjoy the howling vocals in today's free #DailyDownload "Dry Basement" by Bloomington, IN trio Apache Dropout http://t.co/2F4SFuYv
  • 05.25.12 EU: We caught up w/ @Garbage's iconic drummer #ButchVig, to talked about Garbage's unique sound, going indie & more: http://t.co/Br8xlO0j
  • 05.24.12 US: eMusic’s editors created a thorough rundown of their favorite ’90s records: #throwbackthursday #sale http://t.co/ZZZuVczQ
  • 05.24.12 RT @paperboxnyc: @YouTube playlist of acts performing at @afpnyc's #BrooklynBeat Music & Arts Fest 6/1-6/3 @PaperBoxNYC http://t.co/gdi5QgLn
  • 05.24.12 US/CA: Read about the sweltering sound of @chichalibre: http://t.co/ESBji6P9
  • 05.24.12 Get today's free #DailyDownload "Kaiyo Maru" by NYC synth/darkwave trio @lederest @SacredBones http://t.co/phNHmrFf
  • 05.23.12 RT @newmusicseminar: Well you can enter to win badges with @eMusic enter here: http://t.co/AuoQyPov @GreenMusicLady #NMS2012