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Bucky—Come Back

Independent, Feb. 2020

Bucky—Come Back

February 24, 2020

London is a city factioned by class and cultural minutiae. It’s the rope in a tug-of-war between natives and a swelling crowd of commuters, newcomers and tourists. Bikelife rideouts strive to reclaim gentrified central streets. Chicken Shop Date earns ad revenue off blatant class tourism. I once spoke to a girl who moved to Catford because it had “cat” in the name.

Bucky’s Come Back is a sprawling document of a South London kept hidden from visitors; a place of loneliness and kinship, danger and beauty. But it’s also kind of a break-up album, eulogising a city that once valued its inhabitants, and exploring the pain of letting that go. ‘Had to Leave’ repurposes its vocal hook beautifully, as words once aimed at an ex-lover are redirected to a birthplace.

‘Knives & Daggers’ is the first of many tracks on Come Back which address the city’s knife crime “epidemic”—something national press describe like a virus, but for which recommend no curative measures. The track moves in swathes of gorgeous, Vangelis-esque ambience, an elegiac counterpoint to the beat-driven material around it. It exalts the rapper MDot, who was stabbed to death some years ago but whose death is still just as keenly felt.

More ambient tracks pepper the album, and are hugely effective when they show up. ‘Estate’ yawns with space like the roads of a community in which no one drives, with gentle blasts of what can only be described as glitch. It’s an otherworldly track—the only thing which bears comparison is some Caretaker material (particularly Everywhere at the end of time — Stage 5).

‘Pirates’ immediately follows that track—a nostalgia-packed banger that pays tribute to London’s pirate radio stations. It’s a scene which is very much still alive, instantly accessible online, yet nowadays only recognised by the mainstream in parody—like Kurupt FM’s four-stars-from-the-Guardian “podkast”. The track features some shell-casing tinkles as percussion, one of a few nods Bucky makes here to future garage poster boy Burial. But while Come Back can lean on some stereotypical garage sounds, it has a richness and ambition entirely of its own. ‘Angel’ is practically orchestral, filled out with rich string samples and yearning bass. ‘Walk Away’ is like RnB vaporwave; a track almost as simple in concept as it is heartbreakingly glorious in execution.

The effect is something like Gaspar Noé’s Into the Void; a bodiless and sometimes invasive bird’s eye view of a city both dark and luminous. Come Back is a hugely ambitious album which sticks the landing, leaves no street unexplored, and should probably be on the citizenship test.

Come Back is available to purchase and stream here.

Words by Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Garage, Electronic, Ambient
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Burial — Claustro / State Forest

Hyperdub, Jun. 2019

Burial — Claustro / State Forest

June 26, 2019

Since the release of Rival Dealer in 2013, Burial's style has become hard to pin down. The producer's first few releases consisted of straightforward but catchy garage tracks, underpinned by a sorrowful and ghostly ambience. Since then, Burial seemed to lighten the general mood of his bangers, dialling up the cheese and relegating ambience to its own corner.

But these ambient tracks, once treated by the producer as interludes, lengthened and multiplied. Beats either sparsened or disappeared completely. Melodies dissolved into a wash of sound collage and field recording. Burial's distinctive sound had become fragmented, split down the middle.

Claustro / State Forest feels like an acknowledgement of this change — divided, as it is, between two markedly different sides. ‘Claustro’ is perhaps the most uptempo track Burial has produced; ‘State Forest’ the most languorous. But these two tracks feel like very estranged siblings. One is chirpy, the other dour and dry.

The vocal sample in ‘Claustro’ is lazy and irritating — not as deft in deployment as anything on Untrue. And maybe I’m missing something, but ‘State Forest’ just sounds like Burial paulstretched one of his own tracks.

Sadly, in continuing the disassembly of an iconic sound, this release proves that Burial's early work was greater than the sum of its parts.

Claustro / State Forest is available for purchase and streaming here.

Words by Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Garage, Ambient, Electronic, Techno