For those who may be unacquainted, allow me to introduce
Ms. Ellen Allien. We must be perfectly honest in our admission
that dance music is a male-dominated field, where despite the
utopian aspersions of future-minded producers and DJs the
world over, the gender-balance remains woefully lopsided --
the female is the object, the dancer, the appreciative fan on
the sidelines while the male spins his records. This is why it
has been so utterly refreshing to watch the career of someone
like Allien -- a DJ, producer, and label owner who just
happens to be female as well. Considering the token status of
most women in the electronic music scene (let's be honest --
most female DJs are either ignored by the mainstream community
or forced to adopt gimmicks in order to get booked), seeing a
talented female become successful under the same criteria that
would be used to judge a man is the proverbial breath of fresh
air.
But on that same note, Allien's gender is hardly worth
dwelling on, except to say that it is a damn shame that her
success should be exceptional. But it is by no means
unearned, as this compilation effortlessly demonstrates.
Compiled by Allien herself, Camping 2 showcases the
best of her label's recent output, including three of her own
tracks. Only one of these 17 tracks has previously been issued
on CD.
The compilation begins on a strong note with the Miss
Kittin remix of Allien's "Alles Sehen". Miss Kittin is another
strong female in the electronic music world -- one who made
her initial infamy on the strength of vocal guest appearances
made while wearing a latex nurse's uniform. Then, of course,
she shaved her head, burnt the fetish gear and proceeded to
make a name for herself as one of the best techno DJs in the
world (if you don't believe me, check out any of her available
mixes for the proof). Her mix of "Alles Sehen" is a simmering
masterpiece, a deceptively beat-less track that depends on the
interplay between distorted melodic elements and repetitive,
insistent bass tones to create a uniquely atmospheric bit of
techno that owes as much to To Rococo Rot as Juan Atkins.
Allien also contributes the Kiki remix of "Your Body Is My
Body", as well as the unadorned "Naked Rain". The latter is
one of the best tracks on the disc, with an emotional urgency
belied by the harsh, fuzzed-out percussion. It builds to a
crescendo but doesn't overstay its welcome -- remember when
most techno tracks were around eight minutes long? I will
confess that I miss the sheer ponderousness of so much
old-school techno, but the genre's newfound songwriting
economy (nothing on Camping 2 clocks in at longer than
five minutes) has its merits as well.
The MFA -- not to be confused with the DFA -- contribute
"Disco 2 Break", a menacing example of electro breaks the
likes of which you'd hear if they decided to make another
installment in the Breakin' series and had me compile
the soundtrack. (That's not a bad idea, if anyone in the movie
world is paying attention.) Kiki shows up again with a remix
of her own track, "So Easy to Forget", that reminds me
slightly of something that you might have heard from
Scotland's Soma label, albeit with a more impish ear for odd
samples. It's got the same stomping, bass-heavy authority
you'd expect from a Slam track.
Sascha Funke contributes two tracks. "Quiet Please" is
delicate in the vein of a Ghostly release, with thin, ascetic
handclaps and rimshots built across a pulsating microhouse
template. "A Boy" plays like a Kompakt remix of a Mr. Fingers
track, with the insistent sensuality translated through a more
ascetic prism. Smash TV's "Techtechtalk" reminds me strongly
of Middle of Nowhere-era Orbital, in particular the
grinding synths of a track like "Spare Parts Express".
Tomas Andersson is represented twice, with "Happy Happy"
and the Tiga remix of "Washing Up". The former is a loping,
irresistibly sunny track, with Latin-influenced drum
programming and bloopy pseudo-acid straight from the world's
dopiest 303. "Washing Up" is surprisingly subtle for a Tiga
remix, building from a simple beat with the studied intensity
of early Daft Punk, complete with a simple recurring melodic
phrase that waxes and wanes in intensity for the entirety of
the track length.
Paul Kalkbrenner's "Deep" is a throwback of sorts. It's got
a deep proto-trance feel that indicates it could have probably
been a hit record twelve years ago at Renaissance -- if it
were five minutes longer, that is. Kalkbrenner makes another
appearance with "Gebrunn Gebrunn", which sounds as if it were
made to be played to a capacity crowd at the world's most
intense warehouse rave, with stomping drums and squeaking acid
elements peaking out of the mix.
"Land of Milk & Honey" by Ben Klock is a harder,
slightly more IDM-inspired sound, utilizing the kind of
skinned, brutal beats you'd expect from a group like Autechre
in a pleasantly danceable context. Sylvie Marks & Hal 9000
get full points for the compilation's best song title, with
the Dexter remix of "My Computer Eats an Acid Trip". The track
itself sounds less like an acid trip than acid house, however,
with a vintage electro beat reminiscent of Trax's best acid
moments. Feadz "2Kind4U" is a departure, a downtempo acid
track built atop an arpeggiated synthesizer line -- sort of
like DJ Shadow's "Organ Donor" with a 303. I think there's
also a Flavor Flav sample involved, but I may be mistaken.
Mochipet's "Beautiful Belonius Bits" seems like a conscious
homage to mid-era Aphex Twin ("Bucephalus Bouncing Ball",
anyone?), complete with the clicking sounds of a child's toy
set against harsh, complex IDM breakbeats. It is followed by
Modeselektor's "Fake Emotion", which breaks the album's
template entirely by offering an example of shuffling, click
& paste dub, complete with a vocal performance by Paul St.
Hilaire.
If there was any doubt that 2005 was a banner year for
techno, just take Camping 2 and put it in a stack with
recent label comps from Kompakt and Ghostly International.
Tell me that's not an awesome pile of electronic goodness.
Furthermore, I'd have to say that Camping 2 edges ahead
of the aforementioned discs by virtue of Ellen Allien's skill
as a label boss -- a skill that has enabled her to put
together one of the strongest, most diverse line-ups in the
whole of the electronic music world. All killer, no filler.
— 5 January 2006