

Mochipet - Uzumaki
Normally music that is happy makes me angry. Music that most
people would consider happy music is music that makes me wish to
destroy that makes me wish to kill. The US military may have in the
past (and present) experimented with psychedelic drugs to create the
ultimate killing machine, a drug crazed homicidal soldier that feels
no pain, no desire other than the driving need to hunt, kill, and
smash his enemy. Had they experimented on me, and instead of drugs
used happy music, music that was positive, music that let you know
that everything is all peachy keen and wonderful, they would have
succeeded in their goal.
Mochipet is the closest thing to happy that I can listen to
without my brain swirling in a mass of pounding, insanity driven
madness. However, this may be because Mochipet's latest album
Uzumaki is a bizarrely twisted sort of happy music. It combines
poppy idm with traditional Japanese music, orchestral flows with cut
up beats, and smooth ambient with crushing bass. The result is a
contagiously comic masterpiece that keeps me bopping in my seat.
The CD peaks (into brilliance) at two tracks, Lobha and Polka
Electronic Death Country (Otto Von Schirach Redux). Lobha represents
the highpoint of "Quirky Mochipet" vs "Powerful Bass Mochipet". The
first time I heard Lobha, the bass kicked in and I nearly caused a
car accident, it caught me so much by surprise. Polka Electronic
Death Country (Otto Von Schirach Redux), on the other hand, turns
the absurdity level up to the breaking point, much as the name
alludes to.
A brilliant album for anyone who is looking for something a
little different.
Squid @ Nov.
2004