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Three Note B S (MFPR live) Featuring Man From Planet Risk

from Escaping Chixalub (deluxe) by Man From Planet Risk

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about

A live recording of MFPR that is included despite being warts and all: a bonus track to get the metal feel of hearing us in person.

At a gig just after we finished playing music, a woman burst into the venue dressed in a nightgown and pajamas looking frazzled. She asked, "who and what was that?" I told her MFPR and apologized if we caused any problems. She said not at all but had to find the source of the noise to learn more. We handed her a CD and she vanished. (Hopefully she finds this updated release of Excaping Chixalub!)

Here is a review of the show by Tom Moody:

"The Man from Planet Risk debuted last night at the The Lucky Cat in Williamsburg. Their CD Escaping Chixalub is what might be called "downtempo horrorcore" (or The Music Formerly Known As Triphop--more on this below) but the live set, substituting drums for old skool hip hop beat machines, changed the feel of the sound quite a bit. Live, drummer Cave Precise seems to be imitating a beatbox or drum instruction cassette, except he's trying as hard as he can to destroy the drums. His manic rigidity and intensity tipped the sound over from the hiphop column to rock-and-roll, a kind of minimalist psychedelic metal. "Minimalist" because each "song" is basically just a really cool metalloid riff--a big ungainly slab of doomstruck sound--played long enough for the audience to get the point and then ended.

For all its echo-y horror soundtrack atmospherics and Black Sab-like bass riffs, the CD is much lighter: the beats are spryer, with turntable twists & jazzy piano riffs livening up the doom and gloom. I mentioned triphop because the sound is truly trippy: keyboardist/laptopper Jenghizkhan approaches music like a painter (and is in fact a visual artist, exhibiting under his real name John Parker), taking advantage of all the filtering and timestretching capabilities of modern keyboard tech to make layers of artfully mangled sound. Imagine Ennio Morricone eclectism shot through with the kind of dreamy, smeared psychedelia of San Francisco post-punkers Chrome, or the European hardcore tech of The Mover set to a hiphop beat. But also none of the above."

tommoody.us

credits

from Escaping Chixalub (deluxe), released January 1, 2004

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St Celfer New York, New York

*improvisational compositions on glitch-tronics, treading failure with counterblasts through the vanishing point

*there is a lot of noise today - we just need to hear the music within it

*American & Korean, floats between São Paulo, New York, and Seattle
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