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Just a Souvenir | 
enlarge | Artist: Squarepusher Label: Warp Records Category: Music
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $16.75 You Save: $3.23 (16%)
New (17) Used (1) from $16.75
Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 96711
Media: LP Record Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 12.2 x 12 x 0.2
UPC: 801061016111 EAN: 0801061016111 ASIN: B001FY2LCA
Release Date: October 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Star Time 2 | | • | The Coathanger | | • | Open Society | | • | A Real Woman | | • | Delta-V | | • | Aqueduct | | • | Potential Govaner | | • | Planet Gear | | • | Tensor in Green | | • | The Glass Road | | • | Fluxgate | | • | Duotone Moonbeam | | • | Quadrature | | • | Yes Sequitur |
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| Customer Reviews:
If Musicisrottedonenote was Squarepusher's jazz fusion record... December 8, 2008 Just a Souvenir is his punk fusion record, and I'm quite certain that no one has ever sounded like this before. At points, Tom is clearly imbellishing on his bassy jazz sounds of yore (see Feed Me Weird Things and Hard Normal Daddy), but as the record progesses, we find ourselves listening to an alien sound, one that seems to combine the efforts of Einsturzende Neubauten, Kraftwerk, Miles Davis, and Dead Kennedys. The gritty production and deep textures give way to moments of immense beauty, deep and dark jazz, and some of the only electronic music that has ever been suitable for a mosh pit. I won't forget to mention the almost dangerously catchy "A Real Woman", which is a sweet mixture of British snot punk and electrobot drill n' bass. To put it plainly, Jenkinson could have done well to release this album on Mike Patton's Ipecac Label, as it would sit just as well next to a Fantomas release as it would an Autechre release. Just a Souvenir is absolutely worth a purchase to the lovers of Squarepusher and all things experimental. It's not a bad starting point for someone who wants to hear electronic music with the added flavor of live instruments, either. Well done, sir! I can't wait for the new EP due out in January!
Beautiful! December 2, 2008 This album is Squarepusher's 'Druqks'. Absolutely beautiful melodious jazzy guitar work, that leaves you (most clocks under two minutes) wanting more (like Aphex twin's piano work in Druqks). Drill and bass of different kind (not annoying kind). Synths and bongo work thrown in. Unpredictable. Twists and turns in drill and bass tunes. In state of the art sound system you will even appreciate more, when you hear texture and layers of electronic and acoustic instruments sounds free of jitter induced high freq shrills. Warmer recording quality helps a great deal. Great step forward for Squarepusher.
This is not a good squarepusher November 11, 2008 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
I have considered Squarepusher to be one the more exciting and interesting things going on in music this past decade. I was also happy to come across an LP version of this album which includes a very cool poster with a very cool and far out essay by Square himself.
But alas...the great possibilities of this album are not realized. I see some other reviewers liked it but I thought it totally sucked. It sounds like [...] Surfers meets King Crimson micro waved with a thin slice of weak house music sounds. It has Sqaurepusher's sense of humor and I also admire artists that try new things and try to surprise their audience but I didn't like this at all. Some of it even sounds like a crappy Black Sabbath sample looping. Awful.
..and he changes yet again... October 30, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
You never know what your going to get with a Squarepusher release. 'On The Corner' style jazz, drill n bass, bouncy Big-Beat...and the list goes on ad finitum. I will say that Just A Souvenir is much easier to enjoy than it is to describe. I'm sure Tom gets a laugh out of creating music that the media cannot pigeon-hole let alone describe. There is a very late 1970's / early 1980's sound that permeates the entire release. It brings to mind Pink Floyd's 'Animals', Styx's 'Mr. Roboto', and even some Weather Report. It's a healthy mix of instruments where Squarepusher breathes life into the electronic instruments like he's performing CPR, and yet somehow makes the organic instruments sound cold and electronic.
Do you remember the band in the animated video of Daft Punk's 'One More Time'? THIS is what I think they would have really sounded like.
Headphone Commute Review September 28, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
With his twelfth album, Tom Jenkinson takes even a further departure from his staple Squarepuher sound of broken beats atop slapped bass and twisted triggers of the Amen Break. Warp's own store, Warpmart, categorizes the album as "Drum and Bass / Breakcore / Electronica", but I assure you, nothing could be further from the truth! (kind of misleading actually). Just A Souvenir is more in the realms of experimental rock and future jazz, with a touch of electronic treatment and a few very tasteful drills, where Jenkinson continues evolving (as a true musician should) in his experimentation with abstract accompaniment of acoustic instruments (mostly his custom built 6 string bass guitar once again) and drums that effortlessly morph between organic and digital. With Just A Souvenir, Jenkinson introduces an element of early garage rock, with vocoder and all, and reminds us once again of his amazing instrumentalist skills. First thing's first - I like it! And after only a few listens, the melodies come back haunting me later during the day. A true sign that I will return to the album! Just A Souvenir opens up with a track titled, Star Time 2 (makes you wonder about its first part) with a fun funky synth/clavichord melody and light beats. From then on Squarepusher moves into improvisational, jazzy, and effected bass slaps over barely comprehensible vocoder blurbs. All of it is truly of psychedelic nature with sparking notes in a kaleidoscope of white, red, green, blue and yellow. On his site, Jenkinson explains that "this album started as a daydream about watching a crazy, beautiful rock band play an ultra-gig." He then goes on describing his fluorescent trip which included an Eskimo on the drums and a classical guitar player that could speed up and slow down the time in his vicinity. I recommend you read up on on Tom's blurred delirium before embarking on this trip. Then bathe yourself in this album which is the interpretation of Jenkinson's memory of the daydream which he held on to as a souvenir. Running at (only) 45 minutes long, Just A Souvenir picks up where Hello Everything left off, becoming more organic with every track. If that sounds like your cup of tea, then you'll enjoy this rubber band trip through time. Only the way Squarepusher could. Just A Souvenir hits the streets on October 27th (2008), and is currently available as a digital download (in FLAC as well) from bleep dot com.
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