Magda killed it last night. Despite a few turntable difficulties that she
navigated through with poise, her set was nearly flawless and covered a lot
of ground. I caught almost all three hours. Lots of glitchy/clicks 'n cuts
material, both techno and electro, but some older bleepy techno thrown in
for good measure too. She went through one phase where she played a lot of
very bizarre electro not long before Hawtin came on that was unlike anything
I've heard before. Favorite cut of the night was (I think a remix of) "I
ain't f*cked all week". The crowd was really responsive and energetic, much
moreso than I would have expected for the riskiness of the material she
played, and older (less raverific) than on my previous trips to The End.

Unfortunately, I missed most of Clark Warner, who on any other night would
have been my first choice, but I don't think I've seen Magda play in three
years and I really wanted to give Hawtin another chance in a receptive
venue, especially after all the great reviews I've heard recently. When I
ran over to the lounge to get beer, Warner was playing excellent stuff, from
some early industrial stuff to Burial Mix to disco. Nothing less than the
eclecticism you would expect.

Hawtin came on to a frenzied crowd. Magda could not have set him up much
better, and she played a little into his set, which only increased the
anticipation. I didn't recognize many of the tracks he was playing, but it's
evident he's exited the pure locked-groove mode. I guess 'minimal' is the
best way to describe it, although he does so much effects work the end
result is anything but. I must tip my hat, b/c this was *by far* the best
track selection I've heard him play, especially for the first hour or so. I
was very into it, and I am not generally a fan. If I was to give a really
harsh criticism, I'd say that *at times* the effects overload can create a
'progressification' of the music, with similar peaks and valleys. However,
there were plenty of times when the effects work was stunning, and his
general mastery of his gear is unequalled. Sometimes his hands move at Mills
speed, adjusting buzillions of settings in a few seconds. I'd be interested
to hear reviews of how the rest of the set went, since I reluctantly left
around 3:00 to find my way to the closest bus stop. It was nice that it was
pretty full, but not teaming in there. It was a really comfortable audience
size.

Final Scratch through a Sony VAIO seemed to work very well if not perfectly,
for what it's worth. Also of note: they were using his old effects unit, the
Ensoniq DP-4 rather than the Lexicon b/c that one broke. Didn't miss a beat
if you ask me. This ought to shock some people: the record at the back of
one of his crates was Pepe Braddock's 'Burning'. I would've really loved to
hear him play that. Also cool: The End has the sound settings for regular
DJs permanently programmed into their system - you could tell, and Hawtin
was really punishing it (in a good way). Hawtin also did this thing where he
would play two records on top of each other. I assume he was plopping one on
top of a final scratch record or something, but couldn't tell. Any thoughts
on what this was all about?

Oh, and if anyone ever decides to take me up on the cigarette butt earplug
recommendation I made a while back, be sure not to push them in too far!

Tristan
=====
Text/Mixes: http://phonopsia.tripod.com
Music: http://www.mp313.com
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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