Castlefield
Melody Maker
article, 6 July 1996
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Nowadays, arenas
aren't big enough to hold their sound and so they're appearing here, bouncing lasers off
surrounding buildings like crazed Jean-Michel Giros and employing Railtrack carriages to
pass by on overhead viaducts as a surreal extra to The Maddest Show On Earth. Somewhere in
the chaos, the three tenors of Nineties sax-led electronica are huddled on a tiny stage,
blasting out a succession of top tunes. Some sound a bit like Orbital and Phuture, but
also like Acker Bilk, Glenn Miller, ancient tribal drum tattoos and Seveties beardos
Weather Report, mixed together and hurled in a rocket ship marked destination Venus,
20001. Facing this crowd, 808 aren't The Shamen but shamen, dazzling the gurners
with a freeform liquid techno-jazz that seems to drip down from heaven itself.
Nevertheless, they do have their very own Mr C. Darren Partington looks like a trendy
postman and, in keeping with 808's musical sensibility, incites us to form Krautrock
groups - "Make some Neus, Manchester!!" - and every sentence ends with the
word "maarrvellous". The Leonard Sachs of techno! Did I mention sax? The cue for
808's Graham Massey to take up his trusty alto and invite huge cheers of nostalgia and
recognition for "Pacific State", the best rave anthem ever, but
certainly not so scared as to tum down an extended jam/coda with a guest spot from Miles
Davis' ghost. Did mention guest spots? The Mad Show has them as well (but the less said about MC TUNES' face the better), with LOUISE from Lamb coming on all alien Ella Fitzgerald and M DOUGHTY from Soul Coughing doing that old industrial "Terminator" routine with consideralbe aplomb. All that's needed now is a finale and ye olde "Cubik" manages to sound like a million "Dr Who" themes rolled into one, while a load of laser "808 State" logos flash up on buildings and confirm that for tonight, at least, 808 have taken over Manchester. And, let's face it, somebody should. Maarrvellous. DAVE SIMPSON |
Critical
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