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			<title>Musiques Incongrues - Monolith - O.lamm</title>
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		<title>Monolith - O.lamm</title>
		<link>http://archives.musiques-incongrues.net/forum/discussion/9370/?Focus=101229#Comment_101229</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Jul 2015 12:46:48 +0200</pubDate>
		<author>Nils Gasp</author>
		<description>
			<![CDATA[<p>Disque réalisé en 2006, mais proposé à prix libre aujourd'hui. C'est vraiment très bien!</p>
<p><a href='https://f1.bcbits.com/img/a2057898374_10.jpg'>https://f1.bcbits.com/img/a2057898374_10.jpg</a></p>
<p><a href='https://olamm.bandcamp.com/album/monolith'>https://olamm.bandcamp.com/album/monolith</a></p>
<p>"Olivier Lamm, aka Odot, aka O.Lamm, has too many ideas and too many names. The 27-year-old glitch-pop experimentalist shares his European record label and broad-minded view of pop with Shugo Tokumaru, but the Frenchman's recordings are more frenetic and electronic-based than those of his Japanese peer (who has only mellowed since 2004 breakthrough Night Piece). On third proper full-length Monolith, released in the U.S. by Portland's Audio Dregs, O.Lamm overextends himself even further-- but more like a slinky than a bungee cord, so hooray no bloodshed.</p>
<p>It'd probably only be video game bloodshed, anyway. Monolith Mario-Paints laptop breakbeats, J-pop bleeps, and, somewhere, a Gameboy version of a Melvins riff into a delightfully seizure-inducing fantasy. The princess is in this castle, starting with Lullatone's Yoshimi Tomida on kaleidoscopic do-re-mi opener "La Chasse Aux Oiseaux". The real prize, however, is "Open Malice", featuring Paris trio Konki Duet's Zoe Wolf sounding beguilingly listless on a bass-heavy track that's brainy/zany enough for a dream collab between Cornelius and the Blow. "Genius Boy" casts another Konki Duet-er, Kumi Okamoto, in a Hypercolor aural cartoon. Oh, and Momus raps-- spitting words like "malarkey" darkly on ominous cut-and-paste "Syllabus of Errors".</p>
<p>O.Lamm mixes in some organic sounds, too. Sampled strings and disembodied vocal snippets drive the electro-funk plot of "The Macguffin". The wife of the computer voice from "Fitter Happier" gives way to trebly acoustic guitar on "Silviphoebia", while music-box chimes and spaced-out synths help mask a melody that's awkardly like "Good King Wenceslas". Sometimes O.Lamm follows his whims too far, as on "Electric Emily", an allusion to a William Vollmann story with yipping samples and murky percussion that irritate more than they exhilarate.</p>
<p>Since O.Lamm's whole deal is pixie stick-fueled excess-- jerky beats moving onto the next idea without ever quite settling into an easy groove-- his occasional excess excesses are pretty easily forgiveable. But I still can't help drooling over what he'd sound like if forced to work within more conventionally song-oriented limits, as he does here on "Open Malice" or on first YouTube video "Aerialist", which strings together enough vocal snippets to nearly resemble conventional verses. Monolith ends with a succession of voices, each asking, "Julie, what's the matter?" Dudes, this time I have no idea.</p>
<p>— Marc Hogan, February 8, 2007, <a href='http://www.pitchfork.com'>www.pitchfork.com</a></p>
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