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Review: Burial is back. Yes, after four years away, he's not only ambushed us with THAT collab with Four Tet and Thom Yorke, but now he springs a three track EP on Kode9's Hyperdub imprint upon us too! The eponymous 'Street Halo' is a delectable, crackling 4/4 roller with buckets of emotion and texture. In other words, it's the Burial of 'Archangel' fame, which we all know and love. 'NYC' is the urban retort, bristling with echoes of thunder, murmurs of traffic in the distance, jingling keys, it symbolizes the minutiae of everyday existence and is underpinned by slouching beats with a small, eerie and discernibly mournful voice wailing on top.
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Final track, 'Stolen Dog' pairs smudgy piano keys with terse, ticking beats, all shrouded in an ethereal shimmer, much like Burial himself. Review: Given that his sound has now been referenced by countless imitators, it's testament to Burial's enduring appeal that the announcement of a new EP on a Sunday in February was enough to shake the online music press out of their collective stupor. As an EP it more than stands up to his previous work, and it may even be better than last year's Street Halo EP - where the brilliance of the title track left the EP quite top-heavy, there's no such complaints on Kindred. If UK garage was the touchpoint for his earlier releases, this EP sees Burial further developing a sound that has few obvious points of comparison, whether it's the savage, gnarled bassline of the title track, or the shambling house of 'Loner', characterized by its hollowed out arpeggio and ambient crackle. But it's 'Ashtray Wasp' that provides the most breathtaking moment, seeing the producer using the distinct musical language he's created and bringing confident melodic elements into play. Of course such descriptions seem trivial when trying to describe this EP - even for Burial it's far beyond what his peers and imitators could ever imagine making. Review: Burial's first multiple-track release since 'Rival Dealer' three years ago: 'Young Death' takes the lead with weave of deep, scratchy and evocative human textures while soulful vocal shards yearn and flutter over soft faraway beats.
'Nightmarket' takes an even more introspective meander through the shadowy unknown with fractured arpeggios, distant whispers and thick graininess that envelops almost overwhelmingly. As forward, unusual and unique as ever, Burial remains in a league of his own. Review: For all his innovation, Burial has historically shied away from delivering full-throttle, mind-altering club bangers. Certainly, we can't remember him serving up anything as rhythmically intense as the two dystopian techno slammers showcased on this EP.
Both feature many of his usual sonic trademarks - oodles of vinyl crackle, end-of-days aural textures and creepy ambient electronics - but are underpinned by bombastic 4/4 beats rather than sparse, post-dubstep rhythms. 'Pre-Dawn', a dense and incredibly intense affair, is the more energetic and instant of the two, though weirder and looser 'Indoors', which contains some pitched-up rave-era vocal samples and woozy riffs amongst its highlights, is also very impressive. Review: Dubstep legend Burial is back with more street level sound excursions through the dark underbelly of London after midnight. Awe inspiring sound design meets urban music deconstructions again on these two riveting cuts.
Feel the tension, fear and suspense on the first sonic journey that is 'Subtemple', a beatless journey that will have you on the edge of your seat from start to finish. Second offering 'Beachfires' sounds more like the Burial we know; this one is absolutely brooding and atmospheric: the kind of dark ambient paranoia with GCHQ surveillance in mind: circa 2026. Review: Following up great releases by Mana, Cooly G and Lee Gamble recently, Kode9's esteemed Hyperdub imprint returns with UK dubstep hero Burial.
He offers up yet more of his signature style: brooding and semi-dystopian street sounds for journeys home on the night bus. His new offering 'Rodent' features a familiar R&B vocal loop that has been pitch shifted to an eerie extent and backed by a thick garage bassline and gritty/saturated low bitrate rhythm. The label boss himself steps up to deliver a jagged and off-kilter footwork rendition. It's full of spitfire drum patterns, rapid fire bass pulsations and the vocals are accelerated to a stupefying stutter: this one's totally off the chain!
Review: All we can say for this one is wow. There are few producers within the UK that are able to drum up as much hype and anticipation regarding their forthcoming releases as Burial, a true gem. As a team up with the legendary Hyperdub, this was always going to be special, as we take a peek at the first track 'Claustro' to kick us off. This one sounds like a perfect cross between nostalgia and progress, with jittery UKG drum switch ups and spooky layered vocals running wild. Next we land on the stunning soundscapes of 'State Forest', an incredible array of spacey synthesizers and sub tones, providing an excellent accompaniment to the title track.
Review: As we approach the end of the decade, an era, we can look back on what we now understand to have truey shaped musical evolutions. That was done without saying at the end of the 2000s thanks to Burial and the tectonic influence his debut album and Untrue LP had on popular culture. In this 2011-19 time period it's been Keysound, Nonplus and Text that have since shared the music of Burial outside of his known home, with Hyperdub collecting this selection of the artist's music as part of the label's 15th anniversary run of releases.
Hazily so, this compilation shines a light on the trail blazed by Burial with productions like 'Street Halo', 'Come Down To Us' and 'NightMarket', to Burials two most recent cuts 'Claustro' and 'State Forest'. Review: The third instalment of Hyperdub's expansive tenth anniversary series is probably the most surprising volume yet. Having already celebrated their roster's dancefloor credentials and song writing skills, HYperdub 10.3 suggests the UK operation has plenty of artists capable of crafting ambient, experimental electronics. In practice, that means two discs of woozy, dreamy, sparse and occasionally melancholic beatless fare - all drifting synths, dusty textures and far-sighted electronics. While you'd expect Dean Blunt, The Bug or Burial to produce quality ambience (the latter's 'Night Bus' being a compilation highlight), it's more of a surprise to find pitch-perfect contributions from Darkstar, Kode9 (the creept 'Pink Sham Pain Down The Drain') and Cooly G, whose 'Trying' is a comforting wash of spacey chords, ricocheting hits and fluttering vocal samples.
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Review: The ten year celebrations from Hyperdub continue apace here with the second of four planned label compilations arriving with the stated intention of casting 'some sunshine' over the label's sometimes 'dread filled reputation'. Arriving on just one disc this time round as opposed to two, the fourteen tracks nevertheless features productions from DVA, Morgan Zarate, Cooly G, Jessy and Burial among other Hyperdub regulars, who are joined by the vocal talents of Dam-Funk, Fatima and others. Perhaps most exciting is the inclusion of an unreleased track from the defunct partnership of Dean Blunt & Inga Copeland; fans of the latter will also be intrigued by Kode9?s 'Lies Lies', which features the talents of Inga in her new solo guise, copeland.
Review: With 19 Hyperdub artists on show here, this intrigue of a collaboration to help Hyperdub commemorate its 15th year of operation sees the label connect with late night television network Adult Swim. The likes of Burial, Ikonika, Fatima Al Qadiri and Kode9 all sign in with tracks specifically made for the compilation, with stand out numbers coming from Skratch DVA via the toxic and percussive 'Baka' alongside the white noise crackles and subtle dub and industrial techno grooves of Nazar's 'Unruly'. Other oddball highlights include Mana's 'Climbing The Walls' and the slow march of Doona Kanda's 'Perfume'. Late night TV has never sounded so good. The shadowiest of all the contemporary UK producers except for Apex Twin and, perhaps worthy enough of a comparison to the man, in relation to the UK electronic scene. This is his new album, Ultra, and we're glad to see him back on the legendary Hyperdub, now a label surely as important as other British staples like Warp or Rephlex.
He's back doing what he does best on here, and that means future-leaning grime concoctions with an added layer of his singular mystique. 'Reflection' opens up with jarring drones and sporadic gun shots and, before we know it, we're driven heads-first into a cyclone of sounds and influences on tunes like 'Fly 2' featuring Banshee, and 'E.S.P'. 'Glass' offers some trippy, stripped-down techno, but the special material comes though the collaborations on here: one glorious bass excursion alongside Burial called 'Sweetz', the frenetic 'Quandary' with Darkstar, and the supremely deep collaboration with London's Rezzett duo tagged simply as 'SDYF'. This is one mother of an album.

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