Yes, fine, there's clearly something educated and possibly even overengineered about the clicks and beeps which get woven into densely cerebral pseudo-songs by Autechre, the British duo that has been blazing so many trails in experimental electronic music since the '90s. Even the kooky name given to the genre they inadvertently defined reflects this: "intelligent dance music," it was called, which really just means songs crafted more for focused listening than for clubs and dancing, elaborate synthesizer and drum machine programming that lives and dies by nuance and subtlety instead of thunderous downbeats. We find here the difference between "technical" and merely "techno"--most musicians will fire up some audio software and use it to lay down their tunes. These guys write their own software first.
This can all seem pretty intimidating to listeners. The most common response to those sounds often seems to be fleeing in terror from the risk of emotional attachment and writing off Autechre as too brainy for their own good--architectural blueprints infused with a deeper meaning that most of us simply can't grasp. It's difficult music, sure, but it's not dead and dry--New York's city streets are grids too, as are the windows that line them, and nobody sees fit to interrogate the heart palpitations of a wide-eyed newcomer experiencing those for the first time, right? Most of us don't actually use those roads to get around so much as the convoluted, jam-packed, and occasionally dangerous network of tunnels buried beneath them, and those concrete right-angled street corners are all peppered with students, halal carts, drunkards, cops, cabbies--a blanket of humanity laid over the structure that keeps it all totally exhilarating.
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