Horsie (Twilight Circus)



-Antron S. Meister- www.freq.freeserve.co.uk

Twilight Circus Dub Sound System- Horsie
Label: M Records Format: CD

Ryan Moore's fifth solo album as Twilight Circus is billed as
"Dub-Rock-Electronica," which is about an accurate decription as needed - but
with the emphasis as ever on the bass. Moore (who also plays bass with The
Legendary Pink Dots, and is likely to batter audiences with inflatable hammers,
while dressed in feather boas) has drawn a lot from the UK Dub scene of Adrian
Sherwood and On-U Sound as well as the traditional producers such as King
Tubby. The former's influence is apprent in "Romy", which opens the set with a
booming, majestic bass and a shimmering accretion of analogue synth tendrils.
The liquid electric pianos and keyboards which reverberate throughout several
tracks (especially around the skanking stepping of "Kik" or the marvellously
dynamic "Binshaker Dub") show the influence of the latter more, and the whole
is all the more remarkable for the fact that it's a one-man studio band making
such a lively, organic noise.

The Rock side peeks through at first in the title track's guitars, though the
Reggae groove is still predominent - there's more of a post-Rock feel to the
Spanish guitars here, and comes fully to the fore on the slightly epic swell of
"Oats," which verges on the soaring at times, and occasionally resembles Trans
Am at their most dubbed-out, or the relaxed expansion of "Carousel" and the
slowly recursing "Rock Salt," which blends the genres most successfully. Still,
the drums and the bass are the most important thing about Horsie; solid swells
of warmth and circling patterns of rimshot, echo and the steady heartbeat.
Moore is obviously in love with the sound of Seventies Jamaica, but not so
respectful as to restrict himself to mere reproduction.

The mood swings from the contemplative to the militant and back again via
blissed-out in the most varied Twilight Circus release yet, honed live on
serveral major tours. There are many Dub albums worthy of a bass-bin shake or
ten, but Moore maintains his high standards as one of the quality acts which
raise the genre above mere repetition and also avoids pastiche. With future
recordings likely to feature vocalists for the first time, the expansion of the
TC sound seems likely to spread into new areas. Horsie bursts with vibrant
rhythms and shimmering electronics, lovingly packaged in individual sleeves by
Moore - and how many records have fluorescent crayon covers?

-Antron S. Meister-
www.freq.freeserve.co.uk