TWILIGHT CIRCUS – DUB PLATE SELECTION – FULL ALBUM
http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/dub-plate-selection/id19800308
http://www.facebook.com/twilightcircusdub
http://twilightcircus.com/
Twilight Circus Dub Sound System come again with another modern take on classic Jamaican dub. They take the liquid feel of dub instruments to the next level, with atomspherric reverbations, live sitars and flutes as well as the traditional configurations of drum, bass and keyboards. New dub recordings often make use of the soud aesthetics that were pioneered in the ’70s and early ’80s to create sinister Illbient soundscapes but carely does an artist relatively new to the form recapture the uplifting yet haunted feel of early dub as well as Twilight does. “Sir Dub Plate” is particlarly adept at creating a positive vibe with wonderfully juicy reverb- drenched organs while “Beneath The valley Of The Dub” is a more melancholic affair with a wistful sitat dwelling beneath the echos of bass and drums. This satisfying DIY release may be somewhat hard to come by as it was released by the mastermind behind the music. Ryan Moore (formerly of the Legendary Pink Dots), himself, but is well worth searching for. All in all, this is a wonderfully spaced-out modern, dub odyssey into higher levels of eerie relaxation.
Daniel Chamberlin, URB
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A dub plate is a unique acetate platter created specifically for a DJ sound system, but with the elementally deep bass generated by Twilight Circus’ Ryan moore (a Canadian expatriate living in the Netherlands, who essentially is Twilight Circus), “tectonic plates” seems a more appropriate term. The bottomless bass and rubbery tempo of this music conjure images of massive primordial forces, the menace of a slow-moving lava flow. These dub plates originate from twilight Circus’ dub performances, representing both new material and unreleased remixes of older tracks. They navigate the intersecting sound-spaces of reggae-patterned dub, jungle and ambient electronica, cavorting through cavernous reverb, otherworldly electronic effects and the ocassional deconstructed melodic fragment. Delightfully, this is no gratuitous elecronica samplefest – in fact it’s not a samplefest at all – because Moore avoids the usual drum boxes and electronic toys in favor of fat bass lines and real drums (supplied ob three plates by no less than Sly Dunbar). So there’s blood and sweat amongst the circuitry.
– John Baxter, Option