Ufabulum - Squarepusher

Ufabulum

Squarepusher

  • Genre: Electronic
  • Release Date: 2012-05-14
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 10
  • Album Price: 9.9
  • ℗ 2012 Warp Records Limited
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Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
4001 Squarepusher 6:35
2
Unreal Square Squarepusher 5:17
3
Stadium Ice Squarepusher 4:21
4
Energy Wizard Squarepusher 3:48
5
Red In Blue Squarepusher 3:11
6
The Metallurgist Squarepusher 3:50
7
Drax 2 Squarepusher 7:22
8
Dark Steering Squarepusher 6:51
9
303 Scopem Hard Squarepusher 4:56
10
Ecstatic Shock Squarepusher 5:08

Reviews

  • Wow!!!

    5
    By Varcity23
    This guy is so underrated!
  • Brilliant

    5
    By slayer_87
    As always Squarepusher proves himself as the king of electronica!!!
  • Headphone Commute Review

    5
    By Headphone Commute
    I suppose Tom Jenkinson requires no introduction. Any child of electronica should be familiar with his contribution to the evolution of music since his debut, “Feed Me Weird Things” (Rephlex, 1996). And even though, Jenkinson joined the Warp family in 1997, way after Autechre and Aphex Twin, his Squarepusher sound is still one of the staple commodities of the British label, and electronic music itself. Those who somehow missed the era of Squarepusher’s Amen breaks and broken glitchy drums, need only to dig through his vast catalog to catch up. Among these, I highly recommend “Hard Normal Daddy” (1997), “Big Loada”, (1997), “Selection Sixteen” (1999), “Go Plastic” (2001), “Venus No. 17” (2004) and my personal favorite, “Do You Know Squarepusher” (2002). I would have preferred to stay away from regurgitating Jenkinson’s vast discography, especially since I consider him an artist prominent enough for you to know, but in this case the storyline is important to revisit, to traverse his ample sonic arc. At the peak of this curve, we find Squarepusher tweaking the knobs of destructive DSP boxes and slicing up drum loops into a dizzying typhoon of collapsing beats, to what back then, as a precursor to breakcore, felt to be the most mind-warping, accelerated music I have ever heard. With an added sprinkle of AFX-like banter, as is the case with one of my all-time favorite EPs, “My Red Hot Car” (2001), Squarepusher was unstoppable and without a doubt at the top of his game. Around 2004, for his “Ultravisor” release, Jenkinson began experimenting with live sound, layering many juxtaposed pieces with Spanish guitar and his very special fretted bass. The music began approaching future jazz territory, until in 2008, “Just A Souvenir” found Squarepusher’s sound all but unrecognizable among the leftfield, fusion, and art-rock riffs. For the latter, Jenkinson walked away from the computer monitor and performed all live takes, recording the instrumentals for entire tracks all the way through. The 2010 follow-up, in which Squarepusher introduced Shobaleader One‘s “d’Demonstrator”, left many fans confused, at times scratching their heads at the brand new chapter that Jenkinson began to write with his electro retro funk. Many walked away disheartened, leaving the album in a pile of flustered shameful dust. I managed to stay focused, following Jenkison’s development as a musician, always challenged with self-reinvention. Throughout these incredibly unique albums, I navigated every unanticipated turn with mild fascination, marvel and awe, until all of my feelings matured into a total appreciation of his sound. Yes, after admittedly numerous listens, I fell in love with the progression of Squarepusher, eventually doubting, like many others, that he would ever relapse to his [now old-skool] electronic ways. But with the release of his fifteenth studio album, my patience finally paid off! On “Ufabulum” Jenkins performs an acrobatic somersault, returning to his roots, while managing to fuse all of the taken detours together. The drills and breaks are back; the analog bass and digital effects are back, the synths and acid lines are back; even the titles of the tracks, like “303 Scopem Hard” all but flashback to the ‘original’ Squarepusher! Although the world’s fascination with dubstep does not appear to have deeply penetrated Squarepusher’s sound, the 16-bit arcade style lo-fi bleeps and plops comfortably settle beneath his yesteryear cutting edge sound. Jenkins maintains his tongue-in-cheek trance stabs and dark humor IDM just above the surface of serious commitment to intelligent programming and visionary sound design. The seemingly toy-like melodies on “Unreal Square” get drowned in simplistic drum machine patterns and dehydrating saw-tooth bass, until that almost-familiar lead line draws a parallel between two worlds, builds in a snare roll and ruptures into a cut-up post-break drum’n’bass, connecting one Squarepusher to the other. It’s Squarepusher remixing Squarepusher, if you will, combining all of the invented elements of the past, with not yet discovered production of the future.
  • squarepushed

    4
    By iballer
    Another Great ablum by prodigy bass player/ producer
  • 2 halves make 1 awesome whole

    5
    By Actual falcon
    This album is like a 2 part story. The first half is triumphant and BIG (4001, stadium ice) the second is like a dark battle of evil forces (drax2) I'm Convinced This record is telling a story we will never Know of. Classic pearsquasher here!!
  • Squares are Pushed, Really Pushed

    5
    By I am Jean-Philippe
    I thought that he was going to go all electro-funk again but no... this is an unrelenting wall of squawk buzz and blips with lovely synth harmonies and epic breaks. Solid and unrelenting programmed Squarepusher. It is as if his old self inspired his new self. "Stadium Ice" and "Energy Wizard" are a bit softer on the ears. "4001", "Dark Steering", and "Unreal Square" hit hard. If this sort of music is your thing, it is all spaced out well. This is not an album for people who have no patience for real electronic music.
  • The album is good!

    4
    By Naeem24
    I fail to understand reading reviews that I can spot from the first five words that the person didn't actually buy the CD, they just automatically talk down about the artist because they've already previously labeled them mundane. If you purchased the CD of this "so called" horrible artist, that makes you an idiot for buying their CD after already establishing you loathed their previous work. You obviously haven't read the "Tips for writing a great review" located right below the box. Here's a real review: The album is very cool, and definitely will satisfy long time fans of Tom Jenkinson with a return to his more traditional style. At times, it kind of makes you think you're playing a Sonic the Hedgehog video game with the punchy Synth lows of "4001" and catchy choruses such as the one found in "Stadium Ice." Check it out.
  • Enter Return and Run

    5
    By lazesummerstone
    Somehow this both seems like the MOST Squarepusher sounding album and the FRESHEST sounding album. He's definitely gone in the direction of sounding epic here- and where in albums like Ultravisitor, it seemed like you had to wade through a bunch of studies in soundscapes in order to get to a proper composed song, this one just jumps right in and delivers good stuff.
  • Fantastic.

    5
    By Purdyee
    I saw him in New York at Webster Hall, when he played through this album. I loved it then, and I love it now. Don't expect anything that sounds like typical sounds in the electronic genre right now, this is different and refreshing. I think of it as "glitchstep", because it's not really like anything else that I've heard in a long, long time.
  • SEGA!

    3
    By aeopmusic
    This is actually the new soundtrack to Sonic the Hedgehog 2012.

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