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ARTIST
TITLE
Tripolarity
FORMAT
CD
LABEL
CATALOG #
AMAM 015CD
AMAM 015CD
GENRE
RELEASE DATE
8/2/2011
Sardinia's Alessio Mereu has made quantum leaps in his DJ/production career: after releasing an impressive string of EPs for respected labels like Contexterrior, Tuning Spork and CMYK, many top-name DJs took notice, including Dubfire and Duke Dumont (who picked some of Mereu's tracks for their respective Cocoon and Fabric mix CD compilations). In early 2010, he set up AMAM, which has quickly become one of the most popular techno/house imprints in Italy, and as savvy dance music enthusiasts are catching on, throughout Europe as a whole. Now, with his debut full-length album, Alessio Mereu captures the magical energy of the club and distills it into a personal statement, resulting in the title Tripolarity, which reflects his three different musical "personalities": warm-blooded house, sinister techno and -- a side not heard from him before -- experimental abstractions that ignore the dancefloor altogether. To ease into the more kinetically-charged numbers, the album begins with "First Pole," with an ebb and flow of breakbeats and sci-fi synths. Then we enter 120 bpm territory with "Only You Know Who I Really Am," showing off Mereu's funkier side with flourishes of purple paisley. "Purity" flirts with eastern tambours and textures, followed by the contrasting candlelit warmth of "The Perfect Lover" with an anonymous yet expressive voice that floats somewhere between enamored and heartbroken. On "French Connection," Berlin's Bloody Mary contributes, together offering a piece marked by rackety percussion and a siren that echoes a wolf howling at the full moon. The album's most cerebral moment happens with "Second Pole," which is more of a digitally-sculpted art object for the ears rather than what we might refer to as music. Then, "Hypochondriac" shows symptoms of dancemania (restlessness, the shuffles, incessant hand-clapping), followed by the more low-key, tip-toeing suspense of "Distraught." The pumping "Lucky Sinners" was made together with fellow Italians and relative newcomers Naph & Carlo Caronti, and -- punctuated by the computer jazz interlude of "OK, Now Stop And Restart" -- the dusty thump of "The Case Of Mr. Bishop" was produced with Parisian DJ Acumen. The final club-functional track "Survived Boy," weaves in his experimental tendencies for a radiating, buzzing tech-house number. After such a multifaceted audio journey into the world of Alessio Mereu, the album denouements with "Third Pole," an introspective moment soundtracked by digital water dripping from the liquid sky. As a whole, Tripolarity navigates through a spectrum of emotions, with a passionate drive to keep moving forward.
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