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| Reviews Summary |
| A knob-twiddler extrordinaire - Under The Radar / Wonderful stuff - NME / A resplendent sound collage - Remix / There will be few better soundtracks to this summer - Stylus / This is IDM that never loses the listener in its tangents. - BPM / A genre-confounding tale of the unexpected from the deftest of techno artisans - Mojo |
| Reviews | |
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| Re-tooled for a US release, this double-disc set culls together Pedro's self-titled debut and the Fear and Resilience star-studded remix CD. When I say that this sounds like Andrew Segovia with turntables, I mean that in best possible light. James Rutledge (the man behind the Pedro moniker) arranges his songs with delicacy, surprise and a constant network of terraced rhythm. On "123" he lets the beats pile on top of one another like an expressway accident, unthreading them back into listless ambience. Several songs traffic in Middle Easten instrumentation and rhythm, such as "These Pixels Weave a Person," managing the odd juxtaposition of Brian Eno and a James Bond theme. For fans of Fennesz, Mum and Four Tet, this is IDM that never loses the listener in its tangents. - BPM |