Tuesday, January 24, 2006

The Return of Drexciya

1996 brought the importantly titled 'The Return of Drexciya' 12" EP on UR, but returning from where? It seems likely that it would be from their journey home. If so you would then expect this release to provide clues or information on this place, which it does not, instead we only have a warning. This cautionary tale hangs on the subtitle, 'You Don't Know What Lurks in the Fog'. The first part of the phrase comes from the last track on side A, 'You Don't Know', with the remainder of the text found in it’s entirety etched into the run out groove on the same side. The artwork continues this theme with a drawing of a lighthouse surrounded by fog. The aquatic theme is obvious, but what exactly lurks in fog near a lighthouse? Rocks of course, so now we have a metaphor for what we are dealing with. Rocks would certainly scupper the best made boats and likely end in death for anyone on board. So now we know the nature of the warning is of a potentially life-threatening situation.

Musically the EP begins in a very uncharacteristic way for Drexciya with who I presume is a friend of theirs called Smokey doing a rap, but basically just taking. This side is cut at 45 which gives his voice a helium induced quality which is easier to follow pitched down. Drexciya provide a slow droning sound which underlies his vocal that starts off, “Yeah dog check my mic, yo yo yo yo this is Smokey coming at you straight otta Detroit dog, giving it up for the Drexciya report, because I know it dog, man I seen these brothers man, walking down Grant? Avenue one day, and a brother got wronged." The rest of the rap is sadly largely unintelligible to my ears but I think what happens next in the story concerns some feat of heroism on the part of Drexciya with Smokey finishing up telling us to trust them. What this is all about and why it’s titled ’Smokey’s Illegitimate Report’ is anyone’s guess. It’s either a bit of fun on their part or maybe sets the tone for the coming lesson/report. It’s a strange start to a strange release.

‘The Return of Drexciya’ as a title and concept, in the title alone, does make sense in the way I’ve already explained but the reality of what’s contained on it doesn’t really follow on from Drexciya 1 - 5 and 'Aquatic Invasion'. Looking back over some notes I made awhile back when I was sketching out some idea’s about this EP I wrote that it was like Grava 4 without the punch-line. In a way this is Grava 4 in that it appears to be the final record in this instalment but it doesn’t conclude anything that went before it. What it does do is create more confusion which is only continued on the next release ‘Uncharted’. Does this mean I just can’t figure it out or does it have a meaning at all? I guess we’ll have to consider the rest of the tracks and artwork.

The title ‘Bang Bang’ brings to my mind that odd when you think about it child’s phrase ‘Bang, Bang, your dead’. But the track itself uses this phrase, with a male vocal, as nothing more than a percussive element along with a few similar vocalisations to the same effect. Musically it’s a light moment, minimal and effective, certainly not unpleasant but slight compared to what their capable of. ’Rublicks Cube’ is my favourite with some nice sweeping 303 action and a slowed down vocal saying the title over and over. At the end of the track with most of the music stripped away I detected a curious sadness in this repeated phrase which was not evident before this point, but that could just be me. Certainly Rublicks Cube does reference a puzzle which is exactly what we have been unravelling so far so maybe this is some acknowledgement of that on their part. Why they spelled it this way instead of Rubik might be them playing it safe for trade mark copyright reasons. ‘You Don’t Know’ itself is a fast paced electro workout using the classic Drexciya template with a vocal that may or may not be ‘You Float’. In fact it’s so indistinct I wouldn’t be too sure at all on that, but if you want something to sing along with it then that works as good as any. There’s also some wind effects close to the end of the track that sound like someone blowing on a microphone, hey, I’ve done this myself, it works. On the aquatic tip the music is credited as being surfaced by Drexciya and apart from an artwork credit to Frankie C. Fultz there is no other information other than the standard UR label text.

Beyond that we only have the artwork of side B to consider and this might be the closest we get to a resolution of what this is all about. Two eyes stare at us from clouds or fog over a choppy looking sea. Within the pupils are drawn some symmetric lines which could be anything really but they imply knowledge/wisdom in this figure. This may represent Drexciya as a body returning with knowledge from home. This also might be the ‘Sighting in the Abyss’ from the ‘Aquatic Invasion’ EP. Whatever it is it represents a hopeful sign emerging from the abyss/fog to guide us over the life-threatening rocks. That might simply be what this EP’s part in the story is saying, if you have come this far trust us to take you the rest of the way as we have just returned and can now act as your guide. Even Smokey tells us to trust them, the old man voice of wisdom metaphor used on ‘Wave Jumper’ also went some way to build up some trust and reassure us. For sure something big is being asked of us here, a leap of faith is being requested. Certainly the next release speaks for itself in that we are entering ‘Uncharted’ territory. Can we turn back, knowing what we now know have we even got that option anymore, how can we turn back? I never thought I’d find a context for this quote which comes from Martin Seymour-Smith describing the essence of what the gnostic Gospel of Truth is saying but here goes, “Help those dead to reality who want to awaken, to wake up, feed those hungry for knowledge of truth, for you (those awakened by gnosis) are the intelligent ones. Do not return to the old chattering parts of yourself. Do not go back to your old vomit. You have destroyed evil in you – do not fall into it again. Do the will of God for you come from God.” Maybe I'm going too far but this is basically asking how can we can possibly go backwards after coming so far and learning so much, why would we want to? Maybe this sort of extreme sentiment will be more relevant during the Storm series as it's promise is nothing less than Utopia, but for many the promise of 'Home', the ideal of it, what we imagine of it, would be enough.

Back in the real world we are also entering a time period here which concerns a subject I can only ever speculate about. The subject being James Stinson's health problems which he felt were so extreme that he had to take a break after The Quest. Perhaps he also saw a parallel in his own life with this EP, visualising the fog as his unknown future, the rocks as his health problem, his belief in God, Drexciya and himself as the guide he should place his trust in, the return in this context being his own hoped for return to health/life. This might also be way off the mark and the concept here might just be another business as usual EP made before any health problems occurred or maybe if he was already experiencing them it just didn't bother him and he kept going in the same manner he would while seeing through the later Storm series which also must have been made under an increasing awareness of his own mortality. This attitude may be bourn out by this quote he gave to Tim Pratt in 2002 when talking about his future music, “I'll just keep going on till I can't go on anymore.”

'You Don't Know' and 'Bang Bang' made it onto The Quest and this EP was reissued on a sort of grey with a white swirl coloured vinyl by UR in 2003.

Because I've pushed it a bit in this post to fill out the confusion of this EP I dug into the Stinson quotes again and found two for anyone needing convincing that James for one would have approved of this whole endeavour. This quote from Andrew Duke reassures, "Basically, we want people to tap into their minds and their creativity.” He went on to say, “...we kind of do that intentionally (create mystery) to stimulate their minds and take them deeper into the world of Drexciya. Instead of just laying it out there and making it dull and boring; once you have something that is a mystery, people enjoy that more.” Similar sentiments on this subject were expressed in the Beere interview, “We have concepts that you can actually think about and there might be a mystery there, or it might not be a mystery. It just might be fun to get into the concept and it makes you think a little deeper about things in your own life. To me, it makes the music exciting. Without it, it would be very dull. It would be faceless and nameless, and it's here today and gone tomorrow. We try and make it a little more interesting so if it's going to be around a long time and if you come back twenty-years down the line and play it for somebody else, you can tell a story behind the music. It has a reason to exist, a purpose. It lives, it breathes, you can smell it, and you can taste it. It's not like fast-food, this is a home cooked meal, a full-course.” Thanks for the fun James.

'Uncharted' is next.

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