Gear Review: Dave Smith Instruments Tempest

Dave Smith Instruments Tempest

When it was announced that Dave Smith (father of MIDI and Sequential Circuits) was to team up with Roger Linn (Linndrum) to create an innovative new instrument, it was rumored to take the analog community by storm. That storm has of course touched down, and ravaged all preconceived notions of what drum machines can do. For starters, this unit isn’t exactly a drum machine. It is a drum synthesizer. Which in short means that when you play sounds, you are not just simply recalling samples from a ROM chip, you are actually creating drums from analog and digital oscillators. How this exclusive style of sound design relates to music production is very crucial. With a unit like this in your studio, you are actually creating drum sounds that have never been heard before, and therefore renders your productions unique from the herd.

The sound engine for this unit starts with four oscillators per drum sound, two analog and two digital. With a wide variety of analog wave shapes and loads of digital samples to choose from, it is easy to get lost crafting the texture for your individual sound. Now multiply this by 32, and you can begin to see how massive this tool truly is. Moving on to envelopes, the Tempest is stocked with five envelopes per voice, that you can switch between AR (attack release) and ADSR (attack decay sustain release) mode, suitable for snappy drums or lush synth tones. Adding two LFOs to the equation, and your modulation possibilities become endless. One of the best implementations to this unit is the well-developed filter section. With a low-pass filter (LP) and a separate high-pass (HP) filter dedicated to each voice, taming and exploiting harmonic becomes the name of the game. The sound of the filter is about as good as it gets. Having years of analog circuit design under their belt, this team of electronic engineers are surely the elder statesmen of the synth world, and this filter is the flagship of their tenure. Once you get a sound going that you like, there are still several features that drive your drums to the next level. Adding a built-in compression, distortion and amplifier circuit, the modern day drum synth becomes a virtual studio in a box.

Don’t be dissuaded by the cost if creating legendary sounds and timeless music is your goal.

If all this drum and synth voicing wasn’t enough fun as it is, then programming your own rhythms will push to towards nirvana. With a powerful step sequencer on board, it is easy to step your grooves in just like you could with all the drum machines from the past. What makes the programming section of this unit so special, is that the 16 pads (2×8) are extremely sensitive to velocity and work very well for finger drumming. You can input rhythms by performing them live, and Tempest automatically quantizes them to the master tempo. There is also a added roll feature, which allow you to program MPC-style effects simply by pressing a pad. All of the expected edit functions are on here as well, so getting your groove right feeling tight just a few buttons away.

Truly living up to the revolutionary machine that it is, the Tempest comes equipped with a USB port on board, making for loads of MIDI and Sysex information to be transferred back and forth between computer and machine quickly and efficiently. Carrying quite the hefty price tag (MSRP: $1999), this monster of a machine may tempt you to look the other way, but don’t be dissuaded by the cost if creating legendary sounds and timeless music is your goal. Dave Smith and Roger Linn often get mistaken for being craftsmen of fine electronic music instruments; however, these prolific designers are actually engineering the future as we know it.

Album Review: Andy Cato / ‘Times & Places’ (Apollo)

andy-cato-times-places

★★★★☆

Owner of a well-worn passport, Andy Cato sidesteps going around the world in 80 raves and creates instrumental reflections out of check-ins, layovers and time to kill. Hotel lobbies, lock-ins, road trips and terminals are his canvas, as the co-captain of the good ship Groove Armada re-masters lost cassettes, audio doodles and sonic postcards, in some cases rebuilding them from scratch to preserve their memory.

Production both plush and tremulous could just well have seen Cato holed up in an orchestrally-extended studio (“The Coastal Path”) for years on end rather than revisiting a traveller’s scrapbook. Lots of wise electronica, trip-hop kickbacks, free and open chillout and back to mine strums bump in time to the wheels of the pick-up truck Cato thumbs a lift from. A sense of the open road/world does not make for a cultural compare and contrast. It’s more a means of de-ringing ears and finding a happy place when the life of the jetsetter sometimes yearns for home.

Here lies the album expressive lean; everything’s fairly buoyant and in the moment, save for a couple of sterner border checkpoints, dismissing the dullness of any waiting room by looking for its next session under the stars (“Back from Castlemorton,” “Rear Window”) or hitting a secret spot only his inner circle knows of. Very media-savvy as well (“Abbey Road Jam,” “North from Montparnasse” as a boy of summer), it’s a fine companion for your own travels or when returning to terra firma.

File under: Andrew Bayer, Anthiliawaters, Windsurf

Compilation Review: ‘Fabric 69: Sandwell District’ (Fabric)

Fabric 69 Sandwell District

★★★★☆

The comeback of techno X-factors Sandwell District is a meticulous unsheathing of tongs and hammer. Protecting their territory, setting a scene of grim isolation on an eerily quiet battle-scarred backdrop, Function and Regis draw out their pincer movement that you know is coming, but are still thrilled by when it develops the shadows. Suffice to say you have to buy into this protracted build-up if it’s just you and the stereo for company, but Fabric patrons will value the claustrophobia driven to banging down the doors.

The liquid drops of a Terminator finding one another, trying to connect with outside frequencies as the balaclava beats find rhythm and range, Fiedel’s “Andreas” becomes the layer down of the gauntlet, the flicker of the switch, and away Sandwell go. Gristly techno that bangs to a metallic pulse is classically taught (JPLS, Rrose), yet you don’t really care once the kick drum has found its voice. Just occasionally pausing to lick its lips (Carl Craig, Mark Ernestus), Markus Suckut’s “Hunt” rattles and reviles as a snake oozing with venom as mercury spills across the boiler room, the decks’ tone arms being used as thumb screws endorsed by Untold’s “Motion the Dance”, dropping wincing voodoo shattering rare brightness and hope.

Having proceeded like an intense, heart-weakening exorcism, the mix’s last quarter sounds a little cleaner. The toying process is now in effect, the heat brought back to a simmer, the physical battle won so time can be spent getting inside your head.

File under: Surgeon, Plastikman, Trevino

Album Review: Franck Roger / ‘Extensions of Yesterday’ (Circus Company)

Franck Roger Extensions of Yesterday

★★★☆☆

The Frenchman teeming with 12s checks out the past but respects it rather than obsesses over it. Weighty house tunes know where they came from and where they sit now, Franck Roger starting with a slate of clean rhythms, sizing up the then and now, and finishing by polishing up the deep. The vocal track “Sands of Time” could come from any house era, and parallel to the title, Roger is creating his own timeline remixing the evolution of man diagram (pertinent also, as his last album was called “We Walk to Dance”).

“Gossando,” in the vein of a Mr. Fingers, and the lovely sun/moon-worshipping carnival “Surrounded,” tell of the effortlessly futuristic from a past perspective, leading to the deep and stylish through a familiar hum of chords rotation and phases. “Feel It” looks for a late-night balcony, leaving “Tension” to rotate and sweat like meat on a spit, as “Friday” stammers up a quiet storm clocking both ends of the thermometer. The two downtempo cuts, while from the same cloth, arrest the album’s flow and seem included on the basis of creative license — Roger having been straightforward in his aims, “Back With Your Love” backtracks as an unhurried electro-R&B worm, and “This World Don’t Go Round” tries a hip-hop slouch. While there are times you may think he should push forward more, the best quality comes from the most tried and tested.

File under: Octave One, Mandel Turner, DJ Roy, Olivier Portal