BOARD

Quiet Night [Music Review] By JAKOB DOROF

페이지 정보

작성자 no_profile GioMcH 회원 정보 보기 작성일 14-11-25 04:19

본문

Seo Taiji - Quiet Night [Music Review]
[Seotaiji Company; 2014]
By nbsp;JAKOB DOROF on Nov 23 2014
Rating 4/5

STYLES  k-pop, synthpop, nu polka metalstep
OTHERS: Ryuichi Sakamoto, Phoenix, Neon Bunny

In selecting a godfather for the pop music their own children would someday enjoy, the South Korean youth of the 1990s couldn’t have chosen a bigger weirdo than Seo Taiji. When he exploded on the scene in 1992, Korea’s mainstream was stagnant: the nation was still shaking off the aesthetic residues of the authoritarian rule that ended in 1987. By then, Chun Doo-Hwan’s government had censor-smothered anything that wasn’t a pacifying regression to the bellyache ballads and rubric foxtrot rhythms inherited from the Imperial Japanese occupation of the early 20th century. A thick membrane of syrup, schmaltz, and the otherwise saccharine coated most everything that reached television or radio.

Meanwhile, this bespectacled 22-year-old turned his ears elsewhere. After cutting his teeth as a teen in the legendary Korean metal group Sinawe, Seo Taiji wrote, produced, and largely performed a debut album that ran uncleared samples of Bart Simpson and Flava Flav up against other recently vogue US ephemera: new jack swing, fret-for-fret AC/DC riffs, and Hi-NRG synths. The genre shifts usually jarred, the English rang awkward, and Seo Taiji had yet to learn a steady grasp of pitch. But he was the first to bring a modern, cosmopolitan concept of pop to Korean shores, and his esteem reflected as much. Taijimania, at its peak, is often said to have been analogous to Michael Jackson’s American popularity in the mid-80s; considering the aggregate of the Korean pop star’s fan clubs numbered 5 million in a population less than 10 times that size, he may have in fact eclipsed Jacko’s reach per capita.

Seo Taiji’s confidence as a performer grew quickly, but as a songwriter he’s granted himself few breaks. Over the decades, he’s sounded like everything from Built to Spill to New Order, Beastie Boys to The Carpenters; he’s insisted on writing power pop over breakbeats, symphonies around emo songs. With 2003’s Ultramania, Seo Taiji enjoyed maybe his greatest success as the pioneer of Korean nu metal — which, featuring songs like “Tank” and “Internet War,” served as the soundtrack for both youth rebel culture and the growing national phenomenon of MMORPGs (in Korea, a kind of dissidence unto itself). Seo Taiji’s music has always been interesting and sometimes raises a revealing mirror to Korean society at large, but no one album vouched particularly well for its author’s talents.

That makes Quiet Night  the first. It features an elegant inventory of gestures from recent Western trends: the dub techno touches that introduce “90s Icon,” the bridge of “A Sad Record’s” bid for the subtlest use of a trap drum track since trap. But for the most part, Seo Taiji’s ninth is a modern synthpop album par excellence. Several songs reach the destinations that Phoenix’s last album seemed to seek, while the chopped and pitched syllables of “Lost” and “The Fighter in the Forest” help fashion a more decorous Purity Ring. With a gorgeous instrumental opener and the closing “Miracle of Christmas,” Seo Taiji also seems to be channeling Ryuichi Sakamoto’s classic 1983 soundtrack forMerry Christmas Mr. Lawrence  (perhaps consciously, given the heavy holidays theme that runs throughout Quiet Night) Between these bookends, the understated sophistication of the album’s synthpop core glows with added luster.

The Korean media has always been quick to accuse Seo Taiji of plagiarism, and this time it’s lead single “Sogyeokdong” that’s met scrutiny. Indeed, the overall tone and certain melodic turns in the synth leads call to mind Chvrches’ “The Mother We Share” — but if the Western hit served as a template for Seo Taiji’s, he’s done much to write laps around Chvrches’ mundane melody and vocal arrangement. With a poetic lyric about Seo Taiji’s childhood in the martial law of mid-80s Seoul, “Sogyeokdong” is also one of the most moving meditations on that dark time ever to reach the Korean mainstream — another in Seo Taiji’s career-long commitment to social critique.

But there’s one song here that only Seo Taiji could’ve written, and it’s also the best: “Christmalo.win.” Syncretizing the mythologies of Halloween and Christmas (for the sake of another political opprobrium, no less), the Korean number one hit takes everything lame — polka rhythms, nursery rhymes, nu metal angst, holiday music, laserstep breaks, rap breakdowns — and finds, in their sum, something incredible. As one of the few Korean masterpieces in 2014, it’s pure K-pop: madness on paper, superlative in execution, and utterly unencumbered by Western hangups concerning cool, currency, and style. Even by Korean standards, though, “Christmalo” is an ambitious act of genre synthesis as genre transcendence, and in its realization, Seo Taiji at long last claims the aesthetic crown he first tried to grasp in 1992.

Granted, not all of Quiet Night is as vividly imaginative or irreverent. K-pop’s historic potential remains the possibility that someday some genius might sustain the kaleidoscopic ecstasy of something like “Christmalo.win” — or f(x)’s “Rum Pum Pum Pum,” or Ga-In’s “Tinkerbell” — for the entire length of a long-player. Until then, Quiet Night has redefined the album standard not simply for one 42-year-old legend, but for the entire pop industry he accidentally sired.

Source: http://www.tinymixtapes.com/music-review/seo-taiji-quiet-night

___________
___________

Our Captain is a weirdo LOL but we all know many musical geniuses are weirdos ;) and even at 42 he's the biggest weirdo XD

댓글목록

유별난여자님의 댓글

no_profile 유별난여자 회원 정보 보기


크억 이 분 뜨면 우리 모두 비상 ㅎㅎㅎㅎ
JAKOB DOROF이란 분이 쓴 9집 앨범 리뷰인데.. 이번엔 꼼꼼한 번역은 패스~ ㅋㅋ 간략하게 설명하면.. (눈 돌아갈 거 같아서..ㅋ)

다음은 JAKOB의 글 간략..(요약이니 이해해주세용)

-------------
"일본 제국의 점령에서 상속된 한국의 음악세계에서..(검열까지 되던 시대에..)나타난 22세의 서태지는 당시 청소년들이 선택한 주류의 흐름(?)이었다... (한동안 태지 대장이 한국에 최초로 도입한 음악 장르에 대해서 설명............ㅎ) 한국에서 서태지는 미국의 마이클 잭슨과 유사할 정도의 인기를 얻음.. 그러나 한국의 인구를 고려했을 때 이건 비교도 안 될 정도의 인기다.. 그러다 휴식기를 거친 서태지가 발표한 "탱크"나 "인터넷전쟁"과 같은 곡은 청소년의 반문화를 잘 보여주는데... 서태지는 한국의 뉴메탈 선구자로 다시 성공한다. 서태지의 음악은 언제나 흥미롭다... 이번에 발표한 Quiet Night도 서태지의 여전한 재능을 보여준다.. (90s Icon, 비록의 특징 설명 후 9집이 가지는 신스팝적 요소가 아주 뛰어남을 말함. 그러면서 피닉스, 류이치 사카모토 등과 비교를 하며 '숲 속의 파이터'와 '크리스마스의 기적'을 평가하고 있음)
한국 언론은 항상 서태지를 표절이란 이름으로 비난하지만.. 소격동, 크리스말로윈 등에서 드러나는 음악적 요소들과 그 합(?)들은 아주 뛰어나다. 특히 크리스말로윈은 장르가 초월된 장르 합성의 야심 찬 행위를 보여준다.... 서태지는 K-POP이 유지될 수 있는 가능성을 보여주고 있다...(f(x)’의 “Rum Pum Pum Pum,”과 가인의 “Tinkerbell”에서 보였던 잠재력이 서태지에서 비롯되었음과 그게 계속 이어질 것임을 42세의 서태지가 다시 보여주고 있음을 말함)



----------
비평가의 글인만큼 좀 어렵네요;;;; 정말 띄엄띄엄 읽었어요.... 직역아닌 직역 같은 의역을 한 건 아닌지..ㅎ (이상한 건 넘어갑시다잉~);;;