UNDERWORLD, it is pleasing to report, were not perfect. No live band
ever is: spontaneity curtails note-for-note renditions of the last
album. Although this is a truism in the world of indie-guitar rock,
Underworld inhabit the dance arena where a Personal Appearance is too
often an excuse for simple miming over a pre-recorded Digital Audio
Tape.
So Underworld, who really do use their machines as instruments, fouled
up a few times in their immense three and a half hours on stage. But
only pedants cringed at the occasionally bumpy arrival of a new rhythm
into the already bulging mix.
Rhythm is what they do best. Karl Hyde chants rhythmic vocals live on
stage. These are captured in the sampling machines of Rick Smith, who
loops and manipulates them into the sinously chugging syncopated base
beats created by Darren Emerson. They disappear, only to re-emerge half
an hour later in mutated form: a fondly remembered motif to bring the
happily bouncing audience back to the semblance of reality.
While such self-indulgence would rightly be derided as aimless waffle
in a guitar band, Underworld turn it into a virtue on the dancefloor.
This is techno as she should be sung. With every style of the techno
canon available to them, and augmented by DJ Darren Price wielding his
killer beats from behind the turntables, Underworld are an act which has
evaded the backwater known as Detroit minimalism.
Acid, house and even psychadelic guitar melded together as Smith and
Emerson, grinning to each other from behind their machines, decided
which song or sound to titivate with next. Yet beyond the keenly crafted
dancefloor experience, this was a performance bursting with humour,
passion and, above all, creativity.
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