Sunday, 6 June 2010
Guido - Anidea
Guido is a guiding light at the end of the dubstep tunnel. Where dubstep was once a beautiful movement, so many have tainted it’s delicate skin with wobbly remixes of Pop songs, with no rhyme nor reason to the composition. But not Guido. Hailing from the spiritual home of the movement, Bristol, where the likes of Joker, Ginz, Gemmy, Jakes and so many more involved with the sound have come from, he has broken the mould. Taking influence from classic, heavy RnB and 90s Hip Hop, Guido has produced a beautiful record of 12 songs that will make you think again when leaving electronic music behind.
In an interview with FACT magazine, Guido talks about his musical abilities in being able to play jazz and classical piano: “I wouldn’t say my family is hugely musical but my dad was in a punk band [...] I’m not trained prolifically in jazz and classical although I have learnt both for a few years”. His producing started later in his school years and didn’t really have a particular direction. In Anidea, there are clear influences from the likes of old west coast rap, pop - the airy synths almost make you think back to Hall and Oates days - jazz and of course the obligatory heavy dubstep beats known so well.
The album is an eclectic mix of all these styles and more, there’s such diversity in the music and I’m sure that others will agree that this album offers something to a huge number of different people. There’s something for the hardcore bass fans but also for those that prefer the tight drums and piano styles of Usher’s Confessions. He has pipped a lot of artists to the post in releasing this LP and I’m sure it will pay dividends not only in his bank balance but also his respect in the scene. He has gained so many followers since the YouTube debut of “Mad Sax” and the two previous releases “Orchestral Lab” and “Beautiful Complication”. I hope to hear a lot more from Guido, and I hope he really pushes the scene forward in a positive manner similar to the likes of Phaeleh, Subscape and Dark Sky, who have all had their beats applauded just for the sheer originality.
Buy the album on iTunes (You won’t regret it)
Mad Sax - Clear Jazz influences, loose drums compliment the open sound of this track
Tantalized - A sort of Pendulum-esque insight into screaming, guitar based dubstep. Hauntingly beautiful.
MarvinGKHarris
0 comments:
Post a Comment