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From
the earliest recordings to his forthcoming second album for Certificate
18, the sound of Klute has remained at the cutting edge of drum &
bass for close to a decade. Tom Withers, the production force behind
the project, fuses elements of Techno elements with intricate beats
and emotive arrangements to form a distinct hybrid.
Although now eclipsed by his work as Klute, Tom's induction to the
music industry came in the eighties with his role in the notorious
skate punk band 'The Stupids' however, after three albums, ever-increasing
attention got the better of the band and they split. |
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Following the break
up Tom took some time out to travel around the US, where he first discovered
'electronic' music, as he explains. "I started listening to a hell
of a lot of techno, but when I came into it all of the strands were pretty
much lumped together so that if you went out you would hear anything from
Belgian rave to progressive house." "Becoming involved in the music was
never a calculated move, more something which just ended up happening.
I bought a drum machine but found that I was more interested in having
my own sounds and it seemed a logical step to buy a sampler - I haven't
really picked up the guitar since."
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On returning to England
in 1993 he settled in Ipswich, with his early material surfacing on Deep
Red although it was his recordings under the KLUTE pseudonym
("the word has aesthetically pleased me since I was a child," he laughs)
at Certificate 18 that brought widespread attention. Already enjoying
considerable success with artists such as Photek and Digital, the label
suited Tom's techno influences. His singles have stretched the genre,
with the eerie, deep space manoeuvres of 'Total Self' contrasted against
the seminal 'Leo Nine,' which captured the essence of Speed with delicate
synth constructs propelled by tumbling percussives and an unforgettably
deep bassline.
"I've tended to just do what I do and not think too heavily about the
concepts behind it," says Tom. "It's those times when I'm lost
in the space of a track that it really starts happening for me. Different
things please different minds, but it is the challenge of making something
new and avoiding things that are perhaps too obvious or familiar that
keeps me interested. I listen to quite a wide variety of music but have
always tended to be quite marginal; outside looking in - so a 'science
fiction feel ' for me is more abstract than buzzing computers and dark
sounds. I'm very much into portraying an image, but try to present that
image in a distorted manner so a track or a title could mean any one of
many things. I guess my music isn't the easiest to get into, and if I
had to provide a description it would be as intimate terrorism in that
I try go out of my way to stretch expectations of what music."
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After four years at
Certificate 18, Tom released the debut KLUTE longplayer, 'Casual Bodies.'
The album extended on the singles, coupling a complex blend of sounds
sourced from the vaults of Detroit Techno with complex beat programming,
which worked with as opposed to pulling against the atmospherics. The
resulting level headed feel allowed the more unusual tracks to leap from
the system with liquid agility, abstract sounds built into molten landscapes
of percussion. Adds Tom; "Casual Bodies is a reference to the mass
of people out there without referring to them as individuals. For me and
my musical background I feel that the first album is often the burning
one - tearing it out of the garage and getting that fury out of you and
once completed it is almost as though you're free to expand and develop
what you are doing a lot further."
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He
feels his recently completed second album, 'Fear of People,' is quite
different from the first. "It's difficult for me to offer a perception
of this one as I'm still settling on it, other than I am more relaxed
with what I'm doing and feel able to do more on the musical side of things."
In explaining the curious title he adds, "Again it's not necessarily
a negative or paranoid thought, more two fingers to the pretentiousness
which seems to accompany a lot of the dance music scene and an observation
of the reluctance of a lot of people to take their music a step further.
The real reason behind the title is to reflect what seems to be a prevalence
of fear in modern day living, whether that's a fear of crime or missed
opportunities and we almost encourage ourselves to be equipped with this
fear.
I wanted to move away from that and adopt a deeper and emotional outlook
within my music. I think a lot of people have been turned off by certain
elements of drum & bass, and I would hope that 'Fear of People' demonstrates
a side of the music which doesn't exclude anyone and shows that there
is still much that can be done within the genre."
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This is demonstrated
in the album, with the introduction of vocals acting to further humanize
the electronics while the instrumental material is as focused as ever
with multi faceted rhythm sections balanced by melancholic low end and
thoughtful melodic leads.
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"To
me drum & bass is a form of music which has always been out on a limb and
the tracks that have shocked me are those that have expanded on what went
before them," explains Tom. "Whether that's people using the technology
in ways that you're not supposed to or just turning around sounds in different
ways. As far as I am concerned people taking chances is the future and I
would like to think that my material falls into that category."
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Words:
Kingsley Marshall |
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