One repeated hit in time is annoying. Two is a beat. Add three or four more and you have the design of most minimal
dance music out there today. Mexican resident and former
Nortec Collective member
Fernando Corona returns to his more
dance-influenced character, after breaking ground with his unflinching attempt to meld
classical samples with
electronics as
Murcof. On the surface, it is minimal as usual, with half a dozen distinct percussive sounds clicking in perfect machination,
Corona engaging the clutch just long enough to add or remove another gear in his automation. But similar to equatorial natives
Ricardo Villalobos and
Luciano,
Corona's cowbell hits and conga paradiddles possess a syncopated funk that renders any additional need for melody or hook obsolete in commanding your attention. But perhaps because he has not yet chosen to reside in Europe,
Corona's drum strikes offer a much livelier and more colorful tone than the muted drabness of his otherwise contemporaries. On
"Secondary Inspection Theme" he shades his full-frontal conga and cymbal wallop with dark tones reminiscent of
Plastikman in their foreboding and endlessness.
"Vaqueros del Ayers" borrows some fast chirps from
Akufen and
"Ultra Tumba" speeds up a
dub pulse already familiar to fans of
Basic Channel. Like the best in his field,
Corona takes the methods of his predecessors and adds his own festive yet still nominal percussion, making music that is friskier than most found at this tempo. ~ Joshua Glazer