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Errors: It's Not Something But It Is Like Whatever

31 votes
?
by Mike Diver

Errors’ debut has taken its sweet time, its makers four never ones to hurry what can’t be achieved over a period of time more preferably suited to non-professional musicians whose keyboard stabs and drum rolls aren’t entirely paying those bills. But, patience is largely rewarded: It’s Not Something But It Is Like Whatever, awkward title aside, is a stellar if belated successor to the Glaswegians’ recommended How Clean Is Your Acid House EP (review).

Cited as north-of-the-border sound-alikes of Battles by some areas of the music press, Errors’ signature bleeps and moans, coupled as they are with traditional/organic percussion and guitar arrangements, do equal a faint echo of their cross-Atlantic peers; but to paint them as copyists of any kind is to fail to fully appraise the subtleties and nuances that so cleverly infect the listener throughout this ten-tracker. The simplest passage can initially appear an afterthought in the grander scheme, in a plan where intricacies dance merrily beneath solid squelches and crisply crunchy beats. But it’s these buzzing motifs that remain in circulation about the grey matter as early as the final fade of closer ‘A Lot Of The Things You Don’t Isn’t’; incidentally, the album’s parting offering is something of an understated departure, carried on graceful piano lines.

Unusually for a debut LP, little previously released material makes the transition from short-play status to full-length status, with only the single ‘Salut! France’ appearing; its seven-inch flip, ‘Maeve Binchy’, might still be available on greenish-yellow wax, somewhere. The sole blast from the proverbial doesn’t feel at all out of place on this collection, but it does seem fairly singular of dimension compared to tracks like ‘Still Game’ and the band’s latest single, ‘Toes’; both feature facets further and deeper than anticipated, attracting attentions with familiar snippets of wobbly-timed guitar patterns before sucking souls closer still to the songs’ cores with tickled hi-hats and weird, droning FX that are a million miles away from standard, or ‘demo function’ if you must, synth embellishments.

Errors haven’t forgotten to pack instant-fix cuts alongside their more introspective offerings, of course: ‘Pump’ fizzes and pops like a dirtied-up LCD Soundsystem shorn of those so-so vocals. Speaking of vocals, only one track here, ‘Cutlery Drawer’ features any, and they’re delivered by George Pringle. An artist of true opinion-dividing DiS infamy, at least on this site’s messageboards, Pringle’s contribution here lends Errors an affecting edge they’ve never explored before now, her spoken-word lines not necessarily of interest to everyone topic-wise (DVDs, drugs, Oxford, stuff) but sliced and glitched by the band to the extent where the track might just be the best thing she’s been involved in to date. The two artists are certainly encouraged to recreate the magic they’ve mustered on record in a live environment.

While a few tracks can be categorised as forgettable – don’t mistake that term for the rather more offensive, and false, ‘filler’ – so much shines throughout It’s Not Something… that it’s truly tough to quit listening to it on rotation after that first time through, after the first impressions have laid foundations. This is a debut with legs – some will hear it, dismiss it, and then return six months later and realise what didn’t make sense then totally connects now. It’s of that mould, a quite singular product of four men, and a guest lady, left to their own devices and never too pressured by their label to come up with the goods. This attitude, considered slack no doubt by more figures-driven industry types, has paid dividends.

Now, how long before the sequel?

  • Errors 8 / 10

That first sentence has broken my brain

but it really is an excellent album, pretty much agree with everything in the review.


ace album, good review.

They're playing The Freebutt in Brighton on 29th June...

www.myspace.com/ejectorseat


yes

i want this album big style.

but yeah, that first sentence is blagging my head


I know I wrote it and everything...

...but I really don't see what is so tough to understand about my opening sentence. If anyone out there wishes to offer me an answer to why it seemingly puzzles so, please do.


I understood it fine...

but I think the comma should be a semi-colon, can't should be can, and preferably suited is an awkward phrase, it would probably work without 'preferably'.

But good review overall.


Here's me, fully qualified

Taking tips from a teenager.
How'd I sink so low?


i got it last week

and its not been out my cd player, pump is such a cracking tune!


yay

i <3 errors


a great album

can't stop listening to it!


been

waiting for this for a long time and now it's finally here.


No Mr Milk on the album?

I hope that's not true, my favourite track by Errors so far and I've not been able to obtain a hard copy of it. Still going to pick up the album, though.


borrrring.


This is

a quality album, pushes itself into my top 10 of 2008 so far

I was shocked and very impressed by 'Cutlery Drawer', I hate George Pringle but she works really well on this track - probably my favourite of the album

Seems amazing that Mr Milk, Maeve Binchy, Terror Tricks and Hans Herman haven't made the final LP

A very good review apart from the previously mentioned headfuck of an opening sentence


I wondered who was ruining that song

worst track on the album by far.

The rest of it is great though.

Agree with Calump over the first sentence, it is structurally all over the place!


I must check this out

It sounds alright.


this was the first band my little brother recommended to me that i hadnt already heard of

...if its anywhere as good as acid house it will be amazing


Good review

Looking forward to this one. Loved the ep.


Good album

Must echo the previous comments on that first sentce though. That's a fuckin error right there.


What about

the awful album title?


sounds good

me wantee.

I want to go to Supersonic fest and see them but no-one wants to go with me :(
stupid friends and their mainstream music tastes.


Am I being genuinely thick (very possible today)

or does that first sentence just not make sense? Was the 'its makers four never ones to hurry...' bit meant to be 'its four makers' perhaps? Can someone explain what I'm not getting please, preferably with an easy to understand diagram? It's annoying my head.

Good album though.


Good album

But i don't understand the Battles comparisions - Errors have a completely different sound.


^ this

it's much more coheirant and stream line in structure and a lot more melodic and less noodled


Just been added to Loop

festival Line up : )


Did any cringe

at the lyrics to Cutlery Drawer?

EVILS EVVVILS ugh the world we live in today :(


Definitely getting into this, now

And Dance Music makes up for the lack of Mr Milk - it's like a sister-song to it, similar feel and instrumentation/sounds. Really great tune.


Absolutely can't hangle Pringle on Cutlery Drawer.

It's like having teeth pulled. Cut'n slice her vocals all you like, it doesn't take away from the fact that they're -her- vocals.

In fact, her voice popping up towards the arse end of the album kinda sets the whole thing off for me. It's caught in a slightly dreary electro postrock middleground thing; there's some lovely production, but man it gets boring quick. Mr Milk was their key reference track before because it had a really strong melody through it, but here it just sounds like someone's ripped out the vocals. And, oh, worst of all, a lot of it (Toes?) sounds like electronic noodling. Noodling!

I am jack's unfortunate disappointment.





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