Euphone - Breaking Parole [EP]

Primary Artist
Euphone
Album Title
Breaking Parole [EP]
Release Date
September 22, 1998 
Time
 
Review by Stanton Swihart
Had The Jb's been time-warped to the late 1990's and exposed to all the modern goings-on in music-the post-rock jazzbo, the electronica, drone-while retaining their deep-groove funk, they might sound something like one-man band Euphone, the cover for multi-instrumentalist Ryan Rapsys. With a li ttle guitar help from Bill Dolan, Rapsys constructs an EP's worth of short, funky, and swinging instrumentals on Breaking Parole that ebb, flow, and often cook. Each song is primarily built on a bed of drums and bass with guitar, keyboards, and electronic squeals sqirting over the top, but the scope of styles that the songs touch upon is truly impressive: "The Sun Theme" catches a sweaty bass groove and runs with it, making it noodly funkadelica and tribal mayhem; "Passport" revels in the same hypnotic, mechanical, lock-step drone of early Can; "A Hundred Times and More" somehow entangles loungey guitar, elctro-ambience, and Shaft-styled cymbal work into a coherent song; the rock riffing of "Nasal Evidence" dovetails into an atmospheric soundscape led by a cavernous bass melody; "Little Warbles" is simply messy funk (free funkNULL) that manages to sound greasy and unhinged, but also futuristic; and the opening bit of "New Dusk Policy" could be influenced by world-beat. Read More