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The New Deal
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Electronic music seems
to have one specific, defining characteristic: it must be made on keyboard- or
computer-based instruments, not with guitars and drums. The Canadian trio, The New Deal,
have decided thats a little restrictive for their tastes. They do have a
keyboardist, Jamie Shields. But they also have a bassist (Dan Kurtz) and a drummer (Darren
Shearer). Their music is a mix of trance technos highly repetitive note clusters and
steady, quick beat with the improvisatory methods of jam-band rock acts like Phish. Kurtz and Shearer are an excellent rhythm team, turning on a dime
to draw the material in different directions. To succeed with the electronic-music
audience, they must imitate a DJ cutting between instrumental techno records, and they do
so almost perfectly. They seem to have created an entirely new type of music, rooted as
much in jazzs high-speed interaction as in technos endless oceans of sound.
The New Deal's new album is almost entirely instrumental. Only on the
opening Back To The Middle and Exciting New Direction do human
voices put in any appearance. As the album begins, a male announcer states If
youve got headphones, you better put em on and get em cranked up.
Its good advice, because theres a lot going on here that a casual listener
might miss. The New Deals music certainly can be appreciated as just an energy rush;
its impossible not to tap your foot to their beats, and easy to imagine feeling an
almost irresistible pull towards the dance floor. But headphone fans will get off on the
polyrhythms and the way the rhythm players lock into each other, often pulling keyboardist
Shields (nominally the lead instrument) along instead of the other way around.
The second voice heard on the disc, on Exciting New
Direction, is that of a female corporate officer, speaking in the measured tones of
money. Her monologue flows throughout the entire track, and only at the very end is it
revealed as a phone call received by one band member, telling him hes been fired.
Its one of the best laughs available in pop music right now.
This is not The New Deals only release. Theyve got a few
self-released CD-Rs that they sell at shows, and Jive has also issued the album tracks
Receiver and Exciting New Direction as an EP, with two
additional non-album songs. Thats well worth hearing, too. The band's reputation is
being built in the live context, though. They play between DJs at techno clubs, as well as
touring with hippie-ish jam bands. They could probably bring this music into
the jazz scene, if they so chose. Artists like Tim Hagans and Eric Truffaz have been making excellent records in the past few years,
combining electronic sounds with jazz improvisation. The New Deal are the first band to
approach that middle ground from the other side.
- Phil Freeman