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Todd Rundgren - Todd Rundgren, Emil Nikolaisen & Hans-Peter Lindstrom: Runddans CD (album) cover

TODD RUNDGREN, EMIL NIKOLAISEN & HANS-PETER LINDSTROM: RUNDDANS

Todd Rundgren

 

Crossover Prog

3.00 | 4 ratings

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Evolver
Special Collaborator
Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams
2 stars I need to post a couple of things before getting into the actual review of this album:

First: In the Boston area, Tufts University's WMFO was one of the area's best radio stations for prog fans in the 1980s and 1990s. I almost always had a radio on in my bedroom tuned to WMFO, even when sleeping. In the late 80s, I happened to get of the worst cases of influenza I have had in my life. I went to be with WMFO playing in the background. After a short amount of sleep, I awoke to the DJ doing what they called "free mixing". This was a process of cutting up a song and playing the bits back in whatever order the DJ felt like using, while running it all through various studio effects, usually echo and reverb, with whatever other toys were in the studio. In my experience, this has never made for good listening. In this case, it was like a nightmare. I was too sick to get out of bed, and had to listen to this awful, repetitive mush of sound for the entire length of the perpetrator's on-air shift. To this day, I still cannot tolerate the Romantic's "Talking In Your Sleep".

Second: In 1993, Todd Rundgren tried to rebrand himself as "TR-i" (the "i" being for "interactive"). Into computers since the early days of music videos, he fashioned a TR-i web site, and released "No World Order", an attempt at electronic/hip-hop that mostly fell flat. He also toured the album in a small setup that placed him in the center of a bunch of keyboards, pads and devices, that allowed the audience to interact, that is to add their own sounds to Todd's music. I saw this at Boston's Cyclorama, a round cement room with absolutely no sound dampening. The result was an unlistenable barrage of noise, and one of the worst concerts I have ever been to.

So, this album by Todd and his Norwegian friends, Emil Nikolaisen and Hans-Peter Lindstrom, starts out promising. The first track has shades of "A Treatise on Cosmic Fire" from the 1975 album Initiation. The tracks then run together in a continuous stream, much like the "No World Order" album. But after the opening, and a couple of spacy but interesting pieces, the majority of this album becomes a mess of free mixing of what may be a song called "Put Your Arms Around Me" (the track by that name is just part of this).

There are a few lyrics ("Put your arms around me", "Going out of my head", and other short bits), but a complete song is never quite attained. Instead, as in free mixing, little pieces of the song are blended with other sounds and distorted by a variety of digital effects. I cannot deny that some of the parts of this are very good, but the majority remind me of the "Talking In Your Sleep" fiasco.

I also know that Todd was once one of the foremost producers in the business. His production on a large number of albums, from the 70s into the 90s was stellar. But I don't know what happened here. The distortion, reverb, and whatever make parts of this beast absolutely unlistenable (see the Cyclorama comments above for a reference).

Todd, I love most of your music, but I can only give this 2 stars.

Evolver | 2/5 |

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