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Placebo - Marc Moulin - Sam Suffy CD (album) cover

MARC MOULIN - SAM SUFFY

Placebo

 

Jazz Rock/Fusion

4.47 | 19 ratings

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BrufordFreak like
4 stars Though I was first introduced to this music via a YouTube posting of the 2005 release with all of MEDIAMOTION's remixes, I decided to go back to the original vinyl for my definitive review.

A1. "Le Saure" (6:00) since this was before sampling existed, I am going to go out on a limb and guess that Marc himself took on the duties of laying down the awesome electric bass track. The rest of the music has wah-wah-volume- pedal-controlled Charles "Skip" Pitts/"Shaft"-like rhythm guitar and piano-like electric piano with a whole bunch of interesting experimental synthesizer sounds parading around on top. I surmise that it is Marc, as well, who undertook the guitar part as it is also uncredited as otherwise. Awesome rhythm track. (9/10)

A2. "Misterioso" (1:43) Marc and Placebo-mates Philippe Catherine (guitar) and Richard Rousselet (flugelhorn) playing an indiosyncratic tribute to Thelonious Monk over drummer Garcia Morales funky/syncopated drum play. (4.375/5)

A3. "From" (3:35) mysterious cinematic music performed by Marc with keyboard maestro Jasper Van 't Hof and Garcia Morales' orchestral percussion support. But who played the STEVE HILLAGE-like "floating" guitars and the autoharp? Interesting and effective--even memorable. (8.875/10)

A4. "La Bougie" (4:14) fast-panning heavily-reverbed electric piano chord play opens this before Marc's synth bass and Garcia Morales' solid, driving drum track establishes a funky and rhythmically-mathematical rhythm track. Here Marc toys around with a synthesizer for his initial leads before giving way to his solo Brian Auger-like (electric? or electrically-enhanced?) piano. Whereas the bass lines offered on some of the other songs must come from a stringed instrument, this one is obvious that it's a synthesizer bass being played by the keyboardist's left hand. (8.75/10)

A5. "Le Beau Galop" (1:58) bluesy piano and trumpet. N'Orleans here we are! (4.25/5)

A6. "Le Blouse" (4:37) a deeply-hypnotic EARTH, WIND & FIRE/BOBBY CALDWELL-like rhythm track that has my sampling-self salivating (I can understand the crowded lineup of Acid Rock and other 1990s and 2000s Hip Hop artists for sampling this.) Everybody will recognize this enticing groove for its presence in slightly adulterated form in "La femme d'argent" the massive hit from French band AIR's downtempo electronic classic 1998 debut/breakthrough album, Moon Safari. Steely Dan-like piano chord hits are peppered effectively throughout the song, over the amazing bass 'n' drum rhythm track, and the bass line is doubled up by a heavily-treated synth "boing! (spring)" sound in the main meaty sections of the song. Marc chooses an odd synth to quietly, almost unobtrusively, lead for the first half of the song, alternating with his "piano" for the choruses and electric piano for the solo in the extended instrumental passage that takes us to the end, but, otherwise, there's not much to this! (8.875/10)

B1. "Tohubohut" (17:20) (35.25/40) a. "Tohubohut I" (5:11) single piano chord hit, water in the tub-or-sink splashing sound, bass drum hits, toms, eventual awesome BARRY WHITE "(I'm Gonna Love You) Just a Little More Baby"-like solo drum track build before the synth bass and synth horns and, later, real trumpet form the meat of the tune. Nice Acid Jazz beat before there was such a thing as "acid jazz." If Bruno Castellucci is this good at imitating the drum patterns of Barry White songs (especially this, Barry's best song ever), it's no wonder that his drumming on Jan Akkerman's 1977 masterpiece, Jan Akkerman seduces me so. (9.25/10) b. "Tohubohut II" (4:09) 90 seconds of synth sound experimentation through chord progression hits, sounding exactly like the work of synth pioneer LARRY FAST on his early SYNERGY albums. Around the two-minute mark the music shifts into a funky Cobham-like drum, bass and reverberating Fender Rhodes groove over which Richard's "distant" wah-wahed muted trumpet solos. Then Marc steps to the fore with his right hand on the piano while his left continues to play the reverb Rhodes chord pattern (and funky synth bass line). (8.875/10) c. "Tohubohut III" (2:10) Richard Rousselet's trumpet soloing in what sounds like animal sounds (predominantly elephant) while something Marc is playing makes warthog grunting sounds--for two minutes! Quite playful, somewhat humorous, but, ultimately, selfish and masturbatory. Not sure I really wanted or needed to hear this! (4/5) d. "Tohubohut IV" (2:07) really fun, oddly-timed, hugely-spaced piano and trumpet hits. It's like performing (or being subjected to) one of Miles Davis disciplinary exercises--the ones that mess with your mind! I have to admit that it's kind of cool though not exactly the kind of music you want to listen to for relaxation, love-making, or background ambiance. (4.75/5) e. "Tohubohut V" (3:40) provides a return to the theme, palette, and style of the suite's opening movement. (8.875/10)

Total Time: 38:46

A lot of the music on this album feels quite experimental. In fact, I'd say Marc was more interested in fooling around with all of the new technologies in sound and sound engineering--especially with his synthesizers--than he was in creating new masterpieces of music that other musicians will want to emulate. It's all for entertainment: for both Marc and his perceived audience. (Witness the bass synthesizer throughout the album.) The music is smooth, funky (but not stanky), and quite serene, never really disturbing or grating. Marc's melody lines and chord progressions are, I'm sure, advanced and jazz-calculated but, like Bob James, they rarely stray outside the average, uneducated listener's comfort zone.

B/four stars; eminently entertaining and futuristic smooth jazz that is powered by Marc Moulin's creative curiosity and his drummers' considerable prowess. Just not the masterpiece other people are claiming (that I was sincerely hoping to find).

BrufordFreak | 4/5 |

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