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GIANT STEP
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Ammoncontact
Carlos Nino, the mastermind behind the Dwight Trible project, 'Love Is The Answer,' obviously...
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New Birth
Ammoncontact

CD
Released: Jun 21, 2005
Released By Ninja Tune
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release description

Carlos Niņo, the mastermind behind the Dwight Trible project, "Love Is The Answer," obviously never sleeps. On the same day that Trible's single "Equipoise" hits the shops he returns with a mini-album from Ammoncontact, titled 'New Birth' (Itself only 6 months after the release of the 'One In A Infinity Of Ways' album). Mind you, musical partner Fabian Ammon probably isn't sleeping either - he's a new dad and so this is a record with its conception in conception, a whole series of births within births.

Heavy, funky, groove-based minimalism with a dash of cosmic Black Power politics, a love of jazz and enough bass to flatten planets - that's the Ammoncontact formula. Although to call it a formula is to deny just how many different shapes "instrumental hip hop" can be squeezed and formed into over 34 minutes. "Omniverse" parts 1and 2 are examples of Niņo's hybrid production style, which fuses drum machine programming, sampling, live instrumentation and voices. "Futuro" and "A Satelitte's Return" are classic cut-em-up, sample-chop constructions by Fabian Ammon that Niņo arranges with a film editor's eye for the cinematic. "Naeem" (named for Ammon's new son) is a clear-eyed afro-funk shuffler. "My People" sees the return of Lil Sci (originally of Scienz of Life) dropping consciousness over a marimba-driven beat, while "Temple Jam" feature's another Niņo project, Build An Ark.

Ammon Contact once again prove the power of simplicity, of the working man's virtues of craft and knowhow over hype and inflated ego. And, of course, of the groove, of constant rebirth through rhythm. Listen.

tracks
Omniverses 1
-
Naeem
-
Futuro
-
It Started As A Remix For Elvin
A Satellite's Return
-
New Birth
Omniverses 2
-
My People
-
Temple Jam
press

"Head-nodding electronica, minimalist electro twisted into a slinky modern variant, fidgety cosmic bass squiggles, marimba driven consciousness rap, and more. It's a rumble from a slinky, sussed, jazz-tinged, tropical jungle." — DJ Magazine

"Darkly ethereal, left-of-centre beats... intoxicating." — Rock Sound

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