Review: Milkrun

SYDNEY PRODUCER Robert Miller’s demo arrived in my pigeon hole a few months ago. Fighting the temptation to load the disc up with everything on his home PC, Miller cut just three tracks onto the 12 minute and 20 second disc. For a first go from a musician whose tastes seem to run to indie rock rather than dark electronics, it’s a surprising listen. First up, Want From You starts with the sound of rain falling outside Miller’s Newtown terrace. He knows his way around a bass synth, and when it arrives, the dull thuds and eerie wash fill the spectrum. Almost a minute in, he introduces a tinny breakbeat that would sound thin anywhere else. His palette is pretty simple. Two and a half minutes in some rather brutal cuts in the tape give way to an organ-driven melody and Miller’s plaintive and arch half Bowie half Reznor voice. His restraint gives the simple lyrics a sense of depth that’s only amplified by the heavy ambience. Sadly, second track Aliens and Alcohol is a far more typical affair. The riff-by-numbers, drum-machine-driven beats and weak cliched lyrics sound more Sigue Sigue Sputnik than Aphex Twin. To its credit, the whole thing does degrade into a cool distorted break at the end. Fortunately that’s not where the short sharp set ends. Miller’s bass synth starts the final track, along with the slowed down relentlessness of a techno-on-33 beat. A cover of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’s Modern Romance, Miller’s voice is perfectly accompanied by the almost three-dimensional wall of glitchy granular sound that writhes and scratches like sand.
This is a self-titled demo, find out more from milkrun at myspace or from DEMUS (a goth, sorry dark electronic music site run by an old friend). BTW I packaged up an interview I did with Miller on my show, just waiting for it to be podcast on FBI.

cheers for the heads up, kiddo…
very nice stuff
Ali-scare
21 Aug 06 at 7:52 pm
[...] The following mix of music may do to fill your 45 minutes. I haven’t DJed much this year, but I’ve been getting loads of records, maybe more than at any other time and they’ve all gotta go somewhere. Although, I have to say, this mix is not so much about new stuff as about reevaluating some brilliant older tracks such as the first one from Japanese trumpeter Toshinori Kondo. In fact, the only new ones are from new CDs by TV On The Radio and Scritti Politti and a demo CD from Sydney producer Milkrun - all three CDs mixed in to the set using my extremely high tech Teac CD player. [...]
Fortune Grey » Listen: Pastry Chef mix
11 Sep 06 at 8:16 am