Patrick Cowley – School Daze
Few musical legacies are as haunted by the spectre of sexits pleasures and its consequencesas that of disco producer Patrick Cowley. It begins with the sound itself: the shimmering, orgasmic post-Moroder synth patterns of Cowleys early 80s dancefloor anthe
Few musical legacies are as haunted by the spectre of sexits pleasures and its consequencesas that of disco producer Patrick Cowley. It begins with the sound itself: the shimmering, orgasmic post-Moroder synth patterns of Cowleys early 80s dancefloor anthems like X-Factor and Get A Little, and of course the tantric splendour of his 1982 remix ofDonna Summers I Feel Love. Sex also is the musics thematic preoccupation, to the point of fixation, reflecting the deep interpenetration of disco and gay bathhouses in late 1970s San Francisco, Cowleys transplanted home: Menergy celebrates the boys in the bedroom/ lovin it up/ shootin off energy. In 1982, Cowley was one of the first public figures to pass away from complications associated with AIDS (before it was even known by that name), a tragic denouement partly captured in the disoriented and shadowed electro-disco of his final album,Mind Warp. Its fitting, then, that the first concrete attempt to canonise Cowley as an electronic music auteur and innovator comes in the form of a compilation of soundtrack work for gay pornographic films.School Dazecollects, for the first time on CD, instrumental work dating from 1973 to 1981, given by Cowley to gay porn production company Fox Studio, the majority finding their way into the filmsSchool DazeandMuscle Up.
Theres a handful of tracks in modes you might expectZygote is adrenalized cosmic disco, while the title track offers corpulent funk-rockbutSchool Dazemostly consists of expansive, meditative soundscapes whose ambiguous titles (Nightcrawler, Out of Body, Tides of Man) capture their simultaneous evocation of the intimate and the intergalactic, the immediacy of bodily sensation and the depths of deep space. A few deserve special mention. The 16-minute Seven Sacred Pools is luxuriantly expansive ambient dub that could fit onto OrbsAdventures Beyond the Ultraworld, its heart-murmur bass and multi-tiered synth melodies embracing and decoupling in an eerie underwater consummation. The forbidding Journey Home is scraping metallic techno in slow motion, weaving together machinic sound effects with a recurrent didgeridoo bassline with exacting precision. The chiming, swirling Primordial Landscape starts off shadowy and restless, fusing Caribbean bounce with funereal dirge, before ascending to the ceiling with iridescent chime loops that prefigure Manuel Gttschings proto-techno masterpieceE2-E4. But whereas the electronic music which Cowley flashes forward to is mostly preternaturally bright and sharp, the arrangements here feel flushed and hazy, shadowed by the torpor of dope and the blood-rush delirium of amyl nitrate.
Its not necessary to frameSchool Dazeby the use to which these compositions originally were put, but it helps. InThe Rise and Fall of Gay Culture, Daniel Harris writes that gay pornographers of the 1970s believed they were filming two people, not in the act of fucking, but of merging, of coalescing, a process that involved the dissolution of their separate physical identities as they melted together, losing their definition as individuals. Cowleys music here captures exactly that vibe, its slow tempos, meandering arrangements, and persistent sense of disorientation and self-alienation evokes the world of San Francisco bathhouses rather than dancefloors. To listen is to step down those same long, dark tunnels: physical spaces of random encounters and depersonalised unions; psychological spaces of intoxication and longing. – Pitchfork
Label: Dark Entries, Honey Soundsystem Records
Format:2 x Vinyl, LP, Album, Compilation
Released: 2013
Genre: Electronic, Funk / Soul, Soundtrack
Style: Minimal, Ambient, Funk, Experimental, Electro
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