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Attempting to explain Feed The Animals and identify what succeeds or fails with the set can’t be done on the level of an album in its entirety, it’s hard to even approach each track on an individual basis considering what they are. Mashups aren’t anything new, nor is Gregg Gillis’ mix-heavy approach, but what’s detailed on this album is a new offering that exceeds everything that is out there, even 2006’s Night Ripper. And while attempting to explain the album may be difficult, explaining why it succeeds is not - Feed The Animals may have a lot more to do with the direction our culture has taken and how the definition of music as an art is changing than how it sounds.

With Tha Carter III’s release I wrote that I felt Lil’ Wayne’s album was reflecting “the nature of the environment which he is a product of - a society riddled with various revolving doors continually making it harder to focus on a single idea for more than an instant.” While I’ll stand by that statement, it’s far easier to stand by those thoughts in the context of an artist like Gillis. The end product of his work is a piece of music that is almost impossible to recall, a piece of music that is fresh every time it is heard because of the fact that it passes the listener by with lightning-like speed. The fantastic Wikipedia page that has been assembled for the release counts some 274 samples which collectively make-up the album. Falsely judging our society’s shift towards a clip-heavy viral video addiction and suggesting that we’re collectively on a path to that depicted in Mike Judge’s Idiocracy might be a bit much, but the essence for the debate remains - we are slowly shifting towards becoming a nation demanding instant gratification, no matter the vehicle. There stands a partial reason for not simply the existence of mashups and mega-mix styled releases, but the reason they continue to exist and a suggestion as to why the material on this album succeeds.

Mashups are often, to some degree, kitschy, sugar-coated regurgitated second generation pieces of music lacking any substance whatsoever; and I should know, I love them. When done well they are fantastic gems that reflect not simply pop music as a whole, but some of its finer moments. The club culture that Gillis is submerged in isn’t necessarily conducive to mashups however - often they are fun pieces to listen to but just as often they only serve as momentary answers to irregular “what-if” questions (Q. What would it sound like if you tried to combine Nirvana’s “Come As You Are” with some sort of disco-based club track? A. Shit.) That being said, “Feed The Animals” works - not just as a collection of intellectually curated, professionally mastered mashups, but as a piece of music that excels in a club atmosphere.

As much as I try to fight the urge, ever since the mid-90s when The Chemical Bros./Fatboy/Prodigy contributed to taking electronic music to a whole new level of popularity I’ve been a fan of that sort of music, whatever you’ll call it. And while I tend to suggest that I enjoy music with more face-value substance, I love a lot of what’s out there in the clubs these days. The club culture has evolved into something just as unique, innovative and forward thinking as anything else on the pop music’s radar…nothing could help push that statement further than last year’s amazing reception of Justice’s and Daft Punk’s insane festival draw. By propelling his project with the same intensity that these electronic artists demand of their music Gillis has prepared his output for an inevitable acceptance within that culture, it just so happens that he uses the term mashup as a vehicle for what he creates.

It’s not that Feed The Animals uses as many samples as it does and it’s not that it brings mashups to the mainstream or even invites people to further search within the genre. Feed The Animals succeeds because there may be an unspoken demand right now for such an exciting, terminally scatterbrained album. While Night Ripper was a solid release, there are contemporaries out there that are also solid - it just happens that with Feed The Animals Gillis is the first to offer a release of such caliber. I still don’t know what Gillis’ aim was with the album or even how to critically describe what it is that I’ve been listening to for the past few days, but I can say this: the bar has been set, and it has been set high. - Chris DeLine

Girl Talk “Don’t Stop”(mp3)

Girl Talk: (MySpace) (Wikipedia)

Girl Talk “Feed the Animals” (listen)
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Also: (Girl Talk, Dan Deacon & Tay Zonday @ First Avenue 10/05/2007) (Girl Talk Takes Montréal Jazz Fest to the Streets)

7 Responses to “Girl Talk “Feed The Animals” Review”

  1. i got to listen to about 20 minutes of this today in the car, and it kind of freaked me out. some of it worked, some of it i didn’t like so much, but all of it flew by so fast. rarely did a part last for more than a verse and a hook before the new thing jumped in. part of me wanted to hear entire songs, even if the backing tracks beneath the vocals changed up.

    but i kind of feel like the old guy criticizing rap for “not having enough melody” or punk because “it’s too loud.” is the snippetty nature of the album a normal thing for mashup culture, or is girltalk unusually all-over-the-place?

    el guante

  2. I can see where you’re coming from, and as a whole - the rapid turnover of the breaks is fairly specific to Girl Talk, though others use a similar style…this album isn’t really a fair example of mashup culture. It’s more like, to use a cliche, mashups on speed with ADD…fortunately I have ADD and am continually on speed, otherwise I suppose I might not get it.

    Chris DeLine

  3. For context, for those not familiar with Girl Talk’s previous efforts, it is recommended that you definitely check out Night Ripper. Secret Diary and Unstoppable are albums you should listen to just to see what exactly what has been happening over the course of Gillis’ time as Girl Talk. The first two albums are nearly unlistenable due to the speed with which songs move from one sample to the next, so that should clue you in to how Girl Talk has evolved over the years if you think this album is too intensely ADD.

    Hidefininja

  4. I couldn’t agree more. I really got into Night Ripper, but attempting to get into much beyond that is trying, to say the least. That’s coming from someone who loves the hell out of the experimentation that goes into this kind of stuff!

    Chris DeLine

  5. Chris: great review!

    el guante:Yeah no actual mix in Feed the Animals lasts for more than like 20 or 30 seconds. It changes so fast. I do not think his live shows are that fast paced. The albums are more of a show off type experience.

    Check my detailed review of Feed the Animals out at my blog Noosic:

    http://noosic.wordpress.com/

    Peace.
    IASIIS

    Iasiis Seer

  6. This album was a real disappointment. Everything is cleaner, the samples are more obviously geared towards “Oh yeah, THIS SONG!” recognition than sonic moments, and the truly brilliant parts are robbed of any good by a complete lack of the throbbing groove that held Night Ripper together. Night Ripper sounded (and still sounds) badass, this really just sounds old. Neon Coyote and Justice have delivered much more interesting genre-bending mixes in the past year. Pitchfork is still talking about rap tracks with soft music behind them, but that’s the only trick that Gillis pulls out on this album, and it is an old one.

    Will

  7. thanks for the mention!

    Neon Coyote

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