Gabe Gurnsey: Physical review – relentless, hooky dance

(Phantasy Sound)

While not a household name, Factory Floor – the band Gabe Gurnsey co-founded 13 years ago – owned their niche: sleek industrial techno cut with acid basslines made for a club-oriented live outfit, with intoning guitarist Nik Void recalling a robot Nico. Gurnsey insists that his debut solo album is a departure. It is, kind of: a saxophone line by Peter Gordon turns up on Sweet Heat. The club cultures he draws from here are markedly warmer than the stern clank of FF. A succinct funk bassline lurks inside You Can, and Harder Rhythm pays subtle homage to Michael Jackson. Really, though, Gurnsey remains consistent. A drummer by trade, his rhythms are unfailingly relentless. In Void’s absence, Gurnsey’s partner, Matilda Morris, provides vocal anomie. Gurnsey has structured Physical like a night out: driving to the club, stepping outside for a cigarette. But as with FF, Physical works as a seamless loop.

Not everything here is riveting: Gurnsey’s narrative arc is a little underdeveloped. Unlike your average dour beatmonger, however, Gurnsey has bags full of hooks. Heard a couple of times, Ultra Clear Sound’s refrain – “Crystal/ In the algorithm” – is hard to dislodge.

Watch the video for Harder Rhythm by Gabe Gurnsey.

Contributor

Kitty Empire

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Mura Masa: Demon Time review – fleeting dance-pop joys
The British producer bounces back with a clutch of guests and an eclectic romp through genres

Ammar Kalia

18, Sep, 2022 @12:00 PM

Article image
Flume: Skin review – guest-heavy dance with broad horizons
(Transgressive)

Ben Thompson

29, May, 2016 @6:59 AM

Article image
Powell: Sport review – lost in discord
(XL)

Damien Morris

16, Oct, 2016 @7:00 AM

Article image
Mala: Mirrors review – pioneering Andean dub
(Brownswood Recordings)

Isa Jaward

26, Jun, 2016 @7:00 AM

Article image
High Contrast: Night Gallery review – muscular rhythms, winning melodies
(3 Beat/Universal)

Damien Morris

08, Oct, 2017 @7:00 AM

Article image
Mura Masa: Mura Masa review – a cutting-edge swordsmith
Electronic wizard Alex Crossan conjures shivers and warmth on his star-studded debut

Kitty Empire

16, Jul, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Honey Dijon: Black Girl Magic review – eclectic dancefloor delights
The Chicago DJ delves into new jack swing, disco and house across 15 jubilant, guest-studded tracks

Ammar Kalia

20, Nov, 2022 @1:00 PM

Article image
Jungle: Loving in Stereo review – hitting the neon dancefloor hard
A little bit hip-hop, a little bit spangled funk… Josh Lloyd-Watson and Tom McFarland take a more organic approach, and it works

Kitty Empire

15, Aug, 2021 @8:00 AM

Article image
Anohni review – a world of pain, and tears all round
The live debut of Anohni’s Hopelessness combines performance art and political despair to powerful effect

Kitty Empire

10, Jul, 2016 @8:00 AM

Article image
Deadmau5: W:/2016ALBUM/ review – desperately lacking in personality
(mau5trap)

Damien Morris

11, Dec, 2016 @8:00 AM