VoyForums
[ Show ]
Support VoyForums
[ Shrink ]
VoyForums Announcement: Programming and providing support for this service has been a labor of love since 1997. We are one of the few services online who values our users' privacy, and have never sold your information. We have even fought hard to defend your privacy in legal cases; however, we've done it with almost no financial support -- paying out of pocket to continue providing the service. Due to the issues imposed on us by advertisers, we also stopped hosting most ads on the forums many years ago. We hope you appreciate our efforts.

Show your support by donating any amount. (Note: We are still technically a for-profit company, so your contribution is not tax-deductible.) PayPal Acct: Feedback:

Donate to VoyForums (PayPal):

Login ] [ Main index ] [ Post a new message ] [ Search | Check update time | Archives: 12345678[9]10 ]
Subject: Ask and ye shall receive! Here you go--->


Author:
Cari
[ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ]
Date Posted: 02:34:42 08/12/03 Tue
In reply to: chrystynne 's message, "BELATED HAPPY BDAY BEN!!! btw, Cari, have you seen any review of BT's cd? i'm getting my copy on payday!:)" on 11:10:00 08/11/03 Mon

Billboard

BT
Album Title: Emotional Technology
Producer(s): BT
Genre: DANCE/ELECTRONIC
Label/Catalog Number: Nettwerk America 30344
Release Date: Aug. 5
Source: Billboard Magazine
Originally Reviewed: August 16, 2003


Building on the success of his "Movement in Still Life" album and high-profile gig as producer of 'N Sync's "Pop" single, BT (aka Brian Transeau) smartly continues to expand the notion of what a dance/ electronic artist can create. On this, his fourth proper artist/studio recording, BT gives equal time to thick beats, spacey trance, classical arrangements and sincere melodic pop. While BT's vocals are spotlighted throughout, he does share the microphone with 'N Sync's JC Chasez on the hypnotic lead track "Simply Being Loved (Somnambulist)," and it is truly one of the album's high points. Chasez is one of many well-cast guests on the disc, which also includes actress Rose McGowan and Scott McCloud (sharing vocals on the funky, guitar-heavy "Superfabulous") and Guru on "Knowledge of Self."—KC
----------
Rolling Stone

BT Emotional Technology (Nettwerk)

If anything defines where BT is at on his fourth artist album, it is the self-sung lyric in "Dark Heart Dawning," that goes "though I came up in it/I'm not defined by it." The gospel-tinged ballad can be read as BT's swan song to trance. Instead, he's attempting to build heartily on what he introduced on 2000's Movement in Still Life -- bringing a real, radio-friendly pop element to electronic-based tunes he hopes will cross over. "Force of Gravity," featuring 'N Sync's JC Chasez's heavily filtered vocals, follows the same formula as the hit "Don't Give Up" by British artist Chicane with Bryan Adams. Later Rose McGowan, Scott McCloud (Girls Against Boys) and BT sing on "Superfabulousness," funked-up, industrial-tinged, pop fodder, and likely a hit single in the making. BT is clearly ambitious -- and ET will help him achieve his lofty goals. (JOLIE LASH)
-----------
URB review - In flash, but a worthwhile read
----------
LA City Beat - article/review:

Engineering 'Emotional Technology'

by Dennis Romero

BT is lost in his little silver PowerBook, launching a sequencing program called Ableton Live that will allow him to perform pretty much his whole new album using just his laptop. He begins to demonstrate his own proprietary “stutter edit” plug-in program, which he co-wrote specially for his new CD, Emotional Technology. It makes a vocal snippet bounce like a ping-pong ball on its way to rest. “Fucking amazing,” he says, sitting on a vanilla-colored couch in his panoramic Los Feliz home studio. “This is way, way cool.”
No one is more enthusiastic about Emotional Technology, released this week, than the man born Brian Transeau himself. At home with his Boston terrier Tootsie and his pug Presley, overlooking Griffith Park and gazing at an array of dream gear – two Mac G4s, flat-screen monitors, three racks of processors and effects – the 32-year-old is like a kid in a candy store. He explains how he’ll control the stutter edits by using an infrared beam that will respond to his body movements.

“I’m going to sing into the laptop and with my hands go like this” – he karate-chops the air – “and be able to stutter-edit the music live.”

The album is just as ambitious as BT’s worldwide tour, set to begin in October. It’s a showcase of out-of-this-world production techniques that should make the world’s top pop studio artisans – Timbaland, the Neptunes, et al. – take notes. The razzle-dazzle array of nu-skool break-beats (“Knowledge of Self”), lush trance lullabies (“Force of Gravity”), and sassy pop-rock (“Superfabulous”) features celebrity voices – rapper Guru of Gangstarr, singer JC Chasez of ’N Sync, and actress Rose McGowan of television’s Charmed, respectively. But the biggest star of the CD is BT, who finds his voice somewhere deep down on the optimistic “Somnambulist,” and on the digital, throwback-to-hair-band ballad “Dark Heart Dawning.” The collection reaches for the heavens like a progressive-rock opus, but it retains focus and soul even as it showboats with layers upon layers of digital sound editing, amazing effects, and punchy stops. After working the studio with ’N Sync and Britney Spears, perhaps Transeau wanted to make the statement that he can create the hits on his own. Following a decade-long career of pushing forward new dance-floor genres (“epic” house, progressive, trance, nu-skool breaks), BT is leaving it all behind to become a pop star. Few, if any, of Emotional Technology’s album edits will appeal to underground DJs.
“I wanted to make some really personal music and showcase how diverse my influences are,” he says. “The intention was to up the bar on a production level, too. There are a couple songs that are melodically simple, but the production is sophisticated.

“I don’t have a problem with pop music,” he continues. “I want people to hear what I do.”

Like crabs in a bucket, some dance critics are griping about Emotional Technology’s mainstream aspirations. Despite the clawing, the record is already crossing over, with “Somnambulist” debuting in the Top 40 of Billboard’s singles chart. The single has also received airplay on pop station KIIS-FM (102.7) and alt-rock station KROQ-FM (106.7). “We’ve been banging ‘Somnambulist,’” says DJ “Swedish” Egil Aalvik of grooveradio.com and Sirius satellite radio. “We’ve been playing five tracks off the album. They’re all awesome songs.”

BT, whose last album was released in 2000, describes spending hours and hours fine-tuning bits and pieces of each track on his Mac G4 just to get the right sound for Emotional Technology. He says he started with a song in his head – often just a melody – and composed around it, frequently with a virtual, MIDI-controlled synth. “While I’m walking or driving, a melody or a lyric comes to me and repeats itself,” he says. “I sing it into my cell-phone voicemail or a ghetto tape deck I keep in my car. I never just program beats to write songs. The production process always starts with a completed idea for doing a song.” It sounds a bit advanced for a dance artist, but, then again, BT has always been a prodigy, having started playing piano at age two, learning classical licks at 13, and ultimately attending Boston’s Berklee College of Music, only to drop out to chase his California dreams. These days, his production schedule is so intense – he’s scoring the soundtrack to the forthcoming Charlize Theron film Monster – he’s hired a full-time assistant and an intern to help with the more mundane duties. The two young men slice and dice sounds from a downstairs office in BT’s home studio, sending strange loops and phrases resonating through the modern box of a home (which has corrugated metal siding). “This sound editing is really extensive,” says assistant Mike DiMattia as he sits in front of a Mac.

BT is proud of the extra work put into every note on the new album, too.

“Every single 64th note has been intently combed through, sometimes 50 or 100 times,” he says. “There’s a lot of attention to detail.

“Music based on technology should be the most cutting-edge music there,” he continues. “Everybody in the dance scene is trapped under their own little rock, scared to do something. The people stepping out and thinking outside the box are the ones exciting me right now.”

Those people must include BT himself, indeed.
----------
From E! Online (the one I disagree most with because I like the whole album but I like the JC mention)

BT: Emotional Technology
Our grade: B-

Artist / Band: BT
Record Label: Nettwerk
Release Date: August 05, 2003
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Review:
Brian Transeau (aka BT) is used to rubbing shoulders with the stars. After all, he has spent the past decade remixing hits for everyone from Tori Amos to Madonna, collaborating with 'N Sync and Sting--and filling the world's trendy clubs with his signature trance grooves. Now he's flipped through his Rolodex and asked his high-profile pals to return the favor for his latest solo album. The hard work yields mixed results. JC Chasez helps propel first single "The Force of Gravity" to exciting heights, and BT's trance and dance tunes can still rock the clubs. But actress Rose McGowan's vocals only make the synthed-out '80s number "Superfabulous" super-tacky, and BT's attempts at rock 'n' roll lead to schizophrenic sloppiness. Seems Emotional Technology still has some bugs in it.

[ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ]

Replies:
Subject Author Date
okay, i'm confused. i know JC does FOG but looking at the first review, he also did Somnabulist? damn, i can't wait for payday!:( btw, thanks for the many reviews!!!chrystynne06:27:17 08/13/03 Wed



Forum timezone: GMT-8
VF Version: 3.00b, ConfDB:
Before posting please read our privacy policy.
VoyForums(tm) is a Free Service from Voyager Info-Systems.
Copyright © 1998-2019 Voyager Info-Systems. All Rights Reserved.