Amon TobinISAM

Genre:

Non-Music

Style:

Abstract

Year:

Tracklist

Journeyman 6:39
Piece Of Paper 2:40
Goto 10 4:20
Surge 2:05
Lost & Found 4:54
Wooden Toy 2:25
Mass & Spring 4:16
Calculate 1:33
Kitty Cat 4:17
Bedtime Stories 3:44
Night Swim 5:57
Dropped From The Sky 7:11

Credits (5)

Versions

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    15 versions
    Image , In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory
    Version Details Data Quality
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-04-19, File ISAM
    13×File, MP3, Album, 320 kbps
    Ninja Tune – ZENDNL168 UK 2011 UK2011
    Recently Edited
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-04-19, Vinyl ISAM
    2×LP, Album, Limited Edition, 180g
    Ninja Tune – ZEN168 UK 2011 UK2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM (Control Over Nature), 2011-04-19, CD ISAM (Control Over Nature)
    CD, Album, Limited Edition, Book
    Ninja Tune – ZENCD168X UK 2011 UK2011
    Recently Edited
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-05-23, CD ISAM
    CD, Album
    Ninja Tune – ZENCD168 UK & Europe 2011 UK & Europe2011
    Recently Edited
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-04-19, File ISAM
    13×File, WAV, 24 Bit
    Ninja Tune – ZENDNL168 UK 2011 UK2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM : Licensing Edition, 2011, CD ISAM : Licensing Edition
    2×CD, Album, Compilation, Digipak
    Ninja Tune Licensing Sampler – NLSCD057 UK 2011 UK2011
    Recently Edited
    Cover of ISAM, 2011, CD ISAM
    CD, Album
    Barcode Records – Barcode37CD Poland 2011 Poland2011
    Cover of Isam , 2011, CDr Isam
    CDr, Album, Promo
    Ninja Tune – ZENCD168P UK & Europe 2011 UK & Europe2011
    Recently Edited
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-04-15, CD ISAM
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Ninja Tune (2) – ZENCD168 Russia 2011 Russia2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM, 2011, Vinyl ISAM
    2×LP, Album
    Ninja Tune – ZEN168 UK 2011 UK2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM, 2011, CD ISAM
    CD, Album
    Beat Records – BRC-295 Japan 2011 Japan2011
    Recently Edited
    ISAM
    2×LP, Album, Promo, White Label
    Ninja Tune – ZEN168 UK 2011 UK2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-04-20, File ISAM
    13×File, AAC, Album
    Ninja Tune – none 2011 2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM, 2011-04-19, File ISAM
    12×File, FLAC, Album
    Ninja Tune – ZENDNL168 UK 2011 UK2011
    New Submission
    Cover of ISAM, 2011, CD ISAM
    CD, Album
    Ninja Tune – ZENCD168 UK & Europe 2011 UK & Europe2011
    New Submission

    Recommendations

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    Reviews

    • Hypnotia's avatar
      Hypnotia
      An album that I would love to hear on a £10.000+ system
      • Nojob's avatar
        Nojob
        Edited 2 years ago
        As "One last Look" was my favorite track, I was very disappointed to see it dropped from the vinyl release. Very.

        Otherwise, an awesome album and a even more amazing live experience, which I caught twice. If you haven't seen the show, this album probably won't make much sense. Reference ISAM on youtube for full recordings of his 3D projection live show. Amon continues to display his own unique sound, which is somewhat uncommon in the electronic music world. Nothing but iration for this producer and his continually evolving sound signature.
        • ante00's avatar
          ante00
          My copy sounds fantastic. An exemplary album to showcase the outer edges of sound design.
          • pluspaints's avatar
            pluspaints
            The ever evolving stylings of Amon Tobin have morphed into something very special. A less industrial sound than featuring on 'Out From Out Where', with nodnone of the Jazz breaks of old. To offer a comparison, Autechre springs to mind but with a deep velvet theatricality.
            The stage show which accompanied the album was absolutely mind blowing to see in person. Check it out on YouTube

            • Iuxta's avatar
              Iuxta
              A weird, but strangely enticing album, worth a listen at the very least!
              • Headphone_Commute's avatar
                Edited 12 years ago
                Listening to Amon Tobin’s latest album requires preparation. You can’t just throw on the record in the background and expect it to woo you. It requires a certain setting, a certain mood, a focused attention and an acute sense of perception. ISAM is a new full length release from Tobin since his 2007 Foley Room. And since it took him over four years to produce his most intricate and intense work to date, I can certainly take an hour of my time to fully absorb it. Actually, let’s make that an entire day. ISAM is more than an album. Subtitled “Control Over Nature” it is a also collaboration with Saatchi Collection artist Tessa Farmer, which extends into an installation, an audio/visual show, an artbook, a film, and a collection of stunning photography. So where do I start?

                At the center of the album, whether through visual or auditory means, we are confronted with recurring themes of “sensory deprivation, disorienting situationism and the mechanisation of natural things”. The latter is accentuated with Farmer’s occult sculptures, constructed from organic elements, and pieces of roots, dead insects, and bits of bones. Working together on this concept, Tobin and Farmer are both “re-arranging and augmenting natural elements to make something imagined but tangible”. The main focus of Farmer’s installations are insects, devouring decomposing flesh, while controlled by supernatural fairy-like skeletal creatures. In the same sense, Tobin’s compositions are constructed from a wide range of organic source material, seamlessly incorporating field recordings with complex sound synthesis, incredibly sophisticated sound production and warping skeletal structure of the rhythm. Together, these images and sounds are archived in a special 10×7″ black cloth hardback artbook, featuring photography by Pelle Crepin. A deeper exploration on this work is featured in the form of an essay by John Doran (founder of Quietus).

                To fully appreciate Amon Tobin’s achievement with ISAM, one must quickly traverse his musical career. Let me help you with that. Amon Adonai Santos de Araújo Tobin was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Traveling with his family around Europe, Tobin eventually settled in Brighton, England and began producing tracks with a sampler and a 4-track. His debut Adventures in Foam was released under the Cujo moniker on Ninebar Records. In 1997, Tobin finally landed on Ninja Tune with his critically acclaimed Bricolage. Although still mostly sample based, the album had a heavier jazz influence and more complex drum patterns. For his third album, Permutation (1998), Tobin continued working with mutated rhythms and loops, establishing his own instantly recognizable style. This genre-defining approach finally reached commercial appeal with Supermodified (2000). At this point, Tobin was already focused on turning familiar sounds inside out, obsessed with modification of original source beyond all recognition.

                In 2002, Moving closer to Ninja Tune’s North American Headquarters, Tobin found himself surrounded by the industrial area of Montreal, Canada. Finally working out of a professional studio, Out From Out Where put aside jazzy riffs, and took on a darker, colder, moodier side. Two years later, Tobin was ed by Ubisoft to compose a soundtrack for a video game, Splinter Cell. The new approach to sound design and production, opened up a whole new world, challenging Tobin to compose individual parts which could be assembled in real-time with unfolding events. Working with the company’s sound effects crew, Tobin became fascinated with the reproduction of realistic sounds for soundtracks, named after Jack Foley, which culminated into his sixth album, appropriately titled Foley Room. At this point, Tobin finally disentangled himself from previously sourced material, and began recording his own sounds. Quickly skipping Tobin’s collaboration with Joe Chapman as Two Fingers we arrive at ISAM.

                Although ISAM is entirely different in style from Tobin’s earlier works, and as such may not be instantly welcomed by his faithful followers, the album is a logical progression in sound design, experimentation and exploration for an artist with such a defined path. Listening closely, one immediately senses the amount of work and attention to detail that went into every single micro second of the record. Gone are the scratchy vinyl loops interlaced with sample triggered beats and glitchy percussion of Bricolage. Enter the tightly coupled, complex, clearly cryptic convolutions, that at times rush, stagger and fall over each other and then as effortlessly are left to pause, ponder, and catch their breath. Managed within a framework of rubber-band rhythms, pattern defying progressions, and just enough razor-sharp rumbling bass, the musical beauty of ISAM unfolds through its own metamorphosis, like an alien insect shedding its exoskeleton.

                Saturated with evocative aural imagery, an in-depth listening of ISAM is rewarded with an interplanetary ascent into a world where self-aware machines use home grown brain-tissue for their neurological computation, following by an unpredictable dive into a dark cavernous space of enormous proportions where sonic frequencies reverberate through every warping surface. Stitched from self-created field recordings, found sounds, and obscure DSP-rich programming, ISAM is a microscopic exploration into the nature of rhythm and sound. Everything is composed of new and ‘made-up’ instruments, including every percussive element. Even the vocals are synthesized and gender modified – an ultimate feat in having “control over nature”. As Amon Tobin says himself at the beginning of his track-by-track commentary accompanying his full-album stream on SoundCloud: “Anyone looking for jazzy breaks should look elsewhere at this point. It’s 2011 folks. Welcome to the future.“
                • cosanostrakriminal's avatar
                  You can still buy this version on the Ninja Tune website so don't go paying stupid money for it.
                  • Decay_K's avatar
                    Decay_K
                    I don't understand people claiming ISAM is so very different compared to his other releases really.
                    Lose a few fans? If he loses 10, he gains 10.000 new ones. It's a masterpiece. And this goes to the people who constructed his Cube, they doubled the art value of ISAM. It is the most powerful thing I have ever seen.
                    • MRCymbalic's avatar
                      MRCymbalic
                      Edited 7 years ago
                      Who has beef with this album? Tobin fans need to chill out about this release. This is exquisite work, regardless of who created it, obviously a master of their craft – in both design and execution – so what’s the problem? I don’t see any.
                      This album could be summed up in one word. The word is confident. And since Tobin may lose a few fans for being himself, so be it. I can respect the confidence to produce something for yourself. It’s not always about the audience. In fact, true art does not pander to a screaming public, it usually just manifests before the eyes and has instant value for just existing – this album could easily work toward that cause.

                      There is such a playful, almost whimsical appeal to the absurdity of sound bites used to compile beats and establish structure, which in no way hinders the output of creativity and conscious thought that went into the entire production.
                      This album may feel minimal, maybe. But compared to what? Previous Tobin material? Who cares. Self-improvement is what happens when an individual knows there are no limits to what they can do.

                      Right here and right now, this is the refinement we’ve been waiting for -- Amon Tobin couldn’t have marked history at a better date. True bliss during terrible times.
                      • Headphone_Commute's avatar
                        Listening to Amon Tobin’s latest album requires preparation. You can’t just throw on the record in the background and expect it to woo you. It requires a certain setting, a certain mood, a focused attention and an acute sense of perception. ISAM is a new full length release from Tobin since his 2007 Foley Room. And since it took him over four years to produce his most intricate and intense work to date, I can certainly take an hour of my time to fully absorb it. Actually, let’s make that an entire day. ISAM is more than an album. Subtitled “Control Over Nature” it is a also collaboration with Saatchi Collection artist Tessa Farmer, which extends into an installation, an audio/visual show, an artbook, a film, and a collection of stunning photography. So where do I start?

                        At the center of the album, whether through visual or auditory means, we are confronted with recurring themes of “sensory deprivation, disorienting situationism and the mechanisation of natural things”. The latter is accentuated with Farmer’s occult sculptures, constructed from organic elements, and pieces of roots, dead insects, and bits of bones. Working together on this concept, Tobin and Farmer are both “re-arranging and augmenting natural elements to make something imagined but tangible”. The main focus of Farmer’s installations are insects, devouring decomposing flesh, while controlled by supernatural fairy-like skeletal creatures. In the same sense, Tobin’s compositions are constructed from a wide range of organic source material, seamlessly incorporating field recordings with complex sound synthesis, incredibly sophisticated sound production and warping skeletal structure of the rhythm. Together, these images and sounds are archived in a special 10×7″ black cloth hardback artbook, featuring photography by Pelle Crepin. A deeper exploration on this work is featured in the form of an essay by John Doran (founder of Quietus).

                        To fully appreciate Amon Tobin’s achievement with ISAM, one must quickly traverse his musical career. Let me help you with that. Amon Adonai Santos de Araújo Tobin was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Traveling with his family around Europe, Tobin eventually settled in Brighton, England and began producing tracks with a sampler and a 4-track. His debut Adventures in Foam was released under the Cujo moniker on Ninebar Records. In 1997, Tobin finally landed on Ninja Tune with his critically acclaimed Bricolage. Although still mostly sample based, the album had a heavier jazz influence and more complex drum patterns. For his third album, Permutation (1998), Tobin continued working with mutated rhythms and loops, establishing his own instantly recognizable style. This genre-defining approach finally reached commercial appeal with Supermodified (2000). At this point, Tobin was already focused on turning familiar sounds inside out, obsessed with modification of original source beyond all recognition.

                        In 2002, Moving closer to Ninja Tune’s North American Headquarters, Tobin found himself surrounded by the industrial area of Montreal, Canada. Finally working out of a professional studio, Out From Out Where put aside jazzy riffs, and took on a darker, colder, moodier side. Two years later, Tobin was ed by Ubisoft to compose a soundtrack for a video game, Splinter Cell. The new approach to sound design and production, opened up a whole new world, challenging Tobin to compose individual parts which could be assembled in real-time with unfolding events. Working with the company’s sound effects crew, Tobin became fascinated with the reproduction of realistic sounds for soundtracks, named after Jack Foley, which culminated into his sixth album, appropriately titled Foley Room. At this point, Tobin finally disentangled himself from previously sourced material, and began recording his own sounds. Quickly skipping Tobin’s collaboration with Joe Chapman as Two Fingers we arrive at ISAM.

                        Although ISAM is entirely different in style from Tobin’s earlier works, and as such may not be instantly welcomed by his faithful followers, the album is a logical progression in sound design, experimentation and exploration for an artist with such a defined path. Listening closely, one immediately senses the amount of work and attention to detail that went into every single micro second of the record. Gone are the scratchy vinyl loops interlaced with sample triggered beats and glitchy percussion of Bricolage. Enter the tightly coupled, complex, clearly cryptic convolutions, that at times rush, stagger and fall over each other and then as effortlessly are left to pause, ponder, and catch their breath. Managed within a framework of rubber-band rhythms, pattern defying progressions, and just enough razor-sharp rumbling bass, the musical beauty of ISAM unfolds through its own metamorphosis, like an alien insect shedding its exoskeleton.

                        Saturated with evocative aural imagery, an in-depth listening of ISAM is rewarded with an interplanetary ascent into a world where self-aware machines use home grown brain-tissue for their neurological computation, following by an unpredictable dive into a dark cavernous space of enormous proportions where sonic frequencies reverberate through every warping surface. Stitched from self-created field recordings, found sounds, and obscure DSP-rich programming, ISAM is a microscopic exploration into the nature of rhythm and sound. Everything is composed of new and ‘made-up’ instruments, including every percussive element. Even the vocals are synthesized and gender modified – an ultimate feat in having “control over nature”. As Amon Tobin says himself at the beginning of his track-by-track commentary accompanying his full-album stream on SoundCloud: “Anyone looking for jazzy breaks should look elsewhere at this point. It’s 2011 folks. Welcome to the future.“

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