BRAINWAVE TECHNOLOGY

(12")
Michael MayerÉs latest EP, Brainwave Technology, comes at you purposeful, stealthy and sly. ItÉs a glorious left turn for the redoubtable producer, one that sees his typically lean and lithe productions buffed to a metallic, futurist sheen
Genre Techno
FormatVINYL
Cat. noKOM444
Label KOMPAKT
Artist MICHAEL MAYER
Release Date27/08/2021
Carrier12"
Barcode4250101428685
Barcode: 4250101428685 1. Brainwave Technology by Michael Mayer 06:48 2. Gamma by Michael Mayer 05:32 3. Alpha by Michael Mayer 07:03 4. Device For The Young At Heart by Michael Mayer 05:16 Michael Mayer™s latest EP, Brainwave Technology, comes at you purposeful, stealthy and sly. It™s a glorious left turn for the redoubtable producer, one that sees his typically lean and lithe productions buffed to a metallic, futurist sheen. There™s a gleam in the eyes of tracks like šBrainwave Technology› and šAlpha› that speaks of serious fun, of the intersection of the pleasure zone and the frontal lobe. šBrainwave Technology› itself is informed by Mayer™s deep dive into the thorny terrain of artificial intelligence, transhumanism and posthumanism. Inspired by reading German philosopher Richard David Precht, Mayer found himself heading down the šproverbial rabbit hole,› as he describes it, šwatching hours of YouTube material by self-proclaimed prophets of these ˜inevitable™ changes to come.› Never one to be taken in by the egotist™s dance, Mayer™s cynicism about the whole endeavour is tempered, a little, by the deeper questions that these figures gesture towards: šIs it really an evolutionary step that man and machine become one? Or is it rather a marketing plot by Silicon Valley billionaires?› On šBrainwave Technology›, Mayer plays the charlatans at their own game, turning their logic against them by exposing the fruitiness of their ˜visions™. šI chose irony as my sword with which I chopped off some quotes from some of those batshit crazy prophets and self-promoters,› he explains of the drooling psychobabble he drops in the track™s lacuna. There™s a sense of humour here  how could you not laugh at these hungover egotists?  but there™s levity too, a sense that Mayer™s using sound to expose the contradictions and double-speak at the heart of these half-formed ideas. It™s a Burroughsian tactic, to slice into the heart of the voice to see what hidden truths surface. It was Burroughs, too, who once said that šwhen you cut into the past, the future leaks out›; Brainwave Technology cuts into the logic of the futurologist to leak out the messiness of modern reality. On šAlpha› and šGamma›, Mayer seems to conjure up the stark, ominous music that™d soundtrack a science fiction reinterpretation  or preinterpretation  of our modern malaise, all funereal wreaths of electronic noise and clatterboxing beats. As the EP resolves with šDevice For The Young At Heart›, Mayer™s questions are piling up: šDo we want to become immortal and live on as a download? Do we really give up on Earth and put all our effort into colonising Mars?› There are no answers, of course, but plenty of imaginings-to-be. Brainwave Technology soundtracks both dystopian and utopian possibilities of what could come next.