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Q MagazineIts brilliance lies in sifting the wheat from the enormous quantity of thenameless movement's chaff. [Aug 2003, p.119]
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Played start-to-finish, New York Noise begins to cohere into a joyously multi-hued mass, where hip-hop is a natural cousin of atonal noise, where minimalism becomes the perfect complement to funk, and where not even the skronked-out mess of DNA or the melodramatic ultra-seriousness of Glenn Branca can get in the way of a good party.
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It feels like one big loft party, even when it veers into psychotic, dissonant No Wave by DNA and Mars.
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The WireNew York Noise is exemplary: the right mix of 'hits' and obscurities. [#233, p.71]
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From hip-hop to no-wave, jazz-punk disco to house music to electroclash, sleek funk to crusty noise, there's a lot to cover, and Soul Jazz does the job admirably, touring the biggest landmarks and some of the interesting diversions not on the map, but nonetheless co-existing side-by-side.
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Another title that demonstrates what an awesome period the late '70s and early '80s was for music.
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