Did this record come and go? Has anyone heard it? Is it good?
I ask these questions out of an interest in the Notwist/Tied + Tickled Trio guys rather than in Anticon.
― Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 5 May 2005 18:14 (twenty-one years ago)
theres a thread on it somewhere. it's really good but I think you have to be an anticon fan more than a notwist fan to enjoy it. although the first song that the notwist guy sings is amazing (now I can't remember the name of it, and don't have it on my ipod for some reason).
― kyle (akmonday), Thursday, 5 May 2005 18:21 (twenty-one years ago)
Men of Station is the awesome one. From what I hear, the rest of the album is pretty different sounding.
― Mickey (modestmickey), Thursday, 5 May 2005 18:34 (twenty-one years ago)
right, yes, the rest of it sounds like Subtle (which is practically is) but not quite as great (if you think that album is great, which I do).
― kyle (akmonday), Thursday, 5 May 2005 18:44 (twenty-one years ago)
I'm not so much an anticon fan - I don't really listen to much hiphop these days but I came upon the album via the notwist & I played the hell out of it during midterms - I definitely liked it.
― novaeris (novaeris), Thursday, 5 May 2005 19:37 (twenty-one years ago)
This web-site really likes it and made me want to check it out.
http://www.prefixmag.com/reviews.php?page=A&a=1&p=0&rt=cd&rf=ThirteenandGod%20ThirteenandGod%20050305&PHPSESSID=4103ac6656c6c766196e25aa8b4d22ef
13 And God
13 And God
label: Anticon
rating: 4.5
by Matthew Gasteier
The term “experimental pop” seems like it should be reserved for the same universe “jumbo shrimp,” “Microsoft Works” and “compassionate conservative” reside. The immediately accessible melodies and hooks required for a successful pop record are certainly at odds with the primary focus of an experiment: time-tested versus never-been-done. The members of 13 & God wear both labels on their sleeves, but -- as their eponymous debut proves -- the desire to push things forward and still create beautiful and accessible work is not insatiable.
A self-proclaimed “super group,” 13 & God is composed of the San Francisco-based hip-hop group Themselves, which includes Adam “Doseone” Drucker, Jeffrey “Jel” Logan and Dax Pierson, and the inevitably German glitch-pop pioneers The Notwist, made up of Markus and Micha Acher and Martin Gretschmann. The combination is everything you could hope for: dark, down-tempo hip-hop floating through fuzzy pop clouds that drift in and out of the album. As far as abrasiveness goes, you wouldn’t expect a Faust vs. Dalek level of intensity from these two, and you would be right. But the album’s beauty is astonishing. Using a basic formula -- broken a couple times -- of one Doseone (the rapper) song for every Markus Acher (the singer) song, the album is nevertheless enormously cohesive. Acher appears at just the right time, and Doseone’s nasally clip (I’m always surprised I don’t find him annoying) fits right in with the music.
Despite this natural beauty, there is still a sense that they are willing to explore the outer limits of the musical template. The music is strange but immediately appealing, and the effortless tone of the vocals conveys a dark, contemplative moment. On “Soft Atlas,” the B-side of their pre-release single, the simple and gorgeous Men of Station, Doseone contemplates space and the universe: “Without a universal law there is no gravity/ Without gravity there is no atmosphere/ Without an atmosphere there's no chance of life/ With no chance of life I don't exist.” His voice is repeated in rounds until all you really hear are those last three words. The track, like so many on this nearly perfect record, becomes almost trance-inducing.
Often it becomes clear that the experimental musician’s and the pop musician’s purpose is one and the same: create a piece of work that moves someone -- physically or emotionally -- and gives them something they couldn’t have before. Whether the musician is using basic concepts like melodies and beats or something more complex like odd time-signatures or strange production techniques, if the final product convinces someone to think or dance or do anything other than turn off the stereo (though that sometimes works, too), the goal has been met. The members of 13 & God have created a genuinely rewarding record that is better than the sum of its parts.
― BeeOK (boo radley), Thursday, 5 May 2005 20:25 (twenty-one years ago)
I liked Neon Golden, and this has hints of that, but there's just too much not to like here.
― Zed Szetlian (Finn MacCool), Monday, 9 May 2005 23:18 (twenty-one years ago)
five years pass...
Not bad! I really expected this was a one off collaboration so I'm happy to hear they're giving it another go. This track sounds a bit too much like an outtake from the first; I hope they open it up and surprise me somewhere down the line.
― EZ Snappin, Friday, 25 February 2011 15:28 (fifteen years ago)
first impression on first listen:
lifeless drums are lifeless
― Thee Macallan 18 Year, Friday, 25 February 2011 18:43 (fifteen years ago)
Not too bad, would like to hear tracks with more Themselves vocal appearances. At the time this first album came out I was completely obsessed with it, as it brought together my then-current Notwist obsession with my burgeoning Anticon obsession. In the years since its release, my love for both has waned to almost nothing, and yet this new track has me pretty excited.
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Saturday, 26 February 2011 19:43 (fifteen years ago)