The Ultimate Turn On
When Alec Palao's all-pro white-collar 'Ultimate' unfolded from his
laptop, a long-awaited treasured aspiration was realized; the definitive
works of the original Music Machine had at last, arrived.
The continuity of the total presentation is stunning, embodied with a
fresh and commanding timelessness that urges the eye, mind (and ear)
into the inner mechanism of the Machine's collective soul.
It's as if a layer of MM mystique has been meticulously unearthed and
artfully reassembled by a gifted -- technically advanced -- music
paleontologist [Palao-ontologist]: The once buried ultimate
understanding of garage rock MM style, is, as of this release, brought
to light as if shining on a newly arisen plateau.
The tracks -- which are nothing short of magical, confound and confront
each member's personal retrospectives, most of which are at odds with
the sum total of the whole, deepening the mystery of the MM's unity as
the group pursued -- and ultimately captured -- what rock historians
acknowledge was the vanguard of a genera.
For this reason, I would have preferred the omission of certain out
takes, but these conceptual embryos provide the listener with a
progressive evolution -- a musical gestalt -- heretofore unattainable
without the two or three 'takes' on hand (gloved, of course); i.e.,
rehearsal tapes, first mix, final mix -- and even then the listener may
have to cross reference all versions of each song's development many
times over to garner fully informed enlightenment.
This is but one aspect of Ultimate's artful intentions: the re-mastered
mono MM classics are nothing short of brilliant -- a painfully overdue
resurrection of the Music Machine's dedicated and hard fought-for
standard of excellence, not to mention maintenance thereof.
No 'Ultimate' would be so without mono and stereo renditions, but on
hearing the mono re-mastered MM classics, the issue of preference is
delivered moot; truth be told, the Machine's complex musical
arrangements were -- and are -- intentionally tooled to be heard and
appreciated specifically by the collaborated sonic impact only mono
can, and does, provide.
The deal is, the MM's modus operandi is now an open hand of cards.
The consummate MM fan, the purist -- disciples of the era and critics
alike -- are now able to hear the Machine's inner gears refine, polish,
and re-cut its diamonds in the rough; the rehearsal garage tapes reveal
this in spades, being most evident in "Discrepancy", "Masculine
Intuition", and "The Eagle Never Hunts The Fly" (to name just three). As
for the aforementioned classic re-mastered mono MM tracks -- and the
'Ultimate' package as a whole, it is sonically glorious.
A final, ultimate suggestion; with the possible exception of Big Beat's
early re-issue, you now have our official permission to throw away all
previously released 'Turn On' compilations; Those products are deformed bastard
children of blue-collar wanna-be deaf-mutes.
His Will, at last, be done,
Sean Bonniwell
