Heavy-weather, beyond-good-and-evil soundsystem poetics, channelling raw and rootical techno, Isolationist
abstraction, and dub at its most turbulent and raw-nerved and space-time-warping. New worlds ahead... Equal
parts tuff, tail-thrashing dancehall pressure – see ‘Hell Dub’ – and art-of-darkness ambience and introspection,
culminating in the slow-burning, third-eye-opening 23-minute dreamweapon, ‘Vertigo’. Part of the Young Echo
crew, Ossia embodies the best tradition of Bristol underground music in that he doesn’t pay much mind to
tradition, just does his own thing. Yes, Devil’s Dance shares DNA with those sullen masterpieces we will always
associate with the city, from blunted 90s street-soul/hip-hop to sub-loaded dubstep – but like his forebears Ossia
is ultimately a mongrel breed, drawing from his own, very contemporary and idiosyncratic well of influences:
grime, jazz, steppers, dub, post-punk and industrial abrasion, concrète minimalism... Devil’s Dance could easily
be not just a forbidding, but a suffocating proposition. But even at its most angst-ridden it feels lithe and
aerodynamic, its darker impulses both intensified, and offset, by a pure soundboy’s delight in detail and colour
and higher dancefloor mechanics. The music pulses with energy, a fever to communicate...and Raki Singh
(violin), Jasmine (vocals) and Ollie Moore (saxophone) add vivid flesh-tone to the punishing, plasmic electronics.
The record was mixed at an infamous, subterranean Bristolian recording studio, using an arsenal of spring and
plate reverbs, modded pedals, tape-delays and compressors: systems of black magic crucial to the album’s
intense presence and physicality and carefully modulated dread. In the end what we are witnessing, and
experiencing vicariously, is a purging, an exorcism: find the devil, dance with the devil... and then chase, chase,
chase him out of the earth