Fists and feelings, muscle and moodiness: Kode9 and Burial cut opposite but complementary figures. For years the Hyperdub boss and his label’s elusive leading star have carved out distinct approaches to dance music aimed (respectively) at triggering listener’s fight-or-flight responses and tugging at their heart strings. Both emerged from dubstep as a common starting point. Kode9 ran with the genre’s weighted swing, layering tracks with ultra-fine detail while retaining the style’s punchy dynamism. Burial homed in on the air of romance emanating from garage and 2-step, chasing their space and atmosphere until the beat fell out from his music completely.
Burial is anonymous to the point of caricature while Kode9 is professorial in a politely punkish way; neither artist seems overly concerned with stoking a cult of personality. If the two were a little more complicit in their own meme, they might have wielded their Tom-and-Jerry buddy dynamic with a little more flair. But because there are about three pictures of Burial in circulation and the odds are slim of the duo ever posing for a silly Mike & Rich-style photo shoot, their tandem return has gotten a characteristically low-key rollout: a mysterious London billboard, a re-aired Mary Anne Hobbs mix, and the hushed word of mouth that a new collaborative EP was on the horizon.
London nightclub fabric has brought the two artists together again after their 2018 entry in their FABRICLIVE series to release Infirmary / Unknown Summer. The record is easy listening rather than guns blazing, a laid-back pair of tracks warped around the edges by drowsy July heat. If these songs are meant as a dialogue between the two friends, the subject seems to be the weirder properties of summertime: all of the ways in which time melts and distends as temperatures increase.

