Category Archives: Music

Payday!

Robert Babicz : Mister Head (K2/Kompakt Germany) – for Sondag, which Nick Craddock featured in one of his mixes a while back, and I’ve only just been able to track down

Robert Babicz : The Cloudpainter EP (Out Of Orbit Denmark) – more from him. Three solid tracks

Jus Ed
: Small Oak (Underground Quality US) – for the first track. It’s hot

Jenifa Mayanja
: Time Waits For No One (remixes) – From Stream Of Consciousness CD (Underground Quality US) – also for the first track. Also hot

New World Aquarium
: Twenty EP (Delsin Holland) – Five new tracks. Picking up where he left off

Non Stop DJs
: Retarded EP (Non Stop Recordings) – My North London boys doing Ghetto Tech proper like. This is sounding really tight

Jacek Sienkiewicz
: Narrative (Recognition Poland) – a reissue. The last track is the one

Terre Thaemelitz
: You? Again? (Mule Electronic Japan) – late 90s Thaemelitz house wares repressed on Mule Electronic last year. Seriously deep

Terre Thaemelitz
: You? Again? Vol 3 (Mule Electronic Japan) – same

Hydrology Plus 1 + 2

Had a bit of moolah in ye olde paypal reserves as a result of selling a few items via my Discogs page and eBay in recent months, so I repurchased Alan Wilder’s first two solo records as Recoil, 1+2 circa ’86 and Hydrology circa ’87. I used to own the CD which compiles these two records, but I believe it was one of the victims of the 2001 car thefts. At any rate, I now own it again for the first time on wax.

So who is this Alan Wilder you ask? He be the man that replaced Vince Clarke in Depeche Mode after Speak & Spell, then left in 1995, sometime around Dave Gahan’s heroin addiction by my faulty memory. To situate the music, you need first think of Black Celebration and Music For the Masses era Depeche Mode, without the singing, with a bunch of disparate vocals, from indigenous peoples to operatic shit. There are five tracks across the two records, ranging in length from 14 to almost 19 minutes, save the first track which clocks in at 7:43. Within these lengths he builds up some serious density, and roves a fair amount, often incorporating a few movements.

The result is totally coherent, and these were landmark works for their time. In my mind, nothing much approached this level of coherence, complexity and artistry in electronic music then. This was before Detroit Techno as we know it today – contemporary with its beginnings. It had little to do with it and less to do with Chicago house. It was its own electronic beast. I guess its most common style would have to be ambient stuff a la Eno and maybe Tangerine Dream, and I certainly hear some Reich in there.

That “Love on a Fast Train” track from Risky Business (which also accompanies the youngest boy in The Squid & the Whale) that I posted my surprise about a while ago is maybe fairly comparable. Maybe it sounds most like Global Communication’s 76:14 album (on which Maiden Voyage is the interpolation of Love on a Fast Train), but eight years earlier, and probably the superior work given how well it holds up 20 years down the line. I listened to this album hundreds of times in the 90s and never tired of it. I can’t recall the last time I listened to all of 76:14 straight through. Having it again now is a treat. If you’ve never heard it and love that middle era Depeche Mode like I do, definitely give it a go.

Next gig SPAM: Sud records 10th release party, with Portable and Cassy

We will be celebrating our 10th release with a very special party on the 31st of March ; our first party for 2007 , so not to be missed !

We are so so thrilled that Cassy will be joining us & helping us celebrate this release .

Catherine Britton aka Cassy, left England for Austria with her Caribbean father and Austrian mother in 1975.
She spent her childhood in Vienna and Lower Austria, starting to sing and study music at an early age. What happenned since has been nothing short of phenominal .

Cassy has become the toast of the electronic world . It’s no surprise really , with the kind of credentials , she holds .

She has collaborated with some of the most influential artists in Techno . Namely Ricardo Villalobos , Luciano , Steve Bug e.t.c. & holds a residency at the highly regarded , Panorama Bar , in Berlin ; & can sometimes be found working behind the counter @ Hardwax ; Berlin’s legendary record shop .

Her solo projects are worth a look in as well as they are rather good . ‘ My Auntie ‘ her solo debut on Perlon , is a personal favourite . She has also recently started , her own label , simply called , Cassy . If the 1st release on this label is any thing to go by , then expect some killer future releases .

What has trully lifted her profile , though is her mix Cd for Panorama Bar . The first for the club & artist alike . Titled ‘Panorama Bar 01 ‘ . This is a journey into the deeper side of Techno & House . No computer gimmicks , just the mixer , 2 decks & a great selection of tracks . This is most definitely one of the best mix cd’s of 2006 . An essential purchase indeed ! .

Anyone who has spent some time on Panorama Bar’s dancefloor during one of Cassy’s sets has witnessed what special kind of atmosphere and energy she manages to create with her House-Sound. When Cassy is behind the decks, sitting around or hanging at the bar never really is an option, as it is rather probable everyone finds themselves dancing. Her very own way of fusing deep, minimal and sexy records is highly exceptional and it creates a very intoxicating, special groove. Do not miss !

Cassy will be joined by Portable , who will be performing tracks from his forthcoming album , out on Sud , May / June .

Completing the bill will be our residents , Lakuti , Marco Shuttle , Nick Craddock , Special guests Stefano & newbie to Sud , Tristan Watkins aka Phonopsia .

I have been listening to Tristan’s mixes for quite some time now & they are great & i for one am looking forward to his Sud debut .

After the great visual display from Squint in December , he will be back again with Brittski .

We will be back @ the Rhythm Factory …16 – 18 Whitechapel Road , London E1 1EW .

10 pm – 6 am with a new & improved sound in Room 1 .

As usual , book your place on the £8 list by emailing :

[email protected]

otherwise it’s £10 on the door .

Cassy’s discography

http://www.discogs.com/artist/Cassy

Body Code @ Myspace

www.myspace.com/bodycodemusic

Looking forward to seeing you all !

Lerato / Lakuti

Busy weekend

Much ado in Saint Reatham this weekend gone. Must pack this in quickly and catch up on sleep.

Friday evening my new mixing console was delivered right after work. It’s a Soundcraft Spirit ES, which is a 10 stereo channel, 4 mono mixer, which is a rather unique configuration, but perfect to my needs, as I have/use more stereo devices than most people do. The mixer was recently taken out of production, so I had to do some serious hunting. I’m fairly certain I got the very last new one in the UK.

For the last month I’ve been struggling to get the new kit up and running together through my Allen Heath Xone:32, which is only a 3-channel DJ mixer, and I’d totally run out of space on my desk. The new keyboard was hanging out back on top of the turntables, and there was absolutely no space for a 21″ wide mixer on the desk. Basically I had to do a full-scale rearrangement, which has taken me almost all weekend, but all is done now!

Half-way through I convinced myself I would need to buy a new computer desk because I so fully filled my old one (which is fairly massive) with the musical kit, but I’ve managed to get around that and fit everything into a really compact space via the purchase of four new shelves for my Ikea Jerker. Now everything is within reach, all the cables are neatly twist-tied, and I even got the computer set up so that it tucks away while not in use (the whole aim of this reversion to hardware is to use the puter less). Most importantly I can use all my kit at once and the mixer sound dope. I even got the monitors/sub into a sweeter position today. After a few minutes of fooling around with it all for a bit today, I’m most pleased. I feel like I accomplished a lot this weekend. Anyway… have a gander.

Last night, before figuring out what to do with the computer

Now, with the computer added

Now, with the computer tucked away

We also officially kicked off the house hunt on Saturday. More news on that as things transpire.

2006 charts

Top 5 albums and compilations
Convextion – Convextion [downLow]
Herbert – Scale [!K7]
V/A – Lifeworks [Open Mind]
Stereolab – Fab Four Suture [Too Pure]
Traxx presents The Dirty Criminals – Collision Between Us And The Damned [Gigolo]

Top 25 12″s
John Beltran presents Nostalgic – Going Home EP [Groovia Sound Project]
D5 – Neutrino EP [Delsin]
Koss – Ra1030in [Mule Electronic]
3 Chairs – No Drum Machine [3 Chairs US]
Point B – Cutouts [SCSI]
Atjazz – For Real EP [Innervisions]
Marcellus Pittman – # 2 [FXHE US]
Move D – Silk & Shmoove EP [Compost Black Label]
T.O.M. Project – Renaissance [Sound Signature]
Monolake – Alaska Melting [Monolake]
Dabrye feat DOOM – Air [Ghostly International US]
Erell Ranson – Sleeping Beauty EP [Arne Weinberg]
Jacek Sienkiewicz feat Marek Raczkowski – Warsaw For Beginners [Recognition]
Pascal Schäfer – Day Return EP [Karaoke Kalk Pets]
Steve Spacek – Baby Baby [Jazzy Sport Japan]
Atom Heart – Repetetive Digital Noise [Recognition]
Alif Tree – Forgotten Places (Moodymann remix) [Compost]
DJ Yoav B – Language Of The Open Heart EP [Delsin]
Escort – Starlight [Escort Records]
The Mole – In My Song [Wagon Repair]
Chateau Flight – Baroque EP [Innervisions]
Dan Curtin – Tricks (part 1) [Tuning Spork Germany]
Redshape – 2084 [Music Man Belgium]
I:Cube – Acid Tablet EP [Versatile]
Steve Spacek – I Wanna Piece Of Ur Luv [Jazzy Sport]

Convextion

As there will no doubt be at least 80 credible reviews of the 800 copies of the Convextion album, I’ll try not to focus so much on what makes each track essential to the album (and it is an album proper) as what makes Gerard Hanson so compelling to the core of the techno scene; what makes him one of the few who can sell out an initial pressing before it is released, even after a four-year hiatus under this guise. In my mind that is the thing that’s worth writing and reading about at this moment. People don’t need convincing to buy his music once they hear it, and clips are available everywhere. But in a time when labels, distributors and shops are closing left and right, why is it that one quiet and genial fellow from Texas can attract so much attention when so many artists and labels are struggling? In short, is this merit or hype? This is what the unconvinced and unaware are asking themselves, and what I hope to answer in words (however difficult that is).

It will have been said over and over that in Gerard’s music there is always a preoccupation with reverb. He uses delay much more than most and tends to get away with it remarkably well. But to reduce his impact on the techno world to his use of reverb Basic Channel style would be to disregard everything else he is doing. Perhaps 10-20% of the final result will have been basicchannelised in the aggregate, which will of course appeal to fans of that sound, and most techno fans full-stop (and this is of course not a criticism of him, given that he has been fulfilling the prophecy of that sound since it generated). But lost in this narrow reduction is the fact that he’s still got a very normal (if not exemplary) techno arrangement underneath, and often 2-3 times as much going on at any given time, or just as much variance horizontally. What is superlative is that he manages to do this without clutter, incoherence or regrets about any part of an evolving track being superior to the rest. In short, he succeeds. In my mind there are four essential ingredients to this success that set him apart from his peers:

A) His arrangements are always ambitious. While there are some people who succeed as well as he does at making their arrangements work, and there are many people who try to do as much as he does, there are very few who merge this ambition and execution as well as he does.

B) While this may seem like a statement of the obvious, when his efforts in total are added up, and everything can still be picked out so cleanly in the mix, it is nothing short of a miracle. His production skills can’t be faulted, and the pressing of his new album at D+M will only help to justly solidify this reputation.

C) Synthesis is perhaps the most overlooked ingredient in what makes Convextion what it is, and probably the one thing that distinguishes him most from Basic Channel (to unfairly extend the comparison). In nearly every track he is deploying sines, squares, pulses and saws in exactly the right spots, and always tweaking their character throughout, as though the arrangements require it, although 99.9% of producers and listeners would be perfectly satisfied without these extra touches. None of these sounds are essential, but we always know that if it weren’t these sounds, he’d make another equally compelling sound to take its place, and it would work just as well in the mix overall. There aren’t many producers who can impart this comfort in sound design. It is always extensive and almost always right. This is expert synthesis.

D) The one thing that is probably overlooked even more than sound design is composition, which is always impeccable. Given obvious skill in these other areas, many producers would mail in the actual writing of music, which is of course one of the most compelling ingredients in the appeal of Convextion, if shrouded within his many other successes. The key is that he is one of the few who have mastered this totality of making techno, yet still continues to challenge us with the individual melodies that get wrung through these other disciplines. This is probably the most commendable facet of his genius.

Put this all together and you have the techno record buyer’s hysteria we’ve seen in the last month of anticipation of this release. It has been a long time coming. I really hope everyone gets a copy. It does not disappoint. This can only raise the bar for quality in techno – which is not to say it’s the best album evarrr, but in terms of ambition, imagination, coherence and execution it’s hard to see how it can’t be one of them. I don’t know if those are the standards we should use to judge techno, but if they are, it’s certainly one of the top 10. Evarrr.

I can almost imagine people fighting for early slots at parties, in order to guarantee that they can be the DJ who drops these tracks first. Surely this is an hallucination, but it makes me think the album could be renamed “Music to Make People Show Up Early”, and not be wrong. I need to go listen to it again.

Fretting

So I posted this latest mix in a bit of a hurry. It compiled a few different efforts that never got recorded in a way I was happy with individually, but I didn’t really convince myself 100% about the all-in-one effort by the time I was about to press ‘publish’. So I was calm (for once). I listened to it again. Twice. And then I posted it. Later that night I wasn’t sure if I’d done the right thing. And the next morning I still wasn’t sure. It’s exactly on the fence between calling something done with the energy of risk versus attempting to perfect the errors that come out from the aggressive efforts (which would have been quite a chore given that this is already a distilled collection of tracks).

To get technical… there isn’t an easy mix in the first 50 minutes. All-told there’s one mix I hate (although neither track has any prominent, steady high-end to mix with), one mix I’m incredibly happy with (followed immediately by a rushed mix with horrible EQ/levels b/c I held the previous one for so long that there was no time left for the next), a mix I just can’t get my head around (possibly because I had to drop the tempo about -3 to -4 to get the mix in at +8 on the incoming track and I can’t tell if listeners will think this squashes the momentum, consciously or otherwise) and another mix near the end that was purely fatigued.

All told, I’ve found my comfort with this collection of challenges and errors on the aggregate, but it took me a few days and I don’t think I’ll do another mix for a while. I’ve been really longing for access to my digital collection when putting mixes together, and I even did an edit of The Eurythmics “I’ve Got an Angel” the other day (which I played at Plex) and is something I hope to do much more of. I’m just not happy with sticking to a 110-140bpm format anymore. I really want to open up the access to that 90-115 bpm stuff without making it sound chipmunked and without dropping the tempo that low for sustained periods. Anyway… it’ll be some time before I can do that, as property purchase priorities are about to supersede the musical, and in my last month of care-free music budgeting I’m going to round out the studio, so it’ll prolly be a while before my next mix. I’ve done a bunch this year, and the archive is plentiful, so fuck off if it ain’t enough for you! 🙂 Actually I may just start digitizing the ’92-’97 archive from tape, which is a bunch of the stuff I want to be playing anyway!

The post of the beast

This is my 666th blog entry. Shit!

Anyway… I recorded this mix on Sunday. It’s got a bit more drift than I’d like and a couple of mixes I want back, but it should do the trick. This is a collection of some of the stuff I’ve played from my last three gigs, since only one of those sets was recorded, and that one really didn’t come out like I wanted it to. It’s a pretty wide range of stuff with a focus on acid, dub, older house and some newer techno. Something like that I guess. It ends with a song I’ve finally tracked down after 15 years of searching, which was an essential part of the soundtrack to 1991 for me. This clocks in at just under 2 1/2 hours. Encoded at 192 Kbps CBR. Get it here.

Tracklist:

Visioneers – Days Gone By [Omniverse]

Steve Spacek – Peep Live Show [Jazzy Sport]

Aroy Dee and Da Voida – Boracic (Aroy Dee Remix) [M>O>S]

Philus – Acidophilus [Sähko]

Faked.info – 36 Badass Slow [Bruchstuecke]

Atom Heart – L.T.B.C.Y.B. [Recognition]

154 – Themurderpeople [NWAQ]

Plastikman – Smak [NovaMute]

The Rotating Assembly – Orchestral Hall [Sound Signature]

Was (Not Was) – Wheel Me Out [Antilles]

Malik Alston – Butterfly (Amp Dog Knight/Jovante Remix) [Third Ear]

Kahil El’Zabar – He’s Got the Whole world in His Hands (Henrik Schwarz Remix) [Deeper Soul]

Chez Damier & Ron Trent – Space Riddims [Prescription]

Logic – The Warning (Inner Mix) [Bolshevik]

“Little Louie” Vega featuring Arnold Jarvis – Life Goes On (Dub Goes On Mix) [MAW]

Innervisions Presents Atjazz – For Real (Version Remix) [Sonar Kollektiv]

Monolake – Alaska [ml/i]

Forcept 1 – FR:01:V1 (Akufen Remix) [Concept]

Koss – ra1030in (Koss Remix) [Mule Electronic]

Marcellus Pittman – Skylark (Late Morning Mix Foool!!) [FXHE]

Rhythm & Sound – Queen Version [Burial Mix]

Hendrik Luuk – Vikat Voei Leib [Out to Lunch]

Henrik Schwarz – Jeff [Zeppelin]

Redshape – Ultra [Music Man]

TraXX presents ThE DiRtY CriMinALs – 101 Jax [International Deejay Gigolo]

Robert Hood – In Basements [Logistic]

Erell Ranson – Nothing Has to change [Arne Weinberg]

Placid Angels – Going Home [Groovia]

Abecedarians – Smiling Monarchs [Factory]

Maiden Voyage/Risky Business

I’ve just finished watching Risky Business and I’ve been utterly impressed/dismayed to find out that Maiden Voyage AKA 8’07>5’23 from Global Communications’ 76:14 is clearly a cover of Tangerine Dream’s Love on a Real Train, which was blatantly made for that film, or at least titled for it. Did Pritchard/Middleton ever write anything for themselves or were they always just incredibly brilliant sample whores? Listen here if you want/need confirmation. All my illusions have now been shattered.