Category Archives: Music

Recording of me at Süd Electronic, 4th October 2008

This is the archive of yesterday’s radio broadcast on Duff Paddy’s Eclectic Electric show on Purple Radio, which is a recording of my performance at Süd Electronic last October. Apologies about the bass feedback from around 70 minutes until the end. I switched from Traktor Sctratch to vinyl during this bit of the set, and for once digital proved more resilient than vinyl, as the sound was feeding back with real vinyl but it didn’t pose a problem with time-encoded files. Also, as this was the opening set of the night so levels at the beginning aren’t perfect, blah blah blah, but hopefully it’s still enjoyable.

2020 note: all mixes taken down for now to re-post at higher bitrate on Mixcloud in due course. If you’re at all keen for me to do this, please let me know and I will try and get anything specific you want to hear moved over ASAP.

Tracklist
Koss – Earth (S Point) [Mule Electronic]
Inverse Cinematics – The Rise & Fall (Sam Irl remix) [Pulver Records]
A Mountain Of One – Brown Piano (remake by Studio) [A Mountain Of One]
Roland Appel – New Love [Sonar Kollektiv]
Secondo – Solstice [Soul Jazz Records]
Kadebostan – Sofia On Stage [Fenou]
Reggie Dokes – Black Thoughts (Original) [Psychostasia Recordings]
The Asphalt – 8 Mile Road (Juju & Jordash mix) [Deep Explorer]
The Mole – I’ve Got My A1 [Musique Risquée]
Stereociti – Dedicated JB [Deep Explorer]
Mujaba – Fuelta [Four Roses Recordings]
Henrik Schwarz, Âme and Dixon – DPOMB (version 2) [Innervisions]
DJ Gregory – Labyrinthe [Zouk Music]
Todd Terry – I Hear the Music [Sound of Ministry]
Kadebostan – 5.15 am [Fenou]
Kenny Larkin – Keys, Strings, Tambourines – Glob [Planet E]
Johnny Fiasco – D-Drive [Distant Music]
Jacek Sienkiewicz – Living in Oblivion [Smallville]
Focus – Marvin is One [Versatile Records]
Wam Kidz – CB’s Groove [After midnight]
Andre Harris – Lifted (Original) [Cajual Records]
XS – Deeper [Yoshitoshi Recordings]
NY Connection – Messages [Evolution]
Atjazz – For Real (Version Remix)
Kontext – Plumes [Immerse Records]

Space

Here’s a couple of videos with a space theme. The first is the Portsmouth Sinfonia masacring Wagner’s Thus Spake Zarathustra (the music from the opening credits of 2001). The second is a recording of space shuttle launch STS-124 from the sonic perspective of a solid rocket booster. The result is a strange, hypnotic noise/music, which is slightly marred by glitches but still completely worth a go.

We do what we’re told

My friend Stelios uncovered this mashup of Blade Runner and Peter Gabriel, which is pretty beautiful I reckon.

Deckard (Harrison Ford) retires the replicant Zhora (Joanna Cassidy). Footage is from the 1992 Director’s Cut edited with Peter Gabriel’s “We Do What We’re Told (Milgram’s 37)” from the album “So”.

Here’s the link. Unfortunately embedding is disabled. It’s worth checking the HD version if your bandwidth permits.

Upcoming Radio

I’m off on my honeymoon tomorrow but thought I’d give some notice about upcoming radio appearances. I’m not sure when yet, but my latest Thirty Five mix is going to be broadcast on the Bleep43 podcast at some point. If you’re not already a regular subscriber then make sure to rectify that now. Second, a recording of my performance at Süd Electronic last October will be broadcast on my friend Patrick‘s Eclectic Electric show on Purple Radio, Sunday September 13 at 19:00. Enjoy!

Thirty Five

I did a mix on my birthday at the weekend. Hip hop, house and techno, mixed on the edge of my comfort zone, pace-wise. CD length.

2020 note: all mixes taken down for now to re-post at higher bitrate on Mixcloud in due course. If you’re at all keen for me to do this, please let me know and I will try and get anything specific you want to hear moved over ASAP.

Tracklist
Katalyst – How Bout Us (feat. Steve Spacek) [BBE]
Luke Vibert – A Fine Line [JBC Sounds]
Geto Boys – Damn It Feels Good To Be A Gangsta (LP Version) [Asylum Records]
Gang Starr featuring Inspectah Deck – Above The Clouds (Explicit) [Virgin]
Harmonic 313 – Word Problems [Warp Records]
Hudson Mohawke – Root Hands [All City Ireland]
Tensnake – TheThenUnknown [Running Back]
Chez Damier – Why [Mojuba]
Kai Alce – Smoov Bumps [Deep Explorer]
DJ Marin – Love Fantasy (Rondenion mix) [TrebleO]
Domu – Dubs Journey [TrebleO]
Reggie Dokes – Chicago Pimp [Clone Loft Series]
Jared Wilson – Bangkok Four Seasons Hotel [Blank Artists]
Osborne – Wait A Minute (extended) [Spectral Sound]
Mass Prod – Focaccina (Jus-Ed Soul Stir mix) [Kontra Music]
Trinidadian Deep – Future Sonic [Future Vision]
Andre Zimma – Music (Atjazz remix) [Swedish Brandy]
James Kumo – Space Dancer (Planetary’s What Happens In Orbit Stays In Orbit remix) [Metamorphic]
Mr. G – Makes No Sense (Radio Slave’s Shaking The Tree remix) [Rekids]
Matt O’Brien – End Of The Beginning [Offkey Industries]
Deuce – Guttering (original mix) [Ostgut Ton]
Orphx – Threshold (Substance remix) [Sonic Groove]
Sven Weisemann – Trackz [a.r.t.less]
Shed – The Lower Upside Down (Surgeon remix) [Ostgut Ton]
Jacek Sienkiewicz – Connections [Cocoon]

Juno downloads and customer service

It took me a while to notice, but it turned out my last order from Juno was missing a number of tracks. All were available for download individually but in the zip files (which appear to have been automatically split at 2.5 GB) a number of the tracks/art were missing. I detailed this for Juno customer service and they reinstated my order so that I could download the missing stuff. I’m totally pleased with the response but it was a bit of a hassle figuring out what wasn’t there.

I e-mailed them again to find out  how this could happen and they said it hadn’t been reported before, but they are upgrading the download system and it will be faster and more reliable in the future. Anyway, I thought I’d pass the info along so that people check their zipped downloads if they pull them down this way.

A Fine Line between Wagon Christ and God

From Luke Vibert’s early productions on Rising High, Mo’ Wax and Ninja Tune through his reinvention in nearly every form imaginable since the early part of this decade, he has always remained resolutely idiosyncratic and recognisable while adapting himself to changing genres and technology. He’s also turned in some excellent DJ sets which display the same sense of quality and eclecticism.

Despite this reliability and novelty regeneration I seemed to loose track of him over the last few years, so he was one of the artists that I made an effort to catch up with. Setting the time machine back to August 2007 I found Chicago, Detroit, Redruth on Planet Mu and his collaboration with Jean Jaques Perrey, Moog Acid On Lo recordings. Both albums sounded interesting enough, but Vibert’s faster acidic side is a bit hit and miss for me. I picked up God from the former and Vision For the Future from the latter. Both albums as a whole were too acid-indulgent for me, which isn’t really a fair assessment of the whole, but I’ll stand by mu clip-based judgement that they aren’t his best work in their totalities. That said, God is exactly the kind of hip hop that only he can pull off, with lush choral samples over rudely distorted toms. It also has some of the best deitic samples aggregated in one place. Vision For the Future is reminiscent of his Lover’s Acid record or Kerrier District from a few years back. In that way it’s a useful sort of track for me, as I don’t buy a lot of house that sounds like this. Hell, not much house sounds like this. It’s just good with an unusual feel and mood to it.

Fast forward to last month and the release of his Rhythm album. From the first bar I was fondly reminded of Tally Ho! Indeed this album reminds me more of that release than anything he’s done since then, in that it’s mostly instrumental hip hop and it’s full of surprises (and ridiculously creative song names). When shopping I tried to dissect it unsuccessfully. While I could have probably lived with only two or three of the tracks, I really wanted the whole album, as it clearly deserves that monicker, despite its actuality as a repackaged collection of Japanese 12″ releases in an affordable release.

That said, one track stands out because it’s so unusual and good. A Fine line is another track using choral singing in hip hop to mad effect. I don’t know how it works, it just does, and it’s successful enough that it’s been swimming around in my head for a couple of weeks now.

The title track Rhythm didn’t leap out at me until I’d heard it a few times (probably because it takes a bit to get going). It’s all about the claps and reggae samples that come in about half way through. They’re huge. If anything I just wish this track was longer.

Concertina Turner, James Bond in a Jimmy Hat and Harmonica Sellers all have a classic funk feel to them, which will definitely appeal to fans of the classic Ninja Tune sound. Simultaneously it reminds me of DJ Premiere’s production on Moment of Truth. Same era(ish) I suppose.

But as I say it’s mostly just an enjoyable straight-through listening experience for the oddity of his orchestrations and left-field sample sources, which arrived right on time for me. I think this one has some shelf life in it.

To top this off, I’ve just noticed a second album in as many months called We Hear You on Planet Mu. I’ve not yet had a chance to check it but will endeavour to report back following the next batch of purchases.