Showing posts with label slugabed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slugabed. Show all posts

Monday, 28 March 2011

RECOMMENDED: Dorian Concept – Her Tears Taste Like Pears [Ninja Tune]



Rightfully lumped in the whole ‘beats’ movement that exploded around LA and the release of Flying Lotus debut album Los Angeles album, Austrian producer Dorian Concept has since moved on. His ‘Trilingual Dance Sexperience’ 12” on the Affine label, upped the tempo, along with the quota for facemelting synthesizer workouts and since then he’s stood out during his live performances, unleashing new material live on the mini KORG (using anything and everything to hand – a shoe or his face are two memorable examples). Her Tears Taste Like Pears then, is his first outing for Ninja Tune - a label whose continual metamorphosis now includes Slugabed, an SR favourite whose recently signed to the label - and it really highlights Concept’s knack for caterwauling lead lines.

‘Thankyou For All Time Forever’ sets the tone for the 4 track EP perfectly. With the bassline permeating the found sound suddenly it’s the lay up for the title track’s alley-oop slam dunk. As the eponymous track rises and bubbles its evolutions dissipate, with the kick drum’s punch nailing the whole thing to the dancefloor. ‘My Face Needs Food’ travels that rude boy techno route we’ve come to expect from Wigflex staple the Hizatron, the kick drums toying with their route notes as the synths drape their melodies over the top, pirouetting down through the laser tones into ‘Toe Games Made Her Giggle.’ ‘Toe Games...’ centres itself around two things, the swell of the keyboards and the gallop of the drums, playing out like a high pitched sprint to the finish of the EP.

Her Tears... is a solid example of the kind of genius Dorian Concept, himself something of a child piano prodigy, is capable of; it’s frenetic, but grounded by the harmonics and chord structures. Whilst other producers might hone in on the beat, rigorously pushing the shuffle or reaching for the pound to get their point across, Concept does what he does best, layering harmonious synth after synth to jaw dropping effect.

Words: Oli Marlow // Out: Today

Tuesday, 23 November 2010

DOWNLOAD: Pixelord - Magic Firn



Russian producer Pixelord is someone who has long been in our periphery. Floating around that Slugabed/Coco Bryce populated void between, skweee, straight up hip hop and its uptempo dubstep cousin, he’s to date released an EP on the Error Broadcast digital imprint entitled Lucid Freaks alongside a follow up remix package which featured fellow Russian up and comers DZA and Demokracy, amongst others, attacking his source material. Backing it up with the Love Is EP for the Car Crash Set label – a Seattle based label whose grasp on our inbox seemingly grows stronger by the day with top of the line releases from people like King Thing, Distal, MusSck, C.R.S.T. and Mistamen – he’s on the verge a couple more releases.

“I plan to do new EPs in 2011," he told us when we caught up with him. "One EP on 12" vinyl, including an Om Unit remix and there’s another EP with Car Crash Set to come in 2011 too with remixes from SRC, Monky, Doshy, VVV, Pariah, Submerse and more. These are the plans and I’m working really hard to make it all real.”

Structurally his beats manage to really perfect that vital snap, with the snares sitting perfectly on top his winding bass work and primitive pixel edged melodies. It’s a real call and response thing with his music; as soon as it rolls out, it moves you. With determination and the necessary beat talent to back it up – see ‘Cartoon Friend’ or ‘Bossworm’ on the Lucid Freaks EP, he seems more than aware of his niche.

“Pixelord is a solo project by me, Alexy Devyanin. I’m doing music and art, exploring modern electronic music, synths, beats and bass. The Russian new electronic so called ‘beat scene’ is a kind of mutation of past electronic music and new trends, so right now the scene is really small.”

With players like the Sonic Router featured Demokracy, Pixelord himself and the Black Acre destined DZA all firing, it sounds and feels like the core native players have got the necessary legs to develop into something truly special. Having followed his whereabouts via twitter, he got in touch recently to tout his wares and offer Sonic Router readers an exclusive taste of his music.

“I have an amount of unreleased tracks that I like to give away from time to time, when I feel it’s the right time for it. So this track, ‘Magic Firn’ is not really fresh, but it’s a good part of my past work from this year.”

DOWNLOAD: Pixelord – Magic Firn



You can also download the Lucid Freaks EP and its remix package at 192kbps over at Error Broadcast's Bandcamp.



Links:
soundcloud.com/pixelord
twitter.com/pixelord

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

INTERVIEW: Ghost Mutt [Donky Pitch]



We’ve harped on before about the Donky Pitch crew from Brighton, their party friends and general life outlook - we even dedicated one of our installments of theQuietus column to their homie Boss Kite. And recntly we got wind of their first label offering, a split release between two of their parties residents: Slugabed and Ghost Mutt. With Sluga contributing his emphatic ‘Donky Stomp’ (which gets a remix from Spanish beat merchant Mweslee too), Mr Mutt is owning a whole side of wax with the tracks, ‘Platinum Skull’ and ‘Thoroughbred.’ Given the swagger, raw bass and creepily erratic approaches he deploys across the former (and the slinky vibes he wheels out on the latter) we knew he was someone we wanted to task to handle one of our mixes from the first listen.

‘Bringing something different’ is an incredibly overworked cliché even in our world, where we consciously try and avoid that type of rent-o-chump fodder, but it definitely works to grab attention, and it’s something the DP guys are doing brilliantly. So, to commemorate the inaugural release on the DP imprint we holed up at our keyboard and bashed out some correspondence with Ghost Mutt and he kindly serviced us our 57th mix in return.

SR: Can you provide those who may not know you with a bit of background info?

Ghost Mutt: I'm Ghost Mutt, I'm 21 and live in Brighton but originally come from the west country. I like making music and things.

Outside of music who are you? What do you do on the daily?

At the moment I work on and off for a Brighton based removals company. It's good honest man work and gets me out the house and away from the computer screen... Work's a bit slow lately though.

How did you first get into making music? What was it that infected you to do so?

Well I was in the standard cover bands as a teenager, playing Slayer tunes and the like. I used to play guitar a fair bit but over time I completely lost interest. I think in terms of electronic music it started for me when a friend lent me his four track cassette recorder; I'd spend ages recording and layering up all these different sounds then record them into my PC and mess about with them in Audacity. It'd be real basic stuff like reversing things and changing the speed and pitch but it really kind of amazed me that I could do all that inside my home computer that was otherwise soley for the purposes of computer games and porn. This was all with very little technical or musical knowledge of electronic music but that all came to me over time by going to college, even though I pretty much failed academically.

What’s your production set up like? What’s your favourite bit of kit in the studio?

Nothing exciting really... standard bedroom producer fare: just a macbook with Logic 8, audio interface and an MPD24 midi controller. No monitors so I tend to do everything on headphones then reference it on as many speakers as possible. My favourite bit of kit is probably my Korg soft synths... They're all software versions of classic korg analogue synths, likely as close as I'll get to owning one anywhere in the near future...

Where do you take inspiration from when making music?

Things I listen to... and that's about it. Not 'the world around me' or any of that silliness. The world around me is probably the polar opposite of my influences. R&B is creeping in more and more for me, and not just chopping up a diva and using 808 sounds (although both are still all important). The whole genre from around '88 to the mid '90s has the feel to it that I'm striving for at the moment.

And music that girls like too. Don't be surprised if I'm putting out a completely sincere, purely new jack swing album by this time next year.


DKY001 – Minimix

What’s the scene like in Brighton?

Small but healthy. I'm pretty lucky that Dave and Pete Donky decided to get me involved in what's turned out to be a really successful party. The magic of social networking I guess…

Are there any producers you rate the world should know about?

I got How to Dress Wells album recently and I'm really enjoying his lo-fi sound. The new dodpop skweee compilation is mental too.

What other projects have you got in the pipeline?

I've been doing a bit of stuff with Boss Kite that will hopefully see the light of day at some point... DKY001 is out end of this month, a few days after I'm playing their next party with Slugabed, Mweslee, Alex Nut and BFlecha. but I'll leave it to them to do the plugging.

Tell us a little bit about the mix you’ve put together for us…

The Girl Unit remix of C.R.S.T. had to go in because it's insane, plus it's my placeholder until ‘Wut’ comes out. Actually once ‘Wut’ is out I'm considering just doing entire hour long sets with nothing but that tune in. Keith Sweat, standard. I'm going to try and fit a different Keith Sweat tune into every mix from now on actually... I don't know I could literally go on about every track that isn't mine in the mix, they're all awesome. If they weren’t they wouldn't be in there!

Any words of wisdom, for our readers?

A good lather is half the shave.

::

DOWNLOAD: Ghost Mutt – Sonic Router Mix #57



Tracklist:

Keith Sweat - Tell Me It's Me You Want
Rihanna - Rude Boy (Hovatron Remix)
Lazer Sword - Where You Been 7.5
Eprom - Rubber Sheets
Ol' Dirty Bastard - Shimmy Shimmy Ya
Fulgeance - Vengeance
Nino - Get On the Floor
Slugabed - Take Off (Kuedo Remix)
KRSUR - Crystal
Ginuwine - Pony
Joe - Claptrap
Noaipre - Pretty Psycho
Ghost Mutt - Thoroughbred
Dam Mantle - Theatre
Ghost Mutt - Grace Jones
Doc Daneeka - Copz
Juan - Techno Music
Shortstuff - Galaxy
Velour - Booty Slammer
CRST - The Bells (Girl Unit Remix)
Slugabed - Donky Stomp (Mweslee Remix)

Catch Ghost Mutt @ the DKY001 Release Party in Brighton on Saturday at JAM in Brighton. Find DKY001 in shops from 1st November.



Facebook Event

Link:
www.myspace.com/ghostmuttuk

Friday, 6 August 2010

INTERVIEW: Demokracy [Robox Neotech]



Twisting up genres with spectacular ease - both in their productions and in their mixes for sites like Monday Jazz - we’ve been intrigued by the Russian duo Demokracy since we were sent a couple of clips of Starkey dropping some of their tunes on his Sub FM show back in June. With an EP release forthcoming on Doshy’s Robox Neotech imprint - a package that fuses bastard hip hop with anything and everything from digitized squiggles to plump sawtooth bass lines - we got super excited after learning they shared our penchant for the classic Anticon era and Doseone’s manic wordplay, so we asked them to put together a mix.

The happy making thing is: these two near anonymous dudes from Siberia absolutely smacked it...

Sonic Router: Can you provide those who may not know you with a bit of background info?

Demokracy: We are Stas (aka Hmot) and Albert (aka Damscray). We write tunes together and live in the middle of nowhere.

Outside of music who are you? What do you do on the daily?

Well we work at the spheres you may call ‘creative’ but it’s too dull to talk about it. So we’re just two guys who like to play board games, drink beer, read sci-fi novels or something like that. To be honest we don’t like to talk much about ourselves.

How did you first get into making music? What was it that infected you to do so?

We’ve been involved into music production since a very long time ago but as for our Dmkrcy project, well… it was just curious to play with various sounds - you know, to share some ideas, thoughts and all that shit with each other. And though we have a very similar musical tastes our points of view are often diverse and it’s very infectious - brings a new challenge every single day.

What’s your production set up like? What’s your favourite bit of kit in the studio?

Oh it’s just a bunch of old crap including a couple of laptops, two b-stock turntables and some toys like midi-controllers, samplers, even a cute vintage Casio synthesizer. Also we have a mixer that looks like a Soviet nuclear bunker and it’s a bit creepy. We call it Stalin.

Where do you take inspiration from when making music?

Most of the inspiration comes from classic sci-fi novels and movies – each tune has its own background but it’s not very engrossing story to tell you about. And as we listen to an enormous amount of really divergent music – from retro movies’ soundtracks and psychedelic/kraut rock to jazz, death metal, hip hop, modern bass music and beyond – it helps too.

What’s the thinking behind the Demokracy moniker?

All we can say is that at the very beginning it was a bit longer but then our good friend advised us to shorten it so it’s hard to say that it has a deep philosophical meaning or something like that. Quite a poor story, yeah?


Demokracy – Wintermute

How would you describe your sound? I mean your mix for us jumps from Eleven Tigers to Doshy to Burial and Roll Deep. Would you say that your tastes are eclectic? Do you put that into your own music?

The main concept of our production is plain – the tune shouldn’t be too boring. We always try to use alot of various synths, beat patterns, all that sampled crap and just LOVE to switch between different genres or change the whole mood for at least 2-3 times per track. That’s why we don’t really like these shitloads of the dance music tunes having exactly the same loops repeat again and again and again and again. It might work at the dancefloor but it’s too lifeless. And we’re trying to adhere to the same rules when we mix.

Personally I love that you included Bleubird. Under rated imo. Plus the Anticon connect. That’s a big part of my music history right there. How did you discover dubstep?

Actually we met through Siberian underground hip-hop scene where every single person adores such MCs like Doseone, Bleubird, Buck65 or Sole – they’re really great and the lyrics are ridiculous (though we’ve had some problems with understanding a huge part of their bizzare word constructions because of our poor English, lol). And when the local scene successfully died we just switched to a totally different direction.

You come from Russia right? What’s the scene like for this kind of music out there? How do you keep up? Got any tips?

Russia’s got a number of genuinely good producers but most of them just have no reason to carry on production or the opportunity to breakthrough. The situation is pretty ugly because almost all of the peeps just don’t care or have an extremely poor musical taste and that’s why we have lots of miserable DJs playing pirate mp3s or shitty rappers on huge stadiums with 50.000 people attending while guys like Untold playing in empty venues. Our country is a joke.

Your got releases forthcoming on the Robox Neotech imprint. Can you shed a bit of light on the label? What’s the style, who runs it? How did you hook it up? Tell us what people can expect from your release too…

Well, Robox is a fresh label based in Berlin, Germany. It’s focused mainly on up-and-coming bass producers like Powell, NastyNasty or Zet and all the promos we heard for 2010-2011 are really sick. We were asked by Dominic (Doshy, who runs it) if we could do a release for Robox so here’s an EP coming later this year and it will consist of four tracks with remixes from our fam plus a very special guest. We’re happy with the result and very excited of how it will be acclaimed by the public.

What other projects have you got in the pipeline? What’s happening with you in the rest of 2010?

There also will be a digital single and heaps of remixes for our friends and fam. And we feel very good about having a track on sick compilation by Serbian label Svetlana Industries coming very soon – such guys like Teebs, 1000names and lots more are involved too. Actually we have a lot of plans but it’s too early to talk about it right now.

Any words of wisdom for our readers?

When the music’s over, turn off the lights.

::

DOWNLOAD: Demokracy – Sonic Router Mix #51



Tracklist:

Demokracy - Double Star/Intro
Slugabed – It’s When The Future Falls Plop On Your Head (forthcoming Ramp)
Zet. - Capsule Corporation (Dub)
Doshy ft. Raspel - Crtz [Robot Koch Remix] (Robox Neotech)
Dingy Disu - Poltergeist (Dub)
Demokracy - Shapeshifter (Dub)
Lakritze - Killswitch (forthcoming Robox Neotech)
Jammer - Better Than [Lorn Remix] (Big Dada)
Powell - Smack My Glitch Hop [Demokracy Remix] (forthcoming Robox Neotech)
Tobacco - Truck Sweat (Anticon)
Demokracy - Deadhead (forthcoming Robox Neotech)
Daedelus - Thanatopsis ft. Hrishikesh Hirway (Ninja Tune)
Emika - Drop The Other (Ninja Tune)
Dza - Eskimo [Demokracy Remix] (Dub)
Burial - Fostercare (Hyperdub)
Eleven Tigers - Memory Palace ft. Alice-Marie Archer (Dub)
Deadboy - Way That I Luv U (Well Rounded)
Bleubird - Hell Country (Endemik Music)
Demokracy - Zeroth Law (forthcoming Robox Neotech)
Roll Deep - When I’m ‘ere (Relentless)
Monky - Drunkerdz (forthcoming Robox Neotech)
Doshy - Sunset (CDR) + Lonely Ppl Outro

Link:
www.myspace.com/demokracyandhotdogs
soundcloud.com/demokracy

Wednesday, 12 May 2010

EVENT: Oscillations Launch Party @ CAMP



Put together by Jus Like Music and Apple Juice Break, Oscillations Vols 1&2, provided somewhat of an impeccable snapshot of the current neo hip hop(?)/dubstep intersection, packaging beats form reputable producers like Om Unit, Slugabed, Paper Tiger, Lunice, 00Genesis, ANGO and Alex B up for a duo of free downloads - grab them here: http://juslikemusicrecords.bandcamp.com/ for the price of a couple of clicks and an email address.

Now the people behind the compilation have teamed up with Man Make Music and the Bridging The Gap party promoters to celebrate both BTG's birthday and the physical production of CD copies of the compilation, at CAMP (nr Old St. Tube) in London this Saturday. It's FREE entry, and everyone who attends will get a limited edition Oscillations Mix CD, mixed by Mr Beatnick. Only 500 of these will ever be in existence and each one is hand-numbered. There will also be 150 limited-edition prints available on the night, commemorating the event.

Full line up:

OSCILLATIONS:
Slugabed (Planet Mu/Ramp Recordings/Numbers)
Om Unit (Terrorhythm/All City)
Kidkanevil (First Word Records)
Mr Beatnick (Futuristica/Altered Vibes)
BTG:
Count Chocula
Toot Sweet
The Fat C
MMM:
Another Amit
Sketchy

Saturday May 15 @ The CAMP, EC1Y 2BJ
9pm - 4am
thecamplondon.com



Facebook Event

Tuesday, 11 May 2010

DOWNLOAD: Kidlogic - Randy Barracuda Retrospective Mix



In honour of their 1st birthday celebrations on 20th May, Brighton based club night Donky Pitch, have bestowed on us the honour of hosting the second piece of exclusive content - the first being a Fulgeance mix featured exclusively on Rhythm Incursions - in promotion of their first anniversary. The DP guys have tried their utmost to bring the sound of skweee to the South of England, placing it in a 'beats' context, booking skweee pioneers and UK beatheads alike whilst fully supporting UK artists like SR chums Rekordah and Slugabed.

Having run for a full 12 months now, we've been very vocal in our support of the DP family, co-hosting TOKiMONSTA's Sonic Donky mix when she came over to grace Brighton's pebbles last year and surprising DP resident and UK skweee producer, Boss Kite, with our use of his interview answers to form one of the most enjoyable editions of our Quietus column to date. And the reason for our continued support?

Skweee.

Having stumbled across the sound of Scandinavian synthetic computer funk through people like Randy Barracuda or Rigas Den Andre and on compilations like the Ramp/Flogsta Danshall released Skweee Tooth or Harmönia's International Skweee Volume One it became somewhat of an borderline obsession, infecting both home productions and writing schedules. It's all about tunes like this...



Anyway - point is, they're a year old, and - being that we know a little of what it means to put all your energies into something for an extended period of time - we'd like to take this opportunity to officially say: happy birthday! Its just a testament to their attitude and friendly demeanour that they've allowed us to say it with an exclusive retrospective mix of skweee pioneer Randy Barracuda, put together by Kidlogic, so we sought them out to say their piece...

Sonic Router: What's been Donky Pitch's highlights this past year?

Donky Pitch: There are a few…definitely the ‘We Call It Skweee’ screening. We packed the venue on a Tuesday night. It was great to see 70+ people reach that on a cold winter night. Debruit’s set in February was awesome, we’ve never been in a club so jam packed with such a great atmosphere. He slayed it. And being asked to play the Skwee-a-thon in Helsinki on May 16th is pretty dam cool. We’re the only UK crew on a line up that features artists from Finland, Norway, France, USA, Spain amongst others...

Randy is the Tits. What does it mean to you guys to have him come over? What's so special about him?

We’ve been representing the skweee sound all year, but Randy is different to anyone we’ve booked before. He’s one of the originators, a true pioneer. From his early tracks to his newest single he has always been on point. We’re wet with excitement at the thought of his live show; Ross ‘Boss Kite’ almost puked when we told him.

Whats in store for the bday?

This is our biggest and funnest line up to date. We’ve been after both Barracuda and Fulgeance since day one and were seriously happy when we confirmed them both. It also brings together all the local producers and DJs that have ‘pitched’ in over the year to make all our parties so damn fun. We’ve printed up some T-Shirts and other Donky goodies to giveaway. Expect some drunken fools throwing badges into the crowd at 2am.

::



Donky Pitch turns One at The Volks in Brighton on Thurs 20th May 2010 with Fulgeance, Randy Barracuda, Slugabed, Rekordah, Ghost Mutt and Boss Kite.

::



DOWNLOAD: Kidlogic - Randy Barracuda Retrospective Mix



Tracklist:

1. Ketamine Strut
2. Black Vaseline (Featuring Mesak)
3. Love Axe/Heavy Metal (Featuring Michael Black Electro)
4. Duck Butter
5. Adult Games (Featuring Mesak & Michael Black Electro)
6. The High
7. Skweee Like A Pig
8. Rick James Is Dead
9. Overnight Romancin'
10. Group Sexxx (Imatran Voima)
11. Streisand Effect

Links:
www.myspace.com/donkypitch
www.myspace.com/kidlogic
www.myspace.com/randybarracudaofimatranvoima

Photo: Sanja Milosevic

Wednesday, 5 May 2010

INTERVIEW: Rekordah Talks Astro:Dynamics



Without Bristol/London based beat maker Rekordah’s contribution to our mix series way back when I’m pretty sure Sonic Router would never have launched into the blogosphere the way that we did (sidenote: we’re fully aware that the ripple permeating our tiny corner of the internet doesn’t shout as loud as some strongholds but still, we’re outwardly proud of what we’ve put together over the past 15 months). His willingness to give something up to us gave us hope that there were artists out there willing to take the splash on an unknown blogspot page and he inspired us to aim higher in a way…So it’s a glorious feeling deep in our guts for us to be able to bring you news and the inside scoop on a project helmed by the first ever ‘Sonic Router Mix Giver.’

Astro:Dynamics is a compilation of 16 beats curated by Rekordah that features a veritable whos who in modern UK ‘beats.’ Names like Lukid – whose first two albums on Werk Discs pre-empted a whole heap of great music in their own right - Lucky Me’s Mike Slott and The Blessings sit in perfect harmony with Stoke Newington’s Subeena and SR’s new favourite obsession, Coco Bryce, alongside an old one in the form of Slugabed. Theres beats from established talents like Bnjmn (aka Jackhigh) and new names like Professor Ojo and Crackazat plus skweee tinged productions from Metske and Slow Hand Motem.

Designed less as a compilation of UK strains and more of a unifier for discordant strains of music that share similar sound sets, its Rekordah’s enthusiasm and passion for the music having put together the whole thing himself that really shines, making great use of material new and old. And given his position in the scene – as one of the most skewed beat makers out there - it’s inevitable that a compilation helmed by him would be packed full of “good friends and fantastic talents.”

We caught up with him, told him not to even dream of holding back and this is what we were left with… along with the dropped jaws and raised neck hairs.

Sonic Router: So… why the name Astro:Dynamics?

Rekordah: I’m in my last year of my degree right now, and around the time when I started working on this project was also writing my thesis. The thesis was based around an analysis of instrumental hip-hop and beats stuff within the context of Afrofuturism, particularly drawing on Kodwo Eshun’s ‘More Brilliant Than the Sun: Adventures in Sonic Fiction’ as a frame of reference.

I got quite heavily into writing this thesis – looking in depth at the modern instrumental beats stuff as a form of hip-hop that allows for an erosion of the tension between the concepts of roots and futures in the music of what Paul Gilroy calls the ‘Black Atlantic’ – with the instrumental and electronic aspects providing that faceless, post-human element infamous with techno and the like, whilst the swung and unquantized element allows for a human, almost ultra-human, poly-rhythmic foundation to be present also. I also ended up drawing close comparisons between Eshun’s analysis of the late 60s to early 70s psychedelic jazz period – and the establishment of what Eshun calls a “post-jazz universe” – and the modern instrumental beats stuff, putting the case forward for this so called post-Dilla period as a formation of a post-hip hop universe, so to speak.

Anyway, before I end up writing another thesis here I’ll try and get back to the point. Basically… after surrounding myself with all this theory I knew I wanted to link these concepts into this project somehow. In ‘More Brilliant…’ Eshun creates this fantastic and really unique imagery to illustrate his theories by playing with words a lot, very frequently stringing together rather elaborate terms himself, and a lot of the time breaking words in two to form new meanings. So anyway, astro:dynamics is my own attempt at this sort of wordplay – with the ‘astro’ segment representing the stars and the concept of space and future, and the ‘dynamics’ representing sound and music.

I guess it was just a roundabout way of calling it ‘Sound of the Stars’ to be honest, if that makes sense…?

Were you inspired by the Beat Dimensions series? In that you were creating something that would stand as a snapshot of the scene? What drove you to put it together?

Definitely, the first Beat Dimensions compilation was massively inspiring for me – not just in putting together this release, but also in making me want to start getting more serious and focused with my own music as well. To be honest, I think before the first Beat Dimensions compilation came out I really had no idea that sort of vibe had gotten so wide spread.

In fact, before the Beat Dimensions compilation had come out it was another compilation that came out the year before that was really inspiring me – entitled The Sound of L.A. and featuring cuts from Kutmah, Ras G, Flying Lotus, Ammoncontact, Black Monk, Young Jazz Rebels (one of many Madlib alias’), Dntel, Sa-Ra and a few more. Before that I was, like many other guys involved beats stuff now, just listening to wall-to-wall Madlib, Dilla and Ammoncontact stuff. When I heard The Sound of L.A. it really hit the nail on the head of what I was looking for in music at that point, and it helped me to discover a bunch of great artists that I had never heard of before.

But before the Beat Dimensions compilation I was pretty naively convinced that this sort of stuff was pretty much solely confined to L.A. and Detroit. When it dropped it was a kind of WTF!? moment. Here were all these artists from all over the fucking world basically, and it really opened my eyes to it all. Then of course the next stop was the ‘Beatnicks’ Vol. 1 and 2 releases on Up My Alley which opened my eyes to even more new artists. That’s when my interest really went into overdrive to be honest; those Rustie tracks were just not of this planet, and the Jackhigh, Powell, and fLako tracks were really fantastic too – it just really hit me then how much really wild creativity was going on with this stuff, there was a complete disregard for imitation or tradition.

The All City 7x7 series also… it really just set in stone how special this music was, and how insanely eclectic the different sounds and influences coming from all the different artists on that series were. But the whole package with that series was amazing – the artwork, the concept, everything. And just in general I think the compilation format really has a particular potency with this sort of stuff. There’s just something about it that seems right, you know? It’s almost like so much of hip-hop (and dubstep now too) can be so inward-looking and insular, so focused on that one sound – yet the way in which the Beat Dimensions, Beatnicks, and 7x7 compilations gathered together all this internationally diverse and eclectic music it kind of forced you to open your arms and mind to it, and it not only allowed you to be introduced to each respective artist but to a whole group of artists with their own unique palettes, and I think that’s a really beautiful thing. It really is a reflection of how much variety there is to take in. I like listening to individual artist releases too but there is a different way in which you mentally (and I suppose physically) approach a compilation, it is a lot more based around discovery and variety. I suppose I don’t see it as a snapshot of a scene so much as a bringing together of individual outlooks and unique perspectives.

In terms of what drove me to put the compilation together; well it was actually another university project. I had my major project to do and I knew I wanted to put together a compilation from the off. I guess I put it down to the amount of inspiration I gained from the aforementioned compilations that made me want to try my hand at it. The project itself consisted of compiling and signing tracks, sourcing manufacture and distribution, and getting it to retail. I put a lot of thought into the track-listing and artists, and did my best to put together something that was cohesive and made sense, but I also wanted to make each track to stand out from the others and to be its own entity if you see what I mean. I also didn’t want it to particularly represent a scene of sorts nor did I want it to be specifically beats either – I wanted it to have that discovery factor to it as well, and for people to be surprised and intrigued by the music from whichever angle they were coming from. After all, that’s what music is all about in my opinion.



What was it about all the people (and the beats) involved that you gelled with?

Well on one hand I wanted to bring together many of the good people and artists I’ve met and/or worked with (either via the internet or physically) over the past couple of years or so. It’s another aspect of what makes music so great to me, getting to meet really nice like-minded people and getting creative with them or just generally shooting the shit, you know? I’ve been really blown away many really nice people there are making music, there really is hardly any of the egos that you might expect from people. I mean, first and foremost I’m a music-lover, I only ever wanted to start making music because I felt so inspired by listening to such great music, so it really is a fantastic thing to connect with people who I respect and whose music I love. So I guess on the whole the compilation is a sort of tribute to making those connections and friendships via music, and also a tribute to the music for making it possible – I know that must sound corny, but fuck it, it’s the truth.

On the other hand, at the same time as getting music from some more established names on there I did make quite a conscious effort to get some artists who are a little bit slept on onto the track-list. Take Clause Four for example, a friend of mine for a while; his record for DC Recordings back in 2007 was really one of the greatest releases of that period in my opinion, and he’s been making some amazing stuff since, yet he doesn’t get enough love for it – hopefully this release and his recent stuff on Jahtari will help to change that. Professor Ojo is another guy who has been making consistently great stuff for a while now also, and his beat on this compilation is really dope too – hopefully more people will wake up and check him out also.

I also wanted to bring in some more Bristol-based artists too, being my hometown, and that’s represented via the tracks from Crackazat and Lower. Crackazat is a guy who I think I have kind of half-known personally for years and years – a friend of friends and all that, remember the face but never got to know properly. Anyway he is making some really great music at the moment – multi-instrumentalist who’s studying Jazz and making some really nice beats on the side – we are going get to work on a solo release from him in the future and you should watch out for a remix of his on Affine Records soon too.

A lot of the people are UK based right? How did you go about extracting beats from people?

Yeah, all artists are UK based – with the exception of Slow Hand Motem (who is based in Canada) and Coco Bryce (who is based in Holland). The artists were mostly people who I have met over the past couple of years; via gigs, through correspondence online or just out and about in London or Bristol. The bulk of the artists actually fit in to that last category, so naturally the list of included artists ended up being quite UK focused. Looking back at this it wasn’t by any means a deliberate thing, but I do think it’s quite nice to have something that gives a good representation of artists that are doing their thing in the UK right now. That’s not to devalue Motem and Coco’s presence on the compilation by any means, but I will say that I have lots of admiration and perhaps a little national pride in the amount of great artists that are coming through the UK at the moment – and I think the track-list shows a good cross-section of what makes the variety in the UK so rich at present.

Whist I certainly put a lot of work into getting the track-list 100% right and exactly how I wanted, the process for gathering tracks was really quite informal and casual – this was helped by the fact that I see a fair few of the included artists pretty regularly, so it was naturally pretty casual. Also, being a university project, I had deadlines to meet – so this meant that the track-list was compiled rather quickly. When I say quickly, I don’t mean it was rushed at all – and it was at least a good 2 ½ months worth of work getting everything together and cemented in terms of gathering the tracks and finalizing the track-list – but it meant that the way in which I approached constructing the track-list, and the way in which I approached the artists themselves, was probably quite different to how the majority of labels would go about signing tracks for a new release.

I tend to find that quite a few labels, if not most nowadays, seem to want the newest tracks from artists for their releases. I suppose this is understandable in many ways, but it does mean that a lot of truly fantastic music doesn’t make it out there. Because of the deadlines I had to meet with university it meant that I didn’t have the option to have artists work on all-new material for it, so it ended up being the case that a lot of the tracks featured on the compilation came out of the vaults so to speak. – pretty much all of the tracks were already finished and complete when I signed them. Lukid’s track in particular is really quite old, sort of pre-Onandon stuff like the ‘Everybody Make Happy’ track you featured a while ago. And the Slugabed track came from a big pile of tracks he sent me in late 2008, it’s been my favorite beat of his ever since. I’m really happy to have the opportunity to bring these older tracks to a wider audience instead of having them lost and forgotten.

Like I said I can understand why labels would want to grab the new shit, and similarly I can see why artists themselves wouldn’t necessarily want their old stuff being unearthed as they may well be exploring new territories, and the old stuff perhaps doesn’t fit with the angle they are going for in the present day. But I’ve always seemed to be one of those guys who whatever music it is has always been about the earlier stuff, you know? I think it’s also quite interesting to once in a while take a look back at the older stuff, and to look at the contrast between that and the present. It’s also intriguing to see how people react to the older bits when they haven’t got the context and assume it’s new.

That’s not to say that all the tracks on the compilation are all old. Because of the deadlines I had to meet, my process for building up the track-list in the initial stage was mostly a case of trawling through people’s myspace or soundcloud players searching for potential tracks. The deadlines didn’t allow for much time to ask for artists to submit tracks – you what musicians are like with punctuality (I’m probably one of worst to be honest) – so essentially in a good proportion of cases I came to the artist asking for a specific track which I had decided on before even approaching the artists. Bit of a risky process perhaps, because it could’ve easily gone back to square one if the tracks I had chosen prior to contacting the artists weren’t available for whatever reason. Luckily, besides a couple of little hiccups it was plain sailing.

Its coming on CD first and then vinyl after right? Have you decided which cuts will be making wax?

In all honesty I really am having a very hard time deciding which tracks should see vinyl. The plan is to do an EP and perhaps a couple of limited edition 7”s. I’d really love to have all the tracks see vinyl but that’d be mighty costly and I’m afraid I just don’t have the finances to support doing that… I do have a good idea of what will make vinyl at the moment but I also want to see what the feedback and demand is like before the final decision is made. So if there’s anybody out there who has a particular craving for a particular track or tracks to make vinyl then give me a shout!

Any plans for a launch party?

None as yet. We did actually have a sort of pseudo-launch back in January, but it was more of a low-key drinks and records affair and obviously it wasn’t a release party as we were quite far off from a release date at that point. But I’ll be sure to sort one out soon, watch this space.

What else is coming up for you release/gig wise?

Release wise, the brilliant Tropical Heat compilation on MYOR has just dropped which I’m very happy to be a part of – such good tracks on there. I’m also working on a track for a compilation LP that will be coming out on the fantastic Lo Fi Funk label out of Spain – there is sure to be some outstanding music on there and the label it’s self is set for big things too, really great guys running that and they have got some great releases coming up so keep an eye on them. I’ve kind of been laying a bit low in terms of my own music at the moment because I am so busy nowadays what with finishing off my degree and working full-time – am I trying to kill myself?! But once university is out of the way I’m planning on settling down a bit and getting to work on a EP or Mini LP of some description, so hopefully that won’t be too far off.

In terms of gigs there is the Donky Pitch 1st Birthday Party coming up in Brighton with sets from myself, Boss Kite, Ghost Mutt, Slugabed, Randy Barracuda and Fulgeance on May 20th so make sure to try and make it down to that. It’s a brilliant party ran by some great guys. I played their first party and have attended every show they’ve done since, so that’s a testament to how much fun times there are to be had down there.

Astro:Dynamics will be released mid June 2010, distributed by Cargo Records. Further releases are slated to follow after the compilation also...

Full Astro:Dynamics CD tracklisting:

1. Lukid – Pleurisy
2. Jay Prada – Nina’s Strut
3. Tapes – Oberheimer
4. Slow Hand Motëm – Love is the New Evil
5. Clause Four – Daze
6. Mike Slott – Music’s Fun
7. Coco Bryce – The Cliche
8. Slugabed – Clunk Clunk
9. Crackazat – Party in the Clouds
10. Bnjmn – It’s Not a Joint
11. Rekordah – Candy Flossin’
12. Professor Ojo – Focus
13. Metske – Isotopic
14. Subeena – Rakeeh
15. Lower – Heartbroken
16. The Blessings – Lungebob

Artwork by SiriusBerlin.

Catch Rekordah at Donky Pitch’s 1st Birthday on Thursday 20th May at The Volks in Brighton.



Facebook Event

Link:
www.myspace.com/rekorder87

Wednesday, 28 April 2010

RECOMMENDED: V/A – Tropical Heat Vol. 1 [Myor]



If you’ve visited this page more than once over the last year and however many months its been running you’d have probably noted that there are a couple of pivotal moments in terms of ‘wonky’ that are constantly referred to. Be it the two Up My Alley Beatnicks 12”s (number 3 is reportedly mastered and imminent by the way…), Rustie’s Jagz The Smack EP or either of the Beat Dimensions compilations, we like to give a lot of thanks to the curators for introducing us to a wealth of talent that is now blossoming; people like 1000Names, 00Genesis, Jackhigh and fLako... Or basically the backbone of some of the most interesting ‘beats’ we’ve heard in 2010.

Tropical Heat Vol. 1 comes from the mind and passion of one Coco Bryce - someone we were ecstatic to get interviewed on here recently - and his fledgling Myor imprint. As the ‘Volume’ signifier in the name suggests Tropical Heat is the first in a series of 12” compilations; and featuring 6 producers it wields tracks from Coco himself, the first ever Sonic Router mix giver: Rekordah, Slugabed, Nino, Harmonia signed skwee producer Mesak and Saccage & Insence. With each producer bringing their own particular brand of warped hip hop to the table whether its rooted in skweee or simply in boom bap and madcap quantization, its hard to pick stand outs though personal highlights come in the form of Nino’s funk laden ‘Ready To Rock,’ Sluga’s swampy hysterics on the somewhat contemplative ‘Here You Are’ and Rekordah’s straight banging drum work on EP opener ‘Sometimes.’

The compilation pretty much induces the same kind of excitement that those early Beatnicks 12”s did in me and its unquantifiably reassuring to learn that there are people out there still willing to invest in a physical product for this kind of music. Hopefully the sign of more to come, this collection comes highly recommended.

Words: Oli Marlow
Out: Now

DOWNLOAD: V/A - Tropical Heat Vol 1 - Snippets



Link:
http://20shotsequence.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, 21 April 2010

INTERVIEW: Dynooo [Mac Fly/Digsville]



Hailing from Ghent in Belgium, Dynooo’s Gum Dragon EP hit us like a slip on the Malvern hills: totally unexpected and embarrassingly public. It was a poignant act out of nowhere, and a strong collection of beats that piqued all kinds of interest from us. Cut from the same cloth as a lot of the new wave of beat producers (I’d list them if I felt like I didn’t give them enough props repeatedly on here anyways…), Dynooo has a strong and awkward sense of hip hop rhythm, absolutely beating out his boom bap rhythms.

After he ‘Rekuttt’ a track from Slugabed’s Planet Mu EP, we hounded him for some dubs and he obliged kindly, sending us an understated zip folder of some of the rawest demos – an act that never goes unnoticed round this IP address and one that is illustrated perfectly in Dynooo’s accompanying Sonic Router Mix – so we sought to seek him out and let him vent.

Sonic Router: Can you provide those who may not know you with a bit of background info on yourself? Outside of music who are you? What do you do on the daily?

Dynooo: I’m a 27 year old Belgian guy with a caffeine-addiction and a sincere admiration for beautiful women. I like 90’s action flicks, pattern designs, Harold Faltermeyer and stuff that’s often perceived as kitsch. My daily occupation is walking my good friend/pitbull named Cheese and running a concept store.

How did you first get into making music? What was it that infected you to do produce?

I wanted to make a demo tape just like the ones I used to buy at the local skate shop. Me and my best friend started a group and I got hold of a CD which had cracked versions of Cool Edit and Photoshop on it. I bought a mic and started rapping.

What’s your production set up like?

Haha; pretty much just a laptop, mic, mixer, some vinyl and a MIDI keyboard. I own a SP 303 but it’s been a while since I messed with it. I still use the same stereo system my parents gave me when I was 12. I don’t know, every time I’ve freed up some cash for decent studio monitors there’s just other bills to pay. Really wanna get a 80’s analog synth tho....

Where do you take inspiration from when making music?

Nostalgia. Anything unusual looking/sounding; could be something I see walking around, a dope record or cool imagery. I try not to get inspired by music just too much, locking myself in the attic works best for me.

Yours is a very contorted and intricate sound. How would you describe it in your own words?

Tough one. I’d say electronic beat music, although I got so many tunes that sound nothing like what’s out there right now. Let’s result to cliché’s on this one. Let the listener decide.

Your Gum Dragon EP was released on the Digsville imprint recently house in your own custom designed sleeve. Tell us a little about the EP, the ‘Fuh Real’ and Richard Colvaen collabos and the artwork?

It’s basically a collection of songs my friends thought were cool enough to release. ‘Fuh Real’ is a song I did with Swedish songstress Naboobia; it’s more of a r&b joint that didn’t end up on the radio as much as we wanted. I did a remix and so did Luigi.

The artwork is a visual representation of the record, electronic but organic, pure but processed, complete but chopped up.

My dude Vaen is from Luik (located in the French-speaking part of Belgium) just like Cupp Cave. We’re three people with a remarkably similar taste in music production. There will be a collab project, this summer I’m definitely going over there for a week or so. Cupp wants to see Mermaids together but I told him ‘no’.

He’s going to shoot me for this.

Is the visual aspect of your art something you’re concentrating on too?

Yes! Glad you asked… I’ve been trying to do more collage work. Designing the Gum Dragon sleeve certainly triggered my desire to do more visual art again. Finding the time is my biggest boggle. I learned that expression from Demolition Man.



What’s the scene for this kind of music like in Ghent, and in Belgium?

There’s none, basically. People are really close-minded, it’s like they just recently accepted unquantized instrumental hip hop and that’s it. Anything more forward-thinking apparently leads to confusion. Then again, I played at an arts academy a couple weeks ago where people were actually dancing and excited about the music, which has given me a spark of hope.
I don’t know what it’s like in other countries but there’s definitely a lot of envy here and the ‘crabs in a bucket’ mentality is mind-blowing (read: frustrating) sometimes.

Your own and run the Mac Fly shop in the city. Tell us about that...

Mac Fly is a small-scale store I started two years ago where you can get music, new/vintage clothing, magazines and accessories. Attached is a community of young music lovers, designers and photographers. On the blog you can read what goes on in and around the shop.

You also run your own Max Fly mix series too right? Whose contributed to it so far?

Let’s see; Jay Scarlett and Fulgeance are the more known names I guess. There’s a couple mixes that really stand out, like the ones from Jar Moff and the Skate & Destroy joint. I did two, as well as all the artwork.

In the mix you’ve submitted for us you hit an 80s boogie and jazz section. Is that something you’re deep into? Does the mix reflect a typical live set from you?

Not really, I usually play about 80% of my own music at live gigs, preferably heavy bass stuff. However I love doing mixes, that way I can showcase music I wouldn’t be able to play in a live situation, work that I think people should get to know about… I do usually sneak some Pretty Ricky, Freeez, Clay D or Mariah Carey in there. Taking things out of its context is fun to me.

Who else in and out of the beats/dubstep scene are you feeling right now?

I can honestly say both Cupp and Vaen are some of my favorite producers, as are Slugabed, Jar Moff, Dimlite, Mwëslee and 16 Bit. Good stuff is always coming from the Lucky Me camp -I’m reaaally looking forward to that American Men record. In other genres: Nite Jewel, Gonjasufi and Beach House. I just started listening to quite some older leftfield African music as well.

Tell us a little about the mix you’ve put together for us…

It’s a blend of all the stuff I’m currently listening to, including unreleased tracks by Kingfisherg, Richard Colvaen, Slugabed and myself.

What else is coming up for you in 2010?

I’m getting offered more and more live gigs (looking for a booking agent, by the way). The thought of going back to art school has crossed my mind; apart from that definitely new releases plus I’m on some compilations coming out soon-ish.



Have you got any words of wisdom for our readers?

When in doubt, dash.

::

DOWNLOAD: Dynooo - Sonic Router Mix



Tracklist:

1. Sotu The Traveller (Dynooo's Candy Wolf Rmx)
2. Dynooo - Cawf Drop
3. Dynooo - Coiiiin
4. Memory Tapes - Run Uut
5. Dynooo - Kemmet Gefixt
6. Kingfisherg - My Uncle Died Calculating Infinity
7. Dynooo - Sayyyeah
8. The Limit - Say Yeah
9. Sharon Redd - Second To None
10. Dynooo - Fuh Real Instrumental
11. 52nd Street - I Can't Let You Go
12. Jar Moff - Track 04
13. Richard Colvaen - Flashback
14. Jadakiss - I Want A Girl Like You
15. Dynooo - Will Flattened (with Richard Colvaen)
16. Neil Landstrumm - Eva
17. Ludacris & Trey Songz - Sex Room
18. H-town - They Like It Slow
19. Slugabed - Goose
20. Artful Dodger & Craig David - Rewind (Dynooo rwrk)
21. Beach House - Norway
22. Dynooo - Meatfish
23. Kingfisherg - Indian Mound
24. Goodbye Home Sweet Home

Link:
www.myspace.com/dyno
www.macflyisthenewblack.com

Photo: Kmeron
Mix Art: Dynooo

Thursday, 8 April 2010

INTERVIEW: Coco Bryce [Lowriders]



First appearing on a split 12” with Sonic Router bumboy Slugabed, Coco Bryce has slowly taken up residency on the HQ’s mainframe computer. Managing to fuse a clean emphatic skweee sound with rougher more boom bap drum work he gets the best out of his bumps on tracks like ‘Boesoek’ (available to stream on his myspace) and ‘Ghetto Freaks’ which appeared on Harmonia’s International Skweee Vol 2 compilation late last year.

After a run of sweet ass mixtapes, including an outing for Musique Large's La Mixette series, the Dutch producer now rolls with the Lowriders Collective - a positively music besotted bunch of party promoters, mixtape makers and bloggers - and has a frankly frightening amount of forthcoming releases so, ahead of his appearance at the Donky Pitch night later this month we stole him away from his outdoor life and sucked him deep into his computer’s circuitry to answer a few burning questions.

Sonic Router: Can you provide those who may not know you with a bit of background info?

Coco Bryce: I’m still a messenger boy 3 days a week, though I’ve also been a skater for a long, long time.. not too fanatically nowadays, but i never really quit and can still rock a pretty decent switch heel… I've been spending a big chunck of my spare time on the interwebb lately, running a half-assed blog: 20shotsequence.blogspot.com and chatting on Facebook with Halp & V.C.

How did you first get into making music? What was it that infected you to do produce?

My uncle (who's a REAL musician, unlike myself..) gave me a Roland TR 505, and I'd already been DJing for a couple years before that, so trying to do some tunes seemed a pretty logical step. I bought a couple of cheap synths and more drum machines, stuck whatever sounds I wanted to be distorted in the mic entrance on my Numark DJ mixer and made a bunch of horrible sounding tekno records like that. I didn't have a sequencer (Cubase or anything) to edit the overall tunes, so most of it was live recordings. also got myself a bootleg copy of Rebirth (Reason's predecessor which consisted of nothing more than a 303 & 808 software version clone) somewhere along the way and Fruity Loops of course.

Where do you take inspiration from when making music?

… Mostly other music; could be something I hear on the radio/internet or being at a party and hearing some fresh sounds. Sometimes it's hearing something in a movie I think might sound good as a sample in a tune; or getting some fresh sample packs will usually get the creative juices flowing a bit as well.. If I find myself at a dead end I'll sometimes put a CD into my computer and start cutting up random bits n bobs and see what comes out.

How would you describe your sound?

It’s pretty much all over the place I guess… lately a lot of hip hop & 8 bit bleep influenced stuff… somewhere between bad Slugabed rip-offs and even worse Dabrye copies… some Skweee tunes which are a bit cleaner sounding… and a bit of mid 90's style rave breakbeat; Iused to be a big "Knite Force" fan boy and I guess it never left…

Release wise, what can people go out an buy from you?

Ok in the shops now there’s Myor 02 (a split 12” with the Slugalicious one), Myor 03 (a split 7” with Artek/S.Y.Z.), the ‘Ghetto Freaks’ track on Harmönia 10 (International Skweee Vol 2 compilation LP) and remixes for Pixelord released digital-only on Error Broadcast.

And forthcoming:

-Myor 04 compilation EP (full compilation features tracks from Rekordah, Slugabed, Mesak +)
-Lowriders 002 EP (with remixes by 1000names & Pixelord)
-Fremdtunes, collab tune with Dj Mace
-Mässy compilation cd (1 or 2 tunes)
-Dodpop compilation cd (1 tune)
-Astro:Dynamics compilation cd (new label by Rekordah, with tunes by Mike Slott, Sluga, Clause Four, Rekordah, Tapes and a lot more)
-Lowriders digi comp.
-A remix for Niño which will be released on a limited 7" by Galleta records (with a Mweslee remix on there as well)
-Lo Fi Funk compilation double LP (1 tune)
-A remix for Pixelord (breakbeat rave) released digitally on Car Crash Set
-A collabo tune with AK Kids for their "featuring" album.

What else is coming up for you? You got any gigs in the pipeline?

Yeah, April 10th at Motel Mozaique with the Lowriders crew in Rotterdam (+ Hud Mo, GLK, Dam Funk), then April 15th at Donky Pitch vs Lowriders, Brighton and May 8th at Europe Mania festival in Pecs, Hungary.

Plus, I'm now ‘officially’ a member of the Lowriders crew, so all their parties + a residency at a local club here in Breda called De Boulevard, on every first thursday of the month.



Got any wisdom for our readers?

I'll get back at you on that when I've thought of something witty to say…

::

DOWNLOAD: Coco Bryce – Donky Pitch Mix (via Zshare)

Tracklist:

1. Space Dimension Controller – The Love Quadrant
2. Phoenix – Listzomania (Classixx Mix)
3. Beem – Automan
4. Rigas Den Andre ft Dan Draper – Drugs Don’t Work
5. Onra & Quetzal – Give Something
6. Ill Suono – Moment of Sympathy (Nobody Remix)
7. 1000Names – Cup Of Joy
8. Black Milk – Outro (Coco Bryce Edit)
9. Caribou – Melody Day (Four Tet Remix)
10. Caribou – Melody Day

::

Catch Coco Bryce at Donky Pitch vs Lowriders in Brighton next Thursday alongside a plethora of great people:



Facebook Event

Link:
www.myspace.com/cocobrycebeats

Friday, 5 March 2010

PRE-ORDER: Starkey ft. Anneka - Stars [Planet Mu]



Street Bass don Starkey drops another single from his forthcoming album ‘Ear Drums and Black Holes’ on Planet Mu. After the smooth R&B meets grime episode of ‘Ok Luv’ featuring the vocals of Badness comes another vocal cut but it’s on an entirely different tip. Featuring the vocal stylings of Anneka, who you may recall from Starkey’s ‘Build a Beat’ session on BBC Radio One the other month.

‘Stars’ comes in two forms here; the original is a warm, mellow and cosmic journey, whilst Brighton based beat merchant Slugabed takes that template and shatters it, in a freak experiment that leans it away from the headphones and more towards the dance floor. Anneka shines on both versions, either sweetly floating over the original’s deep space soul or chopped into melodic accents on Sluga’s refix. The remix isn’t as bat-shit as some of Slugabed’s previous material but he adds a nice bit of robo-boogie and keeps the vibe of the original in-between outbursts of smeared bass noise and clattering beats.

The two b-sides see Starkey back in the mode we’re most use to; on ‘Starting Gates’ he unleashes some of his evil bots, who I presume control the basslines as they’re pretty deviant, but as always Starkey’s melodic nature nestles inside the hype within the twisted musical progressions. It’s the wide screen cinematic experience of ‘Millennia’ that really takes the biscuit on the flip, Starkey shows his 3D sound ambition with massive builds full of sweeping synths before launching into a hyper-melodic bass drop and a positive flurry of snappy R&B beats.

Words: James Balf
Out: 8th March 2010



Links:
www.myspace.com/starkey
www.myspace.com/annekamusic



You can download Starkey’s recent mix & Sluga’s remix of ‘Stars’ on the NME(!?) here:

DOWNLOAD: Starkey – NME mix

Tracklist:

01 - Starkey ft. Cerebral Vortex & Buddy Leezle "Club Games" (planet mu)
02 - Starkey "OK Luv" (planet mu)
03 - Starkey "Millennia" (planet mu)
04 - Tayo meets Acid Rockers ft. Pupajim "Vampayaa (Starkey remix)" (cool & deadly)
05 - Swindle "Airmiles" (planet mu)
06 - Grems ft. Foreign Beggars "Brokabilly" (dub)
07 - Mensah "Pulse 80's" (hench)
08 - Kingdom "DPM / Juke Ya Girl Remix (Extended)" (dub)
09 - Starkey "Capsule" (planet mu)
10 - Numan "Skull Crusher (Bombaman remix)" (slit jockey)
11 - DNAEBEATS ft. NastyNasty "Aqua Bubble Hash" (seclusiasis)
12 - Rudi Zygadlo "Resealable Friendship (Slugabed's Special Friends Deepest Holes remix)" (planet mu)
13 - EPROM "Humanoid VIP" (dub)
14 - Starkey "Spacecraft" (planet mu)
15 - Kaiser "Lost in an Analogue Dream" (slit jockey)
16 - 8Bitch "G41" (slit jockey)
17 - Starkey ft. Anneka "Stars" (planet mu)

Tuesday, 23 February 2010

DOWNLOAD: Slugabed - Pressure (Dynooo Rekuttt)



The internet is a beautiful thing when two hot to trot producers can get to link up over it. Here's the result, an exclusive, heavy as fuck 2 minute + remix of Slugabed's 'Pressure' by Belgian producer Dynooo.

Don't sleep.

DOWNLOAD: Slugabed - Pressure (Dynooo Rekuttt)



Link:
www.myspace.com/dyno

Thursday, 18 February 2010

RECOMMENDED: Slugabed - Ultra Heat Treated [Planet Mu]



Merely the second solo single release from Slugabed, discounting the bootlegs and split 12"s for dramatic effect, naturally.

Out now on Planet Mu

Read the full review here: http://www.residentadvisor.net/review-view.aspx?id=7153

Link:
www.myspace.com/slugabedmusic

Thursday, 11 February 2010

DOWNLOAD: Boss Kite - Clef Basset



After a quick nudge in the right direction by the minds behind Brighton's skweee heavy night, Donky Pitch, we've come across a gem in Boss Kite and his free 4 tracker 'Clef Basset.' Drawing from the same circuit boards as his Scandinavian synthesizer bretheren he's got an impeccable talent for swampy bass frequencies and glittery flutters of uber melodics.

'CMYK' is indeed the proverbial lick.

DOWNLOAD: Boss Kite - Clef Basset

Catch him at Donky Pitch on the 18th Feb:

Link:
www.myspace.com/bosskitemusic

Monday, 11 January 2010

DOWNLOAD: Coco Bryce - Lowriders Mixtape 001



Having first seen the name Coco Bryce on a split 12" with Slugabed, I'd done the requisite googling and myspace surfing to know that the Dutch producer was someone to keep a keen eye on after releases on Harmonia and Myor. Then the Lowriders fam emailed to say he was kicking off their mixtape series - further entries in the series are promised from people like Hovatron, Debruit, 1000 Names and Slugabed - and I got really intrigued.

DOWNLOAD: Coco Bryce - Lowriders Mixtape 001

Tracklist

1. ELIOT LIPP – FLASHLIGHT (HEFTY)
2. RUSTIE & 215 TFK – CAFE DE PHRESH (STUFF)
3. CANDY HANK & MC SHADE – WE ALL GO TO DIE TONIGHT (SONIG)
4. SAMIYAM – RETURN (HYPERDUB)
5. MAD MEN – KANZULU (HUM DRUMS)
6. 1000 NAMES – TERMINAL 5 (CDR)
7. COCO BRYCE – SLECHTE RIP OFF (CDR)
8. REKORDAH – BEDROOM SUITE (SOON TO BE RELEASED ON POLLEN)
9. POGFLIPPER – ANTHOLOGY – COCO BRYCE REMIX (CDR)
10. STARKEY – OK LUV – EPROM REMIX (PLANET MU)
11. COCO BRYCE – DIS CAM BELIE (CDR)
12. DEBRUIT – KO DEBOUT (CIVIL MUSIC)

Link:
www.myspace.com/cocobrycebeats
www.lowriderscollective.com

Thursday, 26 November 2009

DOWNLOAD: Slugabed - Exclusive SRQ008 Mix



It finally happened... He was one of the first people we had in our sights when we started this blog nearly a year ago but today, after repeated bouts of gchat stalking, countless compliments and hours of repeated listening, Slugabed dropped his exclusive mix for us...

Its hosted by the good people over at The Quietus and accompanies an interview I conducted with him earlier this week for our monthly column. I'll post the full transcript here soon but for the mean time bang on the link below to read the piece and kop the mix.

DOWNLOAD: Slugabed - Exclusive SRQ008 Mix





Link:
www.myspace.com/slugabedmusic

Wednesday, 18 November 2009

STREAM: Slugabed - Thump Ass



Yep, the time is here... today's the day we can bring you that exclusive Slugabed track taken from the super limited 12", '251109' (which features a track from each of the 6 artist on the bill), being pressed for all of those lucky Londoners attending the Ramp Recordings jam at The Lightbox in Vauxhall next Wednesday with Tokimonsta, P.U.D.G.E, Shortstuff, SBTRKT vs Sampha and the White Sugh Knight.

'Thump Ass' is a straight shot of Sluggo; contorted computer squeals pitted against super tough drum pumps and erratic melody lines. An insight into the hype and the studio of the young Brighton based beatmaker.

STREAM: Slugabed - Thump Ass



Link:
www.myspace.com/slugabedmusic

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

DOWNLOAD: Slugabed - DUMMY Mix



Slugabed has put together a mix for Dummy and he's also been interviewed alongside it.

His 'Simon Says' remix is retarded. In a good way.

We told you not to sleep on this dude.

DOWNLOAD: Slugabed - DUMMY Mix

Tracklist:

Pharoahe Monch – Simon Says (Slugabed Remix)
EPROM – Shoplifter
Nasty Nasty – No Names
Low Limit – Trapperkeeper
Lokid – Kick The K
Akira Kiteshi – Pinball
Zomby – Strange Fruit
Dyno – Sosismas
Slugabed – Titans
Slugabed – Take OFF
Busta Rhymes – Everybody Rise
Cupp Cave – Breech This Trust
Mark Pritchard – Wind It Up
Scuba – Twitch (Jamie Vex'd Remix)
Rustie – Response
Rustie – Bad Science
Nasty Nasty – Necking
Kingfisherg – Rubicon
Machine Drum Ft. Melo – Let It (Lazer Sword Remix)
Loops Haunt – Impact Omnihammer
Boss Kite – ??
Dyno – Fuh Real Inst.
Last Poets – Long Enough
Slugabed – The System
Slugabed – Beer
Rabbi Bananas – Cat_Eat
Slugabed – Ultra Heat Treated
Nasty Nasty – This Kills
EPROM – Humanoid
AK Kids – A Soft Touch
AK Kids – Donk
Powell – Toyz Like Soup
?? – ??

Link:
www.myspace.com/slugabedmusic

Photo: Red Fash

Tuesday, 27 October 2009