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Items 1 to 12 of 12 on page 1 of 1
PFG 033DA
11 Nov 02 Techno
MOTE 022D
28 Mar 11 Minimal/Tech House
MOTE 032D
19 Nov 12 Techno
Played by: Paul Mac, Vegim, Concrete Djz, Alexander Robotnick, Jamie Behan (Bastardo Electrico), Systemic, Ben Klock, Hannah Wild, Submerge, Alonso Varela
Review:
If you were to find yourself late one Sunday afternoon jostling for position in a reconditioned power station, surrounded by ubermensch males, it's likely you're in Deep Heet. Techno music doesn't get much more self explanatory than this. "Voltan" is the most club-indulgent of the four track EP. A wall of undulating PAS noise shifts in and around a thrumming bassline. and the only audible deviation of instrumentation comes via pattering snares. Pent tensions encircle "Pygar" which gradually cools, as Slater reduces the track back to its original framework. "Turn" sheds the low end and fizzle of the aforementioned tracks, focusing on hypnotic and bleeping loops and disturbing Hitchcock-like insignia, while Slater reintroduces his fearsome hiss on "Flat Tire" with gargantuan war horns.
MOTE 027D
12 Dec 11 Techno
MOTE 030D
23 Jul 12 Techno
MOTE 018D
20 Sep 10 Techno
Played by: Matt K, Vegim, Zenner, DJ Hi-Shock / Advanced Human, Juno Recommends Techno, Mirko S., Manuel Cass, Vinjay, Delko
O-TON 031
23 Nov 09 Techno
O-TON 053DIGITAL
27 Feb 12 Techno
Played by: Owain Kimber (Owain K), Toby Fairbank, Eddie Niguel Aka Edel, Juno Recommends Techno, Future Beat Alliance, Luke Slater, Kereni, Submerge, Resident Advisor
Review:
Two of the best tracks from Luke Slater's mighty Messenger album get the remix treatment. Under Silent Servant's care, "Bell Blocker" is transformed into an esoteric dance floor track. The hissing percussion that prevailed on the original is still audible, but the US producer deploys sonic blips over a pulsing, clinical groove - and offsets its functionality with a dreamy chord sequence. The Black Dog offer even more radical interpretations of "Beauty In The Fear". The Sheffield act's second version has some bearing on the original but once again spacey pads temper the splurging bass. However, it's the first 'Destroyed on Purpose' remix, with its gentle atmospheric ambience, that really rings changes to Slater's tortured techno.
OSTGUTLP 04
29 Jun 09 Techno
OSTGUT CD20DIGITAL
24 Oct 11 Minimal/Tech House
Played by: Paul Mac, Vegim, Gigi D'amico, Concrete Djz, Chris Finke, Dr Hoffmann, Brendon Moeller, Golden Fleece, Juno Recommends Minimal/Tech House, Slam, Systemic, Todd Bodine, Trebor, Hannah Wild, Niereich, Delko, Electrorites, Jason Fernandes, Dcibel, Giovanni Pasquariello, Kink & Neville Watson
Review:
Luke Slater is a survivor. Not in the physical sense, even though he has lived enough for three people, but because two decades after the UK producer started putting out music, his latest album features moments where the listener is forced to admit that it follows a path that few others have dared to venture down. The main reason for Slater's ongoing artistic relevance is down to him opting for a new approach. Whereas during the golden age of UK techno he was writing his own rules as he went, gifting the world "Booster", "In From The Night" and My Wise Yellow Rug", in his modern-day incarnation he has learnt invaluable insights from the output of those he influenced, absorbing their nuances as a starting point. However, he then applies his own wonderfully skewed thinking, which explains the panning, whiplash rhythm of "Bell Blocker", a track that sounds both familiar and utterly alien, or "Wriss", which - unusually for Slater's techno productions - features a vocal snippet. Invariably, comparisons will be made to other Ostgut artists, but it's hard to imagine any of them daring to even imagine a track like "Rip The Cut". In true PAS form, the beats sound like they're exploding from the speakers as the bass patterns build and build to the point of distortion, tempered only by reverberating claps.
OSTGUT CD 09
22 Jun 09 Techno
Items 1 to 12 of 12 on page 1 of 1
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