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Moodymann – I Can’t Kick This Feeling When It Hits (Appointment remixes) review

by Juno Plus on 31.03.2011 at 18:21pm
Moodymann – I Can’t Kick This Feeling When It Hits (Appointment remixes) review
Artist: Moodymann
Title: I Can't Kick This Feeling When It Hits
Label: Decks Reworx
Genre: Deep House
Format: 12"

Those of you who frequent the more discerning record shops of Berlin – or at least the catalogue pages of the Hardwax website – will no doubt be aware of the mysterious Livejam crew and their defiantly purist take on house and techno production; nothing but analogue gear,  grainy samples, one take recordings and vinyl-only releases for this lot.

Released on the newly minted Decks Reworx imprint, Appointment – apparently made up of four members of the Livejam collective, although whether this is actually true or not remains cloaked in analogue mystery – overhaul the famed Moodymann remix of Chic’s “I Want Your Love”. First released on KDJ Records back in – gulp – 1996, it still stands as one of the best examples of taking a ubiquitous disco sample and breathing new live into it. Kenny Dixon Jnr’s own gravelly spoken word vocal paves the way toward a hypnotic bassline and instantly recognisable looped vocal and slinky guitar samples from one of Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers’ finest moments.

Rather than a merely indulging in a minor tweak or perfunctory tinker, “I Can’t Kick This Feeling When It Hits” is given the full Livejam/Appointment treatment – twice. The first remix is almost unrecognisable from Dixon Jnr’s version, eschewing the guitar and vocal samples totally in favour of stripped back drum programming, forming a mighty deep groove that soon locks into the spoken word vocals. There’s not much to it: it’s sparse, raw and thumping, but that, of course, is the Livejam way. The second version retains the vocal loop used in the edit, but it’s buried beneath a raw, gritty thump primed for sweat-drenched warehouse party use. The Livejam sound has thus far been restricted to the realm of secret weapon, but appearing in such illustrious company should ensure plenty more people seek out their records.

Aaron Coultate


Daphni – Daphni Edits Vol 1 review

by Juno Plus on 31.03.2011 at 16:10pm
Daphni – Daphni Edits Vol 1 review
Artist: Daphni
Title: Daphni Edits Vol 1
Label: Resista
Genre: Edits
Format: 12"

Dan Snaith’s career has never really looked in danger of approaching stagnation thanks to his chameleon approach to musical style. Over the course of six albums, the Canadian has touched on experimental electronics, leftfield krautrock and gloriously kaleidoscopic psychedelic pop. All this before he arrived at the Border Community leaning organic swerve betwixt house and techno which characterised his most lauded work to date in last year’s Swim – indeed it was lauded as the best album of 2010 on these very pages.

It’s perhaps this recent widespread critical acclaim that has lead Snaith to start producing new material under a shiny new alias in Daphni. He is of course no stranger to name changes, being the victim of one of the music world’s most bizarre lawsuits that forced him to abandon the Manitoba moniker (under which he produced the startling album Up In Flames which is worth seeking out for those unfamiliar).

Snaith introduced an enraptured audience to a raft of new Daphni material on his submission to the Podcast Hall Of Fame overseen by Resident Advisor earlier this year. The subsequent vinyl only double drop of Daphni and Four Tet on the latter’s Text imprint seems to have been sucked down the plughole of memory thanks to the axis of hype operated by Thom Yorke and Burial.

The latest slice of Daphni ingenuity comes via the newly formed Resista label, with Snaith flexing his editing skills on two lesser spotted oddities. “Mapfumo” touches on African Highlife, with Snaith extending and embellishing Thomas Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited’s 1986 track “Shumba”. Initially staying faithful to the original, it’s the midway arrival of a skeletal 4×4 thump where Snaith begins to weave his magic.  The intricate guitar melodies skip in and out of focus as a stuttering wall of sub bass fills before the vocals slide back in and the newly fattened groove rides out.

As pleasant as “Shumba” is, the real fire is reserved for the B Side with Snaith dropping the tribal brain cell failure inducing throb of “NPE” – a primal post punk track supposedly lifted from mid 80s Dutch obscurity. If you can imagine Demdike Stare recreating the visceral energy of Liquid Liquid and throwing in some slowed down samples from The Flirts most ubiquitous moment then you might have a grasp on how devilishly good this sounds.

Tony Poland


Tom Trago – Iris review

by Juno Plus on 31.03.2011 at 15:51pm
tom trago
Artist: Tom Trago
Title: Iris
Label: Rush Hour
Genre: House
Format: 2xLP, CD, Digital

If Tom Trago’s debut album, Voyage Direct, was an impressive exercise in developing a signature style, then this sophomore set has clearly been designed to show the sheer scale of the Dutchman’s growing ambition. Where that album was sharply focused in its promotion of a thick, floor-friendly sound that neatly fused synth-heavy disco with rock-solid European deep house, Iris takes a far broader musical approach. It’s almost as if Trago is setting out his stall: he’s not just a simple disco/house fusionist, but a musical alchemist with more strings to his bow than a twelve-string player with an impressive collection of lutes, mandarins and sitars. It may be a tortured metaphor, but it has a ring of truth.

The 15 tracks that make up Iris include forays into noughties hip-house (Tyree Cooper collaboration “What You Do”), crisp, late night electro-funk (“Suckers For Fools”, with Olivier Day Soul), ambient soundscapes (“Soon In A Cinema”), rush-inducing Joy Orbison-ish future garage (“Joys Of Choice”) and, curiously, hooky, radio-friendly pop-house. Of course, there are some typical Trago moments (“Scent Of Heaven”, the Dam Funk-does-deep house vibes of “Space Balloon”), but these are sandwiched between a kaleidoscopic array of rainbow-tinted songs and collaborations (Romanthony, Meikbar and San Proper also feature). In the wrong hands it could have been a misjudged mess, but it’s nothing of the sort. If anything, Iris feels like an impressive step on a much longer a journey; a very good album, yes, but merely a taster for future Trago full-lengths that will no doubt eclipse this. Think of it as a calling card from a producer still on the rise.

Matt Anniss


GHL – Slow Good review

by Juno Plus on 31.03.2011 at 15:42pm
GHL – Slow Good review
Artist: GHL
Title: Slow Good
Label: Electric Minds
Genre: Techno
Format: 12", Digital

Like so many organisations before them – Soma, Kompakt and Optimo are but a few notable examples – Electric Minds have developed organically. Starting off as a club night in London’s east end in the middle of the last decade, founder Dolan Bergin decided to set up a label that showcased the work of the artists that perform there. They have managed the rare feat of keeping the quality high with releases so far from established names like Steve Kotey, Ilija Rudman and Yam Who? as well newer artists.

The mysterious GHL may fall into the latter category, but on the evidence of “Good”, it sounds like this producer has been honing his/her skills for years. The title track is a driving, drummy workout, featuring hissing hats, thundering claps and an irresistible swinging groove – and such is the quality of the arranging that these elements sit seamlessly alongside a warm, liquid melody line.

“Show Me Love” sounds like it was inspired more by the UK’s house past than developments in the US. Featuring shuffling drums and a warm, snaking bassline underpinning sweet chords, the influences are made clear, with the rhythmic elements influenced by UK’ garridge’, while the sweet chords capturing classic UK deep house. That GHL is able to operate seamlessly at the middle ground between these classic styles bodes well for future appearances.

Richard Brophy


New DFA releases on the horizon

by Juno Plus on 31.03.2011 at 13:59pm

With the boss man currently occupied with a series of last ever LCD shows, it’s been an understandably slow start to the year for the DFA twelve inch machine, but things seem to be stepping up a gear or two – with several releases due in the next month which have piqued our interest.

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Red Bull Music Academy 2011 pulled from Tokyo

by Juno Plus on 30.03.2011 at 16:41pm

The Red Bull Music Academy today revealed that their 2011 showcase will no longer take place in Tokyo, citing the recent earthquake and tsunami that rocked Japan as the reason behind the change. Read the rest of this entry »

Hivern ready Teengirl Fantasy remixes

by Tony Poland on 30.03.2011 at 16:38pm

Spanish label Hivern Discs have officially announced details of their forthcoming Teengirl Fantasy remix twelve inch which sees John Talabot, Mano Le Tough and Beautiful Swimmers remix the American duo’s modern day classic “Cheaters”.

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Watch: DJ Craze premieres Traktor Scratch Pro 2

by Juno Download on 30.03.2011 at 14:54pm

Check out this rather impressive clip of five times  DMC champion DJ Craze giving us an insight into the capabilities of the new Traktor Scratch Pro alongside the Maschine, clearly displaying the new high-res, multi-coloured “Truewave” waveforms at work.

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Pioneer DDJ-S1 Controller arrives

by Juno Download on 30.03.2011 at 13:27pm

Pioneer this week released the DDJ-S1, the all-in-one USB controller optimised for Serrato Itch.

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Ones To Watch (No 19): Taragana Pyjarama

by Juno Plus on 30.03.2011 at 13:18pm

We live in a crazy age of musical over consumption where the Cycle Of Internet Hype ensures the vast majority of new music you are exposed to from perusing online music magazine and mp3 blogs  is just the first step in a well calculated PR campaign with a considerable budget behind it. Occasionally, however,  someone breaks through without this forced momentum thanks to obvious talent.

A case in point would be Taragana Pyjarama, otherwise known as an unassuming young music enthusiast from Copenhagen called Nick Ericksen. Already familiar in some circles for his work under the now retired Eim Ick alias on cult Spanish label Hivern Discs – home to John Talabot and Pional – Nick invited the world into the sumptuously psychedelic electronic world of Taragana Pyjarama last August via his debut production “Girls”. The track, produced in conjunction with his girlfriend, subsequently found its way onto several of the more discerning corners of the blogosphere, and in a neat twist of fate the Fool House label borne out of iconic Parisian tastemaker blog Fluokids promptly snapped Taragana Pyjarama up for an EP release.

Fast forward several months and Fool House will be releasing his eponymous EP early next month, filled with a newly dusted down and polished version of “Girls” along with further original Taragana Pyjarama material and remixes from Border Community’s Ricardo Tobar and Merok duo Teengirl Fantasy. If you’re yet to sample the   sounds of Taragana Pyjarama then a clue can be found in this aforementioned choice of remixers as his music sits somewhere between the studied techno brilliance of the Border Communities of this world and the dreamlike, synthesized, throbbing, hypnotic narcosis of Teengirl Fantasy at their best.

After making contact with the elusive Nick – naturally via Twitter – we subsequently exchanged a series of emails broaching how the distinctive name came about, his influences, plans for the future and much more why we consider him one to watch.

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Juno Plus Podcast 05: Orphan 101 & Bloodman

by Juno Plus on 30.03.2011 at 11:57am

DecaRhythm duo Orphan 101 and Bloodman team up for the fifth Juno Plus podcast.

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Win: Tickets to all 7 Electric Minds loft parties in 2011

by Juno Plus on 30.03.2011 at 10:40am

Fancy securing yourself and the special person in your life a season ticket to all seven of this year’s Electric Minds Loft Parties? Read on and find out how…

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Watch: We Play House video interview

by Juno Plus on 29.03.2011 at 17:05pm

“Vinyl is sex, digital is virtual sex:” the amusing words of We Play House don Red D in this video interview with both him and FCL acolyte San Soda.

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Linkwood returns From The Vaults

by Juno Plus on 29.03.2011 at 15:30pm

Firecracker’s favourite son Linkwood is set to release his first solo endevaour since 2009’s System, with a three track EP entitled From The Vaults Part 1 due out in May via Prime Numbers.

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Pearson Sound/Ramadanman – Fabriclive 56 review

by Juno Plus on 29.03.2011 at 15:13pm
Pearson Sound/Ramadanman – Fabriclive 56 review
Artist: Ramadanman/ Pearson Sound
Title: Fabriclive 56
Label: Fabric
Genre: Dubstep, Post-Dubstep, Techno, House
Format: Mixed CD, Digital

David Kennedy, aka Ramadanman/Pearson Sound, undoubtedly one of the most talked about electronic artists of recent times, steps up with his highly anticipated mix, marking the 56th instalment of the venerable fabriclive series. Since he first appeared in 2006, Kennedy has released on numerous labels including Loefah’s Swamp 81, Untold’s Hemlock, Will Saul’s Aus and of course Hessle Audio, the label he co-runs with Ben UFO and Pangaea. Championed by critics, tastemakers and the bass music fraternity alike, he very much represents the sound of now and is an obvious choice for fabriclive, being a talented DJ as well as producer. Amongst the almost exorbitant 30-track selection are 10 of Kennedy’s own, signposted by explorations into dubstep, post-dubstep, house, funky, techno, grime, juke and beyond.

Throughout the album, tracks are spliced together in an ever-metamorphosing swell of sound. We are taken from the atmospheric, blissed out entrée, pottering about around 130bpm, through some hissing techno-laced moments and house rhythms – most notably the ultimate DJ tool otherwise known as “Late Night Jam” by Levon Vincent – to the immense sounds of Julio Bashmore’s “Battle For Middle You” which ups the pace, segueing smoothly and effortlessly into the infectious booty bass of “Grab Somebody” (surely one of Kennedy’s less appreciated offerings) and onwards through the Carl Craig re-edit of “Void23”, his collab with Bristol based producer Appleblim. Elsewhere the grandiose “symphonic refix” of latter day hero Joy Orbison provides another delectable soundbite before we are plunged yet deeper into the mix.

Bass fiends will get a kick out of the second half of the mix in which Pangaea’s “Inna Daze”, with its tribal pattering, wailing cries and deep, dubbed out soundscape foreshadows Pinch’s moody, melancholic “Qawaali” and the Benji B championed classic MJ Cole ft. Wiley “From The Drop”, which all occur in a delicious triplet with a Pearson Sound cut to shake things up. To top it all off there’s even a delicately placed smattering of Burial, before the mix deftly changes direction towards Bok Bok, Girl Unit, and ubiquitous underground anthem “Woo Riddim”. Finishing with a slew of super sharp cuts from Bristol based Addison Groove, dubstep pioneer Mala and London via Berlin producer Sigha, Pearson Sound’s selection for number 56 is both on point and seamlessly eclectic. Much like his electrifying DJ sets, the elements gel together beautifully, offering something very unifying and wholesome, making for an essential and very satisfying listen.

Belinda Rowse


Pioneer S-DJ05 speakers review

by Juno Download on 29.03.2011 at 14:48pm

Continuing in their quest to service all areas of the digital DJ market, Pioneer steps up with two sizes of active bi-amped monitors.

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Class of 808 debuts in London

by Juno Plus on 29.03.2011 at 10:21am

Acid house casualties unite! A new club night in London will launch next week, catering specifically for the the heady days of dance music from 1987-1993. Read the rest of this entry »

Fudge Fingas – Now About How review

by Juno Plus on 28.03.2011 at 13:02pm
Fudge Fingas – Now About How review
Artist: Fudge Fingas
Title: Now About How
Label: Prime Numbers
Genre: Deep house
Format: LP, CD, Digital

Gavin Sutherland isn’t the most prolific producer in the Prime Numbers/Firecracker canon. Since making his debut in 2002, the Scottish producer has released just four solo singles – the most recent being last year’s well-received About Time 12” – and contributed a handful of tracks to various Firecracker and Prime Numbers collaborative EPs. For those of us who dig his atmospheric and at times heady sound, it’s been a frustrating experience. Perhaps he was saving himself for this debut full-length; Now About How largely explores his previous themes, showcasing a densely layered, occasionally downtempo take on dance music that’s never less than intoxicating.

Like the work of contemporaries Trus’me and Linkwood, the Fudge Fingas sound is rooted in a long-held love affair with what local heroes the Unabombers dubbed “basement soul” – a rich, jazz-flecked take on electronic music that promotes an eclectic approach to music-making. The basement soul ideal has always been more about a musical aesthetic than a particular style or genre. Anything can be basement soul – it just has to boast that ethos. In that regard, Now About How is a true basement soul album.

While firmly rooted in deep house (check the swampy Detroitian vibes of “Shake Out”), it never settles into one comfortable, predictable groove. Its emotion-rich grooves include warm, melodic two-step and future garage flavas (“Polo”, the jazzual “Silent Statues”), languid Balearica (“Mind Swamp”), dubwise slo-mo grooves (“If We’re Gonna Go”) and dewy-eyed downtempo beatscapes (“It’s The Music”). It’s eclectic, no doubt, but thanks to Sutherland’s delicious production and strangely distant vocals, Now About How hangs together marvelously.

Matt Anniss


Cosmin TRG – A Universal Crush review

by Juno Plus on 28.03.2011 at 12:23pm
cosmin trg
Artist: Cosmin TRG
Title: A Universal Crush
Label: Rush Hour
Genre: House, Techno
Format: 12", Digital

Looking back at the still fledgling but truly impressive history of Rush Hour’s Direct Current series, it’s possible to chart a figurative inspirational fault line that has strengthened with each release. There’s been a clear progression in sound demonstrated by the series’ main protagonists Falty DL and Cosmin TRG in addition to startling contributions from newcomers Policy and BNJMN.

The unexpected delights of the latter’s full length album Plastic World – an album rich in brilliant Utopian techno futurism – lays the foundations of expectation for this release from Cosmin TRG and true to form the Romanian steps up for his third outing on the series and delivers perhaps his best work to date.

A Universal Crush - formed of four tracks spread luxuriously across two harlequin themed twelve inches – is the starkest example yet of the Romanian’s continual development from his dubstep roots towards a fluid house and techno sound. Of course there are plenty of artists currently moving in a similar direction, the most recent example being the Joy O release on Hotflush. Whilst “Wade In” is an accomplished techno production which has even caught the ear of Villalobos, it’s somewhat lacking in that sonic personality to distinguish it from the continual swathe of techno releases.

Crucially, Cosmin TRG’s distinct style is apparent from the moment the title track arises from the ether – listening to the glitchy melancholia coated rhythmic twists that run through “A Universal Crush” the mind remains blank when scouring for obvious comparisons, be it contemporary or historical. Similarly “Negligee” sounds wholly unique, delivering six minutes of warped analogue sex – excellently twisting itself inside out amidst the euphoric chords that drive the track forward.

Opening proceedings on the second, white slab of vinyl “Magnetic Bodies” is perhaps the one instance where TRG plays it straight – delivering into a soaring deep house thump that’s still sprinkled with enough ingenuity to make it stand out. Special mention is reserved for the final track “Sirop” – perhaps the finest six minutes here – with the dizzyingly brilliant rhythms and sweat-addled thumping joy worthy of far more than mere verbs.

Tony Poland


Mary Anne Hobbs returns to the airwaves

by Juno Plus on 28.03.2011 at 12:05pm

Xfm today announced they have secured the services of legendary UK broadcaster Mary Anne Hobbs for a weekly Saturday evening show commencing in July.

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