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Brainfeeder prep Collections 01 from Teebs

by Tony Poland on 31.10.2011 at 17:13pm

Fly Lo’s Brainfeeder imprint have announced plans to release a collection of tracks from label mainstay Teebs which further expand on the ideas the producer explored on his debut album Ardour. Read the rest of this entry »

Watch: Ann Aimee – Inertia

by Juno Plus on 31.10.2011 at 15:27pm

Ahead of the release of the bumper Inertia compilation, Dutch label Delsin have commissioned Amsterdam based visual artist Heleen Blanken to provide video clips for the tracks featuring on the four sampler EPs that precede the full mix release.

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Juno Plus Halloween Podcast: JD Twitch (Optimo)

by Juno Plus on 31.10.2011 at 12:26pm

To celebrate Halloween we’ve got something quite special indeed: an exclusive Halloween themed entry into our Juno Plus podcast series, provided by none other than Optimo’s JD Twitch.
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Tom Trago/Bok Bok – Night Voyage Tool Kit review

by Juno Plus on 31.10.2011 at 11:53am
bok bok tom trago
Artist: Bok Bok & Tom Trago
Title: Night Voyage Tool Kit
Label: Sound Pellegrino Crossover Series
Genre: House, Techno
Format: Digital

The new Crossover Series from the Sound Pellegrino crew makes for a canny and eye opening endeavour, offering like-minded producers from different paths the chance to collaborate together with the aim of “crossing the invisible bridges of the great house music archipelago”. The standard for the series is set truly high on the inaugural release that sees Alex Bok Bok Sushon team up with Tom Trago for the Night Voyage Tool Kit EP.

If you’d paid keen attention to recent interviews with either the Night Slugs founder or the Rush Hour regular, you might have noted subtle whispers of mutual appreciation – something that was clearly not lost on Sound Pellegrino figurehead Teki Latex, who approached the two to open proceedings on the Crossover Series. In broader terms, this project is just one aspect of a growing bond between the emergent powers of the UK underground and the Dutch standard bearers. (Blawan and Untold surfacing soon on Clone and Dexter indulging in some Bristol loving sounds for the recent Great Northern Driver 12″ are further examples for those who require them.)

Musically, Night Voyage Tool Kit is the result of a four day recording session at Trago’s studio in East Amsterdam earlier this summer, with the help of a Sequential Drumtraks 400 analogue drum machine newly gleaned from the aforementioned Dexter. The six tracks see Trago and Sushon deliver heavily, stripped down drum trax informed by a love of Dancemania era Chicago House. At times the results are playful; see the opening track “Pathfinder” – little more than the duo checking out how pliable the rubbery analogue tone at the core is, with drums stripped down to a hissing undercurrent. More structure is evident on the skeletal “White Type R”, which slowly unfurls into compressed head jack material, though that playful sense of melody creeps through intermittently.

The midway point here is perhaps the release’s strong point, with both “Vector” and Pom Clash” heavily pressurised club workouts. The former contains some brilliant usage of space, dropping into just the birdlike sonic swivels before a wave of percussion takes hold. The latter is even more thrilling, utilising the sort of Funky rhythms that Bok Bok knows all too well and marrying them with vocal stabs that veer the scale of dementia as the track bumps along.

As the EP progresses, the overarching feeling you get from this release is two producers becoming increasingly comfortable working together – see how the vocoder led “Time Master” unexpectedly bursts into a percolating 23rd century p-funk out. It’s obviously just the start of much more from the duo, with Trago revealing the duo will continue their Night Voyage endeavours in some shape or form.

Tony Poland


Moog give away Halloween sounds

by Juno Download on 31.10.2011 at 11:36am

Moog have compiled a Halloween-friendly collection of unsettling and bone-chilling sounds for their recently released polyphonic synthesizer for Apple’s iPad.

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Rebolledo – Super Vato review

by Juno Plus on 31.10.2011 at 11:20am
rebolledo IMG
Artist: Rebolledo
Title: Super Vato
Label: Cómeme
Genre: Off Kilter House
Format: 2xLP, Digital

Since surfacing with a terrific debut EP for Matias Aguayo’s Cómeme imprint in 2009 (the delightfully odd, lo-fi house masterpiece “Guerrero”), Mexican maverick Rebolledo has carved a niche for himself as a producer of weird and wonderful, often stripped-back house music that’s as likely to boast twisted guitars or barely decipherable high-pitched vocals as bowel-bothering basslines and scratchy, almost under-produced percussion. It’s no wonder those who enjoy their house leftfield and experimental have declared him to be a genius.

Given this, it’s perhaps little surprise that this debut album is getting plenty of attention. It expands on his previous peculiar but invigorating releases, offering up a selection of tracks that veer from the raw and brutal to the surprisingly cute and cuddly. While the old trademarks remain – particularly the oddball vocals (occasionally high-pitched and delirious, much like those employed by Mungolian Jet Set man DJ Strangefruit, at other times dark and nightmarish), wonky drums and a mix of both live and programmed percussion – Super Vato sees him travel outside of his comfort zone for the first time.

If bouncy opener “Canivalen” is traditional Rebolledo fare, the same can’t be said for the spiraling synths, brutal bottom end and dub-laden drums of the subdued “Steady Gear Rod Maschine” or kraut-flavoured, Kompakt-ish “Positivisimo”. Or, for that matter, “Aire Calliente”, which opens with two minutes of hypnotic cosmiche synths before developing into a delcious dancefloor murk-out. “Steady Gear Rebo Machine” offers a thrilling, off-kilter excursion – all fuzzy drums, alien synth pulses and freaky background noises – whilst “La Pena”, the first of two collaborations with Comeme boss Matias Aguayo – sounds like sparse South American synth-pop made by a trio of Mexican crackheads after a particularly heavy night out.

Then there’s the joyous muscle car celebration that is “Corvette Ninja”, a kind of acid-flecked electro-disco ride through Mexico City in the company of Patrick Cowley, Giorgio Moroder and a clutch of Italo-disco revivalists. As if all that wasn’t enough, Rebolledo draws proceedings to a close with the sort of raw, loose and cacophonous drum workout (“Te Conozco Moskow”) that will have all but the most conservative listeners joyously reaching for the tequila.

Super Vato is perhaps not the easiest of listens, but then that’s not Rebolledo’s style. He’s much more interested in exploring the possibilities of utilizing lo-fi elements – slack drums, vintage synths and raw vocals, particularly – in a genre full to bursting with slick, overproduced material. As a result, Super Vato is arguably one of the most interesting and exciting house albums in years.

Matt Anniss


This week at Juno

by Tony Poland on 28.10.2011 at 15:44pm

There was a distinct air of synchronicity about this week’s releases, with some of the best releases indelibly marked with the number two.

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50 Weapons prep Addison Locked Groove

by Tony Poland on 28.10.2011 at 14:45pm

Not content with unveiling a forthcoming twelve inch from Ostgut don Marcel Dettmann, 50 Weapons today rolled out a shiny new website that contains a welcome surprise in the shape of a forthcoming highly limited, bespoke seven inch from Swamp81 mainstay Addison Groove.

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Tornado Wallace enters the Underground Sugar Cave

by Juno Plus on 28.10.2011 at 13:02pm

Australian producer Tornado Wallace will return to the Delusions Of Grandeur imprint in November with the three-track Underground Sugar Caves EP, featuring a remix from the Idjut Boys.

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Mr Oizo readies Stade2 for Ed Banger

by Scott Wilson on 28.10.2011 at 12:08pm

France’s favourite electronic oddball Mr Oizo will release his next album, entitled Stade2, in November.

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Win: Martyn’s Ghost People on vinyl

by Scott Wilson on 27.10.2011 at 15:43pm

We have a copy of Martyn’s new album Ghost People to give away to one lucky reader, on 2×12″ vinyl no less.

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Listen: Scuba – M.A.R.S. (Machinedrum remix)

by Scott Wilson on 27.10.2011 at 15:04pm

M.A.R.S. was one of many highlights on Scuba’s recent DJ-Kicks mix, and this version, fresh from !K7 Records, sees Machinedrum give it a fast-flexing wokout.

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Rush Hour prep Tom Trago – Iris In Dub

by Juno Plus on 27.10.2011 at 13:14pm

The ever bubbling release schedule at Rush Hour Records sees the Amsterdam based label return to Tom Trago’s masterful and multi-faceted second album Iris, commissioning the producer to rework a number of the tracks for a Iris In Dub release.

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Andy Stott – We Stay Together review

by Juno Plus on 27.10.2011 at 13:02pm
andy stott
Artist: Andy Stott
Title: We Stay Together
Label: Modern Love
Genre: Dense, swampy techno
Format: 2x12", Digital

Coming less than six months after Passed Me By, Andy Stott’s follow-up We Stay Together has much to prove. After several years of dub techno productions following a more standard 120bpm template, Passed Me By was a murky exploration of sub 100bpm tempos, with bass frequencies washed out by swampy compression and rhythms comprised of heaving kick drums, grimy handclaps and hi-hats whose lurching pace evoked a sensation of continental drift. It was a record that required patience, but if you had the time to absorb its monotone variations there was a staggering amount of detail and beauty to be found beneath its dense layers of doom laden sludge. Passed Me By’s artwork, an early black and white photograph of an African tribesman, evoked a colonial-era mistrust of “primitive” civilisations, perhaps an ironic nod to the fact that Stott’s stripped down style highlights the inherent African rhythmic influence in much contemporary bass and techno. We Stay Together’s artwork is much less obviously provocative; a seated tribesman in a more casual pose whose masked appearance nevertheless evokes a more creeping sense of dread. It’s difficult to describe what makes We Stay Together so subtly different to its predecessor, but in a sense the difference between these two images is perhaps the best way to approach it; as a less aggressive, but no less confrontational record; a record with the same creaking structure, but one that allows you to sink into its cracks rather than be buoyed up by a tectonic sense of movement. Nobody could ever say that Passed Me By was exactly peak time, but this record makes its immediate predecessor’s sharp, syncopated rhythms look sprightly by comparison.

The record begins with “Submission”, a five-minute long introduction akin to the sonorous wash of Fennesz. Skillfully blending field recordings of the ocean with sleek pads and just the right amount of metallic grit, it sets the pace for the rest, drawing you into a hypnotic state of artificial bliss. This is further built on in “Posers”, where the spaces between its languid, trance inducing thump seem filled with the sounds of creaking icebergs; the curious landscape’s only humanity being offered by a bit-crushed vocal disco loop. For a brief moment it shocks you out of Stott’s marshmallow like textural construction, but it’s not long before you are sucked back into its torpor. The seven minute long “Bad Wires” which follows is a haze of ghostly hi-hats smudged out by what feels like an acrid sense of pressure, its sheer weight pushing down in atmospheres. It’s a stark contrast to “We Stay Together (Part One)”, which has a significantly less oppressive feel, but one that is nonetheless haunted by a demonic vocal presence which snaps away from beneath. Somewhere within, an 80s pop sample is audible through a ton of distortion, but unlike the sample use in Passed Me By’s “Intermittent” which offered a brief moment of saccharine respite, this does not. It highlights the crushing sense of sadness that pervades the record, almost as if in the process of making this record Stott depleted all the serotonin he may have had left after completing Passed Me By.

The last two tracks take us further down Stott’s dark path – the resonating, monolithic sounds of “Cherry Eye” recall the iceberg movements of “Posers”, but with a distant jet engine attached to them, while closer “Cracked” begins with the kind of percussion that sounds like it could have been recorded in a bottling factory, with its closing dub chords offering some comforting familiarity. You may expect a record like this to offer a sense of relief at its end, but Stott’s unique sonic world, bleak as it may be, offers a pace that allows breathing space, and an apocalyptic beauty that’s asking to be explored. As such, We Stay Together is one record most will want to retreat straight back into.

Scott Wilson


Dro Carey gets ready to Journey With The Heavy

by Scott Wilson on 27.10.2011 at 09:46am

Exciting news has arrived from the RAMP Recordings stable, as they confirm the first release on the label from hotly tipped Australian producer Dro Carey.

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Outlander resurfaces on We Play House

by Scott Wilson on 26.10.2011 at 16:48pm

Belgian house mavericks We Play House have announced the latest release in their vinyl only coloured series, featuring contributions from Luv Jam and Outlander, with the latter’s first new material in 15 years.

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Listen: ZZT – Partys Over Los Angeles (Jon Convex remix)

by Scott Wilson on 26.10.2011 at 15:26pm

ZZT (aka Tiga and Zombie Nation) have enlisted the talents of Instra:mental’s Jon Convex to remix the lead single from their forthcoming debut album.

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Marcel Dettmann readies Deluge for 50 Weapons

by Juno Plus on 26.10.2011 at 14:26pm

Fresh from a storming set at last weekend’s Amsterdam Dance Event, it has today been revealed that Berlin techno deity Marcel Dettmann will release an EP on Modeselektor’s 50 Weapons imprint.

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Watch: Steve Summers live on Beats In Space

by Tony Poland on 26.10.2011 at 14:03pm

Tim Sweeney invited L.I.E.S. alumni Steve Summers into the Beats In Space studio last week, and the prolific producer elected to mark his debut with a live performance of his tracks beamed across the WNYU airwaves.

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Win: Tickets to Ital’s UK live debut

by Scott Wilson on 26.10.2011 at 13:41pm

100% Silk star Ital will be making his UK live debut this Friday in Dalston, and Juno Plus have a pair of tickets to give away to one lucky reader.

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