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Various – Chilean Pop review

by Juno Plus on 21.04.2011 at 11:51am
Various – Chilean Pop review
Artist: Various
Title: Chilean Pop
Label: Cómeme
Genre: Minimal/Tech House
Format: 12", Digital

Matias Aguayo’s Cómeme imprint is seemingly matched only by the equally fledgling Pampa label for sheer precociousness and uniqueness of sound. So far this year the label has introduced these gleeful ears to the sounds of Argentinean Ana Helder – we defy you not to pick your jaw from the floor after hearing “Complicado” – and Cómeme indulge in curveball tactics for their next essential drop.

Chilean Pop squarely throws the focus down on Aguayo’s hometown of Santiago de Chile and sees a selection of Cómeme’s key players remix tracks from bands that form the city’s underground music network. Not being particularly au fait with either the bands in question or Santiago’s music scene in general, it’s naturally a bit futile to attempt comparisons. What is clear however is how easily adaptable the source material is to the humble art of booming club music.

Aguayo himself teams up with Markus Rossknecht under the Broke guise to remix the band Fredi Michel – turning “Enganami” into a mutant discoid future classic. It’s quite simple yet utterly effective in execution as layers of off kilter rhythmic textures are introduced whilst the organic melodic elements are teased out playfully – this is a remix stamped with Aguayo’s own unique palette of sound. The same band get remixed by Diegors, whose Percapella rerub of “Marinero” can only be described as a bunch of Chilean cold wave enthusiasts doing a Miami bass cover version of the Strafe classic “Set It Off”.

Diegors appears again on the flip as part of the Cómeme all star team that do a flip on $990’s “Gatito” which matches the A Side endeavour in the quality stakes – bringing forth a shuddering EBM proto techno flex which should be at odds with the gentle vocal harmonies that ripple atop! Rebolledo goes solo for the final remix, switching the pace right down to Sex Jam on Javiera Mena’s “Hasta La Verdad” which suddenly drops into a seemingly endless epic combination of John Carpenter style arpeggios and delayed vocals.

Tony Poland


Discodeine – Extended EP review

by Juno Plus on 13.12.2010 at 16:50pm
discodeine
Artist: Discodeine
Title: Extended EP
Label: D-I-R-T-Y
Genre: Disco
Format: 10" blue vinyl

Amidst the swathe of lists that inevitably clutter up the internet each and every year, a category rising in the popularity stakes seems to be the worst artwork, which is fair enough as there’s plenty of fuel for the fire (Beatfanatic has been high in on the list at Juno Plus HQ).

As admirers of the arts though, we’d rather concentrate on beauty than horror though and Gallic label D-I-R-T-Y make a fashionably late play for the affections of vinyl fetishists across the world with this Extended EP from Discodeine. Arriving in a ten inch sleeve which is covered in some decidedly spectral artwork – a illustrative rendition of The Divine Comedy by Gustav Dore for the less culturally enlightened – the vinyl itself is adorned in the most attractively electric of blue colours.

The music proves to be just as aesthetically pleasing with extended versions of the duo’s collaborations with two feted musicians adorning both sides. The A Side sees “Synchronised” – the gloriously orchestral collaboration with Jarvis Cocker – stretched to fit, making this release the more bespoke, attractive alternative to the comparatively plain edition released by DFA last month.

This is complemented by an extended version of “Singular” which features the hushed tones of Comeme boss Matias Aguayo, exclusive to this ten inch which marks it as a highly collectable and a suitably delectable aperitif before the main course of Discodeine’s debut album which gets served up in February.

Tony Poland


Tiga – Sex O’Clock remixes review

by Juno Plus on 01.02.2010 at 10:54am
Tiga – Sex O’Clock remixes review

Artist: Tiga
Title: Sex O’Clock
Label: Turbo
Genre: Electro house/Electroclash
Format: 12″, Digital
Buy From: Juno Records, Juno Download

2009 was a watershed year for the Turbo label, fronting up massive releases from the year’s big winners – Zombie Nation, Proxy, Brodinksi and, of course, Tiga himself. The Omnidance compilation was a veritable who’s who of this year’s popular techno-banger sound. Whether you’re a disc-carrying convert or not, you can’t but admire Turbo’s relentless release schedule.

Turbo swing right into the twenteens with a remix EP of Tiga’s “Sex O’ Clock”, a new single lifted from last year’s Ciao. However the title and Tiga’s Shoe-like vocals, belie the brooding, twisting house of this release. Eschewing the original, three musical polymaths, each with roots in DIY techno and analogue machinery, have contributed a new remix for this EP.

Jamie Lidell cuts and thrusts through feral, fuzzy synths. Just a slight hint of Lidell’s  stage show funk shines through the fog. Messy, exciting electro-funk.

Matias Aguayo, owner of up-coming label Comeme, flattens things out. Supplanting the original’s stabbing, acid vibes with Argentinan street rhythms and warm, analogue tones, it keeps to Aguayo’s tested formula. Any fan of Comeme’s 2009 releases will find something here.

Trevor Jackson, wearing his Playgroup house moniker, injects an extra level of driving acid groove, building up into spooky, Blade-running synth pads. All sass has been stripped away from the vocals. This is a twisting grind into moody realms of big room acid. Totally hypnotic and equally pumping. Grab the dub if you’re not into Tiga’s trademark vocals.

Review: Duncan Byrne


Review: Matias Aguayo – Ay Ay Ay

by Juno Plus on 04.11.2009 at 12:26pm
Matias Aguayo

Artist: Matias Aguayo
Title: Ay Ay Ay
Label: Kompakt
Genre: Minimal/Tech House
Format: Digital, CD, LP
Buy From: Juno Records, Juno Download

Chilean born, German based producer Matias Aguayo often talks of his extensive pool of musical influences, and this ambiguity is clearly a definitive factor in his second album Ay Ay Ay, where he leads the listener on an epic journey which encompasses everything from Africana to electronica.

Opener ”Menta Latte” is a synecdoche of the album’s breadth; countless vocal layers float over a dreamy beat and simple xylophone chord. The albums first single “Rollerskate” is an unpretentiously upbeat and ridiculously catchy groove, while his respect for traditional African music is evident on the haunting warble of “Koro Koro”.

The Latin-beats of “Me Vuelvo Loca” and “Juanita” allow an embrace of his South American roots while gently coaxing his listener to the dance floor. In Ay Ay Ay Aguayo has created an undeniably unique and highly-accomplished world music album, a trick that I suspect is unlikely to be repeated by his contemporaries anytime soon.

Review: Peter Carroll