In a week of surprise announcements news surfaces of a new Syclops album called In The Blink Of An Eye.
New Syclops album due on Bubbletease Communications
by Juno Plus on 16.01.2013 at 11:17amMim Suleiman – Umbeya review
by Juno Plus on 03.07.2012 at 11:06amQuite how Tanzanian vocalist and percussion player Mim Suleiman came to reside in Sheffield is a mystery, but since moving to the Steel City she’s certainly made her mark. Alongside producer Maurice Fulton, she impressed with Tungi, a delicious 2010 debut album released on Gerd Janson’s Running Back – a regular outlet for Fulton-produced projects.
New LP due from Mim Suleiman
by Tony Poland on 12.06.2012 at 18:27pm
Bubbletease Communications will release Umbeya, a second Maurice Fulton produced album from Sheffield dwelling Tanzanian singer Mim Suleiman later this month.
Produced, Arranged, Sneezed On, & Squirted Out By Maurice Fulton
by Juno Plus on 21.05.2012 at 12:47pm
Maurice Fulton is one of those mavericks who prefers to let his music do the talking, and there is so much of it to discuss, spanning countless aliases and labels in a discography that stretches back to the 90s, including the oft-mentioned production credit for “Gypsy Woman” by Crystal Waters.
Win: Tickets to Land of Kings festival
by Juno Plus on 30.04.2012 at 11:06am
Dalston’s annual Land Of Kings festival has reached its fourth year – and Juno Plus have a pairs of tickets to give away to the two day long festivities.
Maurice Fulton and Bicep added to Land Of Kings line-up
by Tony Poland on 03.04.2012 at 15:00pm
Dalston’s annual showcase of music and culture Land of Kings is shaping up nicely, with house music legend Maurice Fulton and Juno Plus page botherers Bicep among the latest additions for the festival that takes place at the start of May.
Nicole Willis – BubbleTease Communications Classics Vol. 5 review
by Juno Plus on 03.11.2011 at 15:26pmThere are many reasons to love Maurice Fulton. Setting aside his impressive track record and ability to create genuinely far-sighted music across a range of genres, there’s something particularly impressive about his approach. The one-time American prison officer says very little in public and little more before or after DJ gigs. To outsiders he’s a cold fish, often wearing the concerned look of a man with the weight of the world on his shoulders. Yet the music he makes is rarely less than weirdly celebratory. Whether recording low-slung disco under his given name, off-kilter house as Boof, dubwise oddness as Ladyvipb or ragging electronic wonkiness as Syclops, there’s a skewed genius and solid dancefloor pulse to everything he does.
Fulton takes the same single-minded but musically adventurous approach when it comes to running BubbleTease Communications, the digital-only label he’s used for the past few years to release his own projects and those of his nearest and dearest (most notably wife Mu, who is as outlandishly outgoing and eccentric as he is cautious and introverted). Named after his Sheffield studio, the imprint has managed to build a sizeable reputation and fan base despite steering clear of vinyl pressings. Few labels in the underground electronic music sphere – particularly in the disco, deep house and leftfield genres – manage this, although the number of high quality ‘digi only’ imprints is growing. And, of course, this is Fulton we’re talking about, a producer who has spent almost two decades building up a towering reputation.
For his latest low key release on BubbleTease, Fulton has unearthed a pair of previously unheard remixes of “Feelin’ Free”, a breezy, Motown-ish soul track from Nicole Willis’ 2006 collaboration with the Soul Investigators, Keep Reachin’ Up. Fulton has previous when it comes to Willis, otherwise known as Mrs Jimi Tenor (another maverick in the Fulton mode, though Tenor has always been more obsessed with lounge suits and European jazz). Last year, the Sheffield-based producer released his delightfully uplifting disco/soul remixes of another track from Keep Reachin’ Up, “Holding On”.
The two mixes of “Feelin’ Free” featured here offer a fuzzy flipside to those unashamedly uplifting versions of “Holding On”. Where that track built around one of Fulton’s typically rubbery electric bass riffs, his “Feeling Free” mixes wrap dub-laden soul guitars and dreamy organ chords around hefty analogue bass pulses. It’s the combination of sub-bothering analogue bass and the tight, cowbell-heavy percussion that makes these mixes – check the dub version for the full wonky disco effect. That Willis’s vocal also snugly fits Fulton’s lazy leftfield disco groove is no great surprise – he is, after all, a superb, single-minded producer.
Matt Anniss
Maurice Fulton headlines Five Easy Pieces
by Juno Plus on 07.04.2011 at 12:02pmBubbletease boss Maurice Fulton will headline a Five Easy Pieces party at London’s CAMP next month, with the fledgling label calling on a cast of impressive talent from Hoya Hoya, Hyperdub, Pictures Music and Huntleys & Palmers in support.
Maurice Fulton talks shop
by Juno Plus on 15.01.2010 at 13:47pmOur friends at the Red Bull Music Academy have sent us a fascinating video in which Maurice Fulton explains the finer points of beatmaking.
Simian Mobile Disco – Cruel Intentions review
by Juno Plus on 17.12.2009 at 10:59am
Artist: Simian Mobile Disco
Title: Cruel Intentions
Label: Wichita
Genre: Disco/Nu Disco, Dubstep/Grime
Format: 12″, Digital
Buy From: Juno Records, Juno Download (available from January 3)
Just one of several prominent features on Simian Mobile Disco’s early 2009 full-length, Temporary Pleasure, was Gossip’s lead-singer Beth Ditto on “Cruel Intentions.”
There her roaring vocals play the foreground, reborn a diva in her genre debut. Now released as a single, the robust and soulful original gets proper reintroduction from several noteworthy producers.
Heartbreak both slows-down and reduces for each of his two remixes. Greg Wilson adds his own percussive flair, and Maurice Fulton sticks to complementary disco overtones.
But for the icing on the cake, Bristol prodigy Joker reinvents, adding his own dirty dubstep signature to the recipe, spicing up the single quite uniquely.
Review: Nick Andrews
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