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Second remix package for Planetary Assault System’s “Function 4″ announced

by Juno Plus on 19.06.2012 at 16:20pm

A second round of remixes of Luke Slater’s seminal “Function 4″ release under the Planetary Assault Systems guise will feature Marcel Dettmann, Lucy and Shifted. 

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L.B. Dub Corp/ASC – Parallel Series 1 review

by Juno Plus on 05.10.2011 at 09:25am

The concept behind Mote Evolver’s new Parallel Series – placing two contrasting but complementing artists either side of a 12″ – is not necessarily groundbreaking in itself, and it can be argued that other recent ventures, such as Bristol’s Schmorgasbord imprint and Sound Pellegrino’s Crossover series (both of which encourage producers from different backgrounds to actually get in the studio together) are more daring. But when you’ve got someone like Luke Slater taking curatorial duties, you know the results are going to be fascinating – especially when his seldom-seen L.B. Dub Corp alias comes out to play.

To launch the series, Slater has called on US-based Englishman ASC (aka James Clements), whose previous releases have lurked around the intangible periphery of dubstep, D&B and ambient. Here, however, he turns in two whopping, wholly visceral techno cuts. It’s a natural progression, considering the success currently being enjoyed by his contemporaries Instra:mental, who have been releasing a steady stream of electro and techno. The relentless guttural throb of “Slow Burn” – a track only true in title for someone used to operating around the 140bpm mark – is offset by slapping synths and barely-there vocal snippets, like a studio jam between Levon Vincent and Boddika. This is complemented by the more liquid tones of “Transit”, a reverb-laden throbber with menacing sonar bleeps piercing the swampy atmospherics.

On the flip, Slater adopts his L.B. Dub Corp guise, last seen on an excellent 12″ last year for Ostgut Ton (the wonderfully rattling 12-minute epic “Take It Down In” being the highlight). Of the two tracks here, the cavernous sub-bass and twinkling keys of “Lurcher’s Dub” is the highlight, a hunched, dimly-lit tour of the creaking, groaning passageways buried deep beneath the earth. “Native Dub” is more sparse in nature, a loopy Chicago house cut dressed up with distorted metallic slaps and warbling synths. Although much of the press attention on Slater is currently centred around his upcoming album under the Planetary Assault Systems moniker, this series has intriguing long-term potential.

Aaron Coultate


Planetary Assault Systems – GT (remixes) review

by Juno Plus on 27.09.2010 at 09:49am

After a long period in the wilderness, Luke Slater’s return last year under the Planetary Assault Systems guise was one of most inspired techno comebacks of recent times. The fact that his new output, including the Temporary Suspension album was audibly influenced by harder European techno that had in turn been influenced by earlier PAS work gave his reappearance the kind of perfect symmetry that is coincidentally replicated here. And so to this latest remix package: James Ruskin’s take on “GT” weaves filtered percussive stabs over a morass of dense, rolling bass, and Function & Sydenham’s version is a faultless Sandwell-style deployment, its niggling acid line insinuating itself among the resonating kicks and epic claps that have ‘main room at Berghain’ written all over them.

Despite these inspired efforts, it’s Slater’s own remixes as PAS that impress the most. Surprisingly though, the “Drone” version is not quite the full-on assault we may have expected, its barely contained menace tempered by bursts of feedback and its pulsing groove coming across like a distant cousin to PAS’s “Surface Noise” on Peacefrog. However, Slater has no problem bringing out the heavy artillery, and the two ‘Rhythm & Beats’ versions distil the original down to the essence of techno functionalism. The second one is a relentlessly grainy rhythm track caked in six inches of black dance floor sludge, while the first take is centred on heavy, industrial drum patterns that is guaranteed to annihilate anything -  speakers, crowds and venues -  it comes into contact with. Chose your weapons wisely…

Richard Brophy


Submerge – Black Mamba EP review

by Juno Plus on 13.04.2010 at 16:52pm
Submerge – Black Mamba EP review

Artist: Submerge
Title: Black Mamba
Label: Mote Evolver
Genre: Techno
Format: 12″, Digital
Buy From: Juno Records, Juno Download

Submerge lands a new two track EP on Luke Slater’s Mote Evolver imprint. The “Black Mamba” EP introduces two of the dark and tweaky tracks that have brought the Chi town native to the attention of  today’s techno scene.

Mote-Evolver has been on a fine run of form of late. Recent releases from the likes of Cari Lekebusch, Ortin Cam and Samuli Kemppi’s excellent “Dark Matter” EP are still fresh in the memory and have subsequently raised the expectation levels for every release that follows on the label. Those levels increase even more when the producer is one of the most exciting to come out of the USA in recent years. Having built a reputation as an eclectic and innovative producer, and fresh from the success of his “2012” EP on his own Impact Mechanics label, Submerge now pushes his fresh techno sound further with “Black Mamba”.

The title track is an adrenalin fuelled, full throttled techno jauggernaught that gets the release underway with a bang. Bristling with energy and intensity, the track builds amid pounding beats, pulsing acid stabs and manic phaser FX from outer space. It is heads down stuff for peak time sets, sure to blow the heads off anyone who hears it. B Side, “J-XX” is not as emphatic but every bit as powerful. Crunching beats and swashing FX create a rawness that compliments the groove to perfection. Constantly building, the track grows and grows with each bar, mutating itself into an angry and fierceful climax.

Review: Tom Jones