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Maria Minerva reveals Will Happiness Find Me?

by Juno Plus on 19.07.2012 at 17:44pm

Not Not Fun and 100% Silk artist Maria Minerva has just announced details of her forthcoming album, entitled Will Happiness Find Me?

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Ital prepares to enter the Hive Mind

by Tony Poland on 16.11.2011 at 10:34am

The swelling number of albums slated for release next year just got a bit more interesting with the news that Daniel Martin-McCormick will release his debut album as Ital on the Planet Mu imprint next February.

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Exclusive: Peaking Lights – Tiger Eyes (Cuticle edit)

by Scott Wilson on 04.11.2011 at 12:11pm

We’ve teamed up with ace L.A. imprint 100% Silk to premiere one of the tracks from the forthcoming Peaking Lights remix project.

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Domino scoop up Peaking Lights

by Juno Plus on 12.09.2011 at 18:02pm

Domino Records have announced the signature of Peaking Lights to their fledgling Weird World sub label, and will give their rather fine second album the proper UK release it fully deserves, as well as putting out a third LP from the West Coast duo.

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Live: Maria Minerva, Shacklewell Arms

by Scott Wilson on 25.08.2011 at 16:29pm

Framed by an arch and surrounded by flashing blue fairy lights in an East End pub’s back room would generally be considered an odd way to see anyone perform, but somehow, in the case of Not Not Fun and 100% Silk artist Maria Minerva’s recent gig at Dalston’s Shacklewell Arms, the whole thing seemed totally appropriate.

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Watch: Maria Minerva “Ruff Trade” video

by Juno Plus on 15.08.2011 at 09:51am

Maria Minerva’s new album Cabaret Cixous has chiselled its way into our collective affections over the past few weeks, marking yet another highlight in the year of excellence that the LA boutique label Not Not Fun is currently enjoying.

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Maria Minerva – Cabaret Cixous review

by Juno Plus on 09.08.2011 at 13:25pm

Having broken through with the cassette-only album Tallin At Dawn released via the on-point Not Not Fun label back in March, it’s clear the smudged out, backwards glancing sounds of East London dwelling Estonian Maria Minerva have found favour with Amanda Brown and her blossoming retro-futurist empire. A subsequent release early in the life of 100% Silk helped establish the blossoming momentum that the NNF offshoot currently revels in, and now Cabaret Cixous, Minerva’s eagerly anticipated second album, arrives on more traditional formats courtesy of Not Not Fun.

It’s certainly a good time to be looking back and garnering the soulful drones of 80s synth pop, but that means there’s no shortage of competition. As Cabaret Cixous whirrs into life, the name bouncing round this particular reviewer’s head is Hype Williams, a correlation that you can’t help but think many other listeners will be finding. As with most associations of this nature, it’s unfair to dismiss the music as one and the same, but it makes for an ideal reference point. The same ethereal, degraded quality presides over the music, while Maria’s vocals float in the distance with that same intentionally off-point mixing.

However, there’s a greater consistency and immediacy at work on Maria’s album than you find on the Hype Williams output. Even when the style shifts to something bordering on uptempo it all fits the narrative of the LP as a whole. “Laulan Paikse Kaes” comparatively bangs, six tracks deep into the album, with a filtered electro break battling and losing against its processing whilst ravey sun-kissed chords reverberate around a subtle, almost G-funk synth refrain.

Indeed, as the album progresses beats begin to emerge, and on “Soo High” a positive groove can be discerned amidst the metallic fuzz. Minerva’s vocal takes on an electro-pop kind of delivery, while a funky bassline permeates through the mix, but only just. If any kind of sonic clarity was achieved on the album it would sound at odds with everything else, but it’s this commitment to the sound that achieves the consistency.

The only time the smoke lifts to let all the elements shine through is on album closer “Ruff Trade” where Minerva’s vocal turn takes the lead on top of an understated and moody synth. By the time the track opens up into a soaring chorus of sorts, you could be forgiven for forgetting that most of the album swaggers and sways bleary-eyed through Minerva’s layers of sound. If you weren’t sold on Hype Williams, this certainly won’t change anything for you. If, however, you’re easily seduced by their wistful swathes of sound then you should definitely give Cabaret Cixous a whirl.

Oli Warwick


Peaking Lights – 936 review

by Juno Plus on 18.07.2011 at 09:56am

Hailing from Madison, Wisconsin, husband and wife duo Peaking Lights make sun-speckled dub pop psychedelia. The premise is simple: deep repetitive bass, catchy drum loops, extended grooves, and ethereal vocals that also work on repetition and cavernous echo. The result: a perfectly blissed-out long player for the summer months, one that will linger in your head long after the album’s played out.

Since the duo spent some time in California and record on the intriguing Not Not Fun label, an immediate comparison can be made to fellow labelmate Sun Araw, who operates in the same hypnotic manner, but while 936 leans heavily on dub influence for groove, it also pays homage to lo-fi psychedelic rock. Even though the tracks are deep and sludgy, they still manage to feel open and airy; the songs wander, joyfully going nowhere in particular for up eight minutes.

Take “Tiger Eyes (Laid Back)” for example. Aaron Coyes drops a simple drumbeat, anchors it with a deep bassline for riddim, and tosses in some light guitars, while Indra Dunis provides some haunting, trance-induced vocals and gentle bursts of keyboard. It’s a serene eight minute head-bobber, perfect for afternoon drives down scenic highways – where you’re sitting in shotgun and the windows are down and you’ve got your feet up on the dash, an arm out the window fighting the wind — and you’re smiling, looking over at your friend driving — he’s wearing a pair of old Ray Bans, and he’s playing the steering wheel like a drum, and honking the horn in time to the beat, while he points out useless historical landmarks along the side of the sun-drenched road as you zip by…

While not too far away compositionally from many dub techno artists like Rhythm & Sound or Deadbeat, Peaking Lights style diverges, because instead of going inward they go out – it’s still heady music, but as their name implies, they take the listener skywards, floating in a headspace above the clouds and the mountain peaks, a place where just enough light and warmth peeks through to make you smile. With 936, Peaking Lights creates groovy yet subtly romantic music that allows the listener to cheerfully zone out, whilst also playing with the notion of summer nostalgia, and the result is surprisingly radiant.

Matt Leslie