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Exclusive mix: Fur (UNO NYC)

by Juno Plus on 13.06.2012 at 13:25pm

The folks over at NYC based imprint UNO offered us this exclusive mix from deep house starlet Fur – naturally we snaffled it up.

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The Twilight Tone: Mean Machines

by Juno Plus on 06.02.2012 at 11:28am

To say that Anthony Khan ― aka The Twilite Tone, Master Khan, Great Weekend, and Ynot―is a jack of all trades is both a little unfair (he pores himself into every endeavor he pursues) and inaccurate (he’s not as prolific as some of his peers, at least in terms of sheer number of releases), but it tends to be the simplest way to explain his career.

Starting off in the mid-80s as a house and hip-hop-obsessed Chicago teen, Khan quickly moved from casual observer and hobbyist to creator, shacking up with the likes of Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr. (better known as Common), Dion Wilson (No I.D., often noted as Kanye West’s mentor), and others. As Ynot, Khan produced tracks on Common’s first three full-lengths and recently reconnected with his old friend to become, once again, his touring DJ as well as his production manager for live shows. Simultaneously, Khan ― who prefers to go simply by Tone ― was, and continues to be, deeply involved and embedded in the world of house music, from its early days in Chicago thanks to DJs and clubs like Ron Hardy and the Muzic Box and Frankie Knuckles of the Power Plant and the Warehouse, to its current state, putting out records on NYC labels like The Wurst Music Company and UNO, with further releases on Throne of Blood and L.I.E.S. slated for 2012.

Juno Plus scribe Nik Mercer sat down with Tone at the Ace hotel in New York City for an extended interview – it was nearly four hours in length – so settle in for what we consider to be one of the most―if not the most―definitive Q&As the man has ever offered up.

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CFCF – Cometrue review

by Juno Plus on 18.08.2011 at 16:49pm

It’s certainly no rare thing to have a producer that straddles both the more experimental world of electronic music and the instant satisfaction of pop. The real challenge comes in finding someone who makes the combination of the two seem somehow effortless. The likes of James Blake and Nicolas Jaar both have a penchant for soulful crooning which no doubt helped them win a lot of fans, but then they also decorate much of their music in avant-garde trinkets, possibly as a means of compensation for their accessible tendencies.

As a newcomer to the sound of CFCF, it’s hard to know what his legacy has foretold with an album and numerous EPs behind him, particularly for Paper Bag Records and more recently RVNG Intl. Based in Montreal (which has long been a home to weird but ultimately fun musicians), Michael Silver is the man behind the CFCF music, and it’s certainly instantly charming to the ear.

The lead track “Cometrue” warms to life on a melancholic but incredibly smooth piano hook. The beat comes in with a minimum of fuss; a conserved 2-step funk at an easy pace, while the yearning vocal hook comes not from an old R&B record but rather something more romantic. There’s something of the emotionally ambiguous feeling of 1980s synth pop about the track which makes it very easy to listen to.

“Looking So” on the flip has the same downbeat qualities, although this time Silver plumps for a helium vocal snippet alongside the almost elegiac mood of the rest of the track. Once again the beat ticks away dutifully in the background while the considered melodies do their work.

D’eon’s remix of “Cometrue” is a nice surprise, bouncing to life on the kind of chimes that early electronica in the vein of The Black Dog made such great use of. The primitive techno percussion accentuates this feeling even more, creating a rather divine slice of ambience, inducing the kind of glassy-eyed reverie that a good ambient track should.

Oli Warwick