Review: Big bad and very very heavy! Ten Ton hit the big tonne with this overweight menu of murkery. Featuring some of the label's oldest sparring partners and freshest fighters, across the album we're navigated through some of the darkest, dirtiest and dankest corners of Project Lando's imprint. Stars of the show include Project Lando himself, who delivers a whole string of sick remixes and originals (including an immense hair-raising twist on MQ's 'Roll Out' and an insane VIP of 'Suck Out'), Shodan, who presents a whole brace of releases (including the super-charged euphoria of 'Soulfire') and the rising styles of Skuff who tags up with Iffy for the lush vocal track 'Illusions' and the trembling dark liquid bumper 'New Tones'. And that's just the tip of this centennial iceberg. 100 thumbs up.
Review: Project Lando rounds up the crewdem for a special collective release featuring the full Ten Ton crew. All repping hard at the coal-face of new-gen drum & bass there's a strong balance of rollers (Damageman's heads-down warped bass sub salute "Give Me A Sub Plate"), hurters (Dec James' squelchy Moving Fusion style "Ache"), emotional shock-outs that will leave you spasming on the floor (Manga's 2009-era Taxman-style "Suffer") and bubbly jams that pay homage to Don dapper DJ Die (GAW's "Back & Forth") Ten dons of damagement right here... GO TEAM
Review: We get knee deep into some tasty new jump up here as Dangerous gets busy on the Storno Beatz imprint for his exciting 'Allstars' EP. From start to finish this one is made up of heavyweight collaborations, including the the electronic stabs of 'Conflicting Points Of View' alongside Basstripper and the super aggressive synths of 'Road Kill' with Licid. Following this, Trafalgar joins the party on 'Spill Seome Blood' whilst Maze gets busy on the free roaming arrangements of 'The Cure'. We then turn up further with 'Armitage' alongside the earth shattering synths of Shrust before finishing up the EP 'Six Shooter (VIP)', the only solo recording from Dangerous on this frankly super stacked project.
Get You Down (Project Lando remix) - (5:18) 175 BPM
Review: Here comes the remix! Just over a year ago Ten Ton Beats blessed us with the near-evangelical vibes of Dangerous's "Get You Down". A future rave classic with blissed vocals from Mary B, it's now been subverted by Freek and Project Lando. The former gets some serious weight behind the bass while the latter cooks up a sweet chugging rhythm with some seriously deft percussion touches on the groove. Quintessential remix business.
Review: Who's your daddy? Don't answer, it was a rhetorical question. We all know the answer; it's Dangerous. Back packing slaps with pals old and new, his third instalment of "Dangerous & Friends" is K.O after K.O; highlights include the classic sample and sci-fi synths of "B Wing" the creepy drama and skin-melting drop of "Hands Off" and two delightfully trippy remixes with Belgian badman Basstripper. With friends like these who needs enemies?
Review: Ten Ton Beats barge into the new year with one of their longest-standing and consistent family members - Dangerous. As always, it's a game of shades and exciting contrast. "Get You Down" licks up with a beautiful, early 90s style piano hook over which Mary B lays down the right amount of sensuality for peak rushes. "Friend Or Foe" ups the aggy factor as Complex collides into the mix for some obscene, soaking wet lazer bass steppy fun with added horror score string drama. With friends as ugly as this, who needs foes?
Review: Dangerous is back in town! Well, actually, he never went away... He's been licking serious shots consistently for five years now. And they don't lick much harder than this co-lab-heavy six tracker. Highlights include the cymbal-smashing, late 90s-style Steampunk hook-up "Give It To Me", the Hazard-level face-ripper "Good As Dead" and the croaking, no-joking Goonies-sampling "Hungry Hippos". Dangerous by name...
Review: Wobble Infection brings their Antwerpian bedroom-based label ever closer to the big time with the grimy, dark and devastating sounds of Dangerous and Various, an outfit whose slash and burn approach to production leave homeland crowds smashed to pieces. Inspired by the likes of Hype and hazard, their style of upfront drum and bass also grabs aspects of European neuro at times, blending the two into a nasty mixture of heavyweight bass and nosebleed rapidfire percussion. Get yourself a neck brace, you'll be snapping to this.
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