Home  Artists  

Keita Sano

Filter

My filters

See all
Downloads
See all
Release Date
Not Forthcoming
10
Last 6 Months
1

Keita Sano

Browse the latest digital releases by Keita Sano
When Love Comes Around
When Love Comes Around - (6:57) 120 BPM
Special Time - (5:29) 120 BPM
Roll Of Acid - (5:12) 124 BPM
Love You Mr. Brooklyn! (KS For You Dub) - (7:44) 126 BPM Hot
Review: Since making his debut on Mister Saturday Night a decade ago, Keita Sano has racked up releases on such esteemed imprints as Delusions of Grandeur, Let's Play House, 1080 and Spring Theory. Here the Berlin-based Japanese producer makes his bow on another admired house stable, Local Talk. He begins in typically sweat-soaked fashion via the breathless lo-fi house beats, cut-up vocal samples, hissing cymbals and rubbery slap-bass of 'When Love Comes Around', before opting for a more intergalactic sound on sci-fi house jam 'Special Time'. 'Roll of Acid' is a surging slab of lo-fi acid house insanity, while 'Love You Mr Brooklyn (KS For You Dub) is a bubbly, intoxicating and mind-mangling early morning stomper.
 from $1.89
LT 142
15 Dec 23
Funky/Club House
LPHWHTDD
Keita Sano - "Long Run" (part 3) - (6:21) 122 BPM
Klubbhuset - "Omedelbar Karlek" - (7:03) 120 BPM
Lovers - "Fresh 'N' Hot" - (5:40) 120 BPM
Jacques Renault - "Top Billin'" - (5:02) 116 BPM Hot
Review: There's no grand concept behind the latest all-star EP from Brooklyn's Let's Play House, other than a clear desire to create pandemonium out on the dancefloor. All four tracks have "peak-time anthem" written all over them, from the opening bump of Keita Sano's "Long Run (Part 3") - a brilliant, tooled-up revision of a classic disco anthem - to the ultra-jiggy hip-house madness of Jacques Renault's "Top Billin", which sounds tailor made for over-excited Adriatic boat parties and afternoon festival rinse-outs. In between, you'll find the undulating, bass-heavy grooves and delay-laden soul samples of Klubbhuset's "Omedelbar Karlek" and the swirling disco-house grandiosity of Lovers' "Fresh 'N' Hot". To quote a much-used cliche: this is all killer, no filler.
 from $1.89
LPHWHTDD
03 Apr 23
Deep House
AIAE
Jacques Renault - "No Strings Attached" - (6:50) 122 BPM Hot
Kristy Harper - "77" - (6:30) 124 BPM
Laroze - "You Inspired Me" - (4:46) 135 BPM
Keita Sano - "Party VIbes" - (7:45) 124 BPM
Review: As you'd expect, there's plenty to set the pulse racing on the latest multi-artist edition of Let's Play House's "LPH White" series. Label co-founder Jacques Renault sets the tone via the lolloping, bass-heavy filter-house bump of "No Strings Attached", where swirling orchestration gently rises to prominence over a bustling groove, before Kirsty Harper whips out her Roland TB-303 and lays down some seriously sleazy, Phuture style acid-jack. Laroze's "You Inspired Me" is a throbbing, filter-sporting romp through disco-house territory enlivened greatly by layered drums, while Keita Sano's "Party Vibes" successfully manipulates some superb samples in cahoots with a typically weighty and thickset house groove.
 from $1.89
LPHWHTE
03 Apr 23
Deep House
Homedrills
Decent Rides - "At The Terrace" - (6:33) 127 BPM
The Mechanical Man - "Saw Killer" - (6:18) 122 BPM
Tree Threes - "Check It Out" - (5:55) 125 BPM
Keita Sano - "Everywhere" - (7:08) 125 BPM Hot
Review: The 120th release on esteemed Swiss imprint Morris Audio is a multi-artist affair, with a quartet of artists - some well-known, others rising stars - delivering predictably high-quality cuts. Sometime See-Saw and Quintessentials contributor Decent Rides steps up first with 'At The Terrance', an analogue-rich chunk of Move D-esque deep house excellence, before experienced Italian artist The Mechanical Man delivers a synthesizer-rich fusion of Italo-disco, analogue nu-disco and sun-bright Chicago style house ('Saw Killer'). Tree Threes' 'Check It Out' brilliantly blurs the boundaries between dusty old U.S deep house and early morning New Jersey garage flavours on 'Check It Out', while Keita Sano's breezy 'Everywhere' is a masterclass in jazzy, lo-fi piano house.
 from $1.89
MORRIS 120
24 Mar 23
Deep House
Otutso
A Place Called Sun Beach - (8:54) 122 BPM
Hmmm - (4:23) 118 BPM
Sweet Fruit - (5:19) 112 BPM
My Pain - (5:42) 106 BPM
Can't Wait The Party - (9:51) 124 BPM Hot
Bitch - (5:44) 118 BPM
Psychedelic Ants - (5:55) 118 BPM
The Stripper - (5:27) 96 BPM
Played by: Kraak & Smaak
Review: Prolific Japanese producer Keita Sano has been developing a close relationship with the Let's Play House label for sometime. This latest EP, which first appeared as part of the Brooklyn imprint's "LPH White" series of 12" singles, follows on from a 2016 mini-album and the recent Totsu EP. It's something of an epic affair all told, with eight fine tracks to choose from. Our picks include the swirling delays, heady reverb and looped electric piano motifs of head-in-the-clouds disco-house workout "A Place Called Sun Beach", the gentle tropical melodies and South American percussion "Sweet Fruit", and boompty-minded disco-house bounce of "Can't Wait For The Party". That said, the more cinematic deep house chug of "Psychedelic Ants" and dubby, slo-mo disco shuffle of "The Stripper" are also fantastic.
 from $1.89
LPHWHT 18+
25 May 18
Deep House
Flowers From Your Grave
Flowers From Your Grave (T2 edit) - (6:34) 123 BPM Hot
Let's Stay Together - (6:38) 127 BPM
Night Walking - (5:55) 120 BPM
Review: Holic Trax has established itself as a respected, no nonsense outlet for quality house and
techno and that carries on here with a new EP from Keita Sano. Keita Sano, based in Okayama, Japan, has previously released on labels such as NYC's Mister Saturday Night and Hugo Capablanca's Discos Capablanca. Up first, 'Flowers From Your Grave' is a gritty number with tough drums, Detroit inspired pads and plenty of physicality in the groove. Crisp and dynamic, it's a robust house cut, for sure. 'Let's Stay Together' is a more party sounding offering with atmospheric ambience in the back ground as streaming Rhodes chords and organic percussion set a Moodymann style vibe front and centre. Then comes 'Night Walking', which flips the script again, this time sinking down into a warm, propulsive deep house vibe with bold but soft edged chords, driving drums and engaging hand claps. This is a fine EP that is sure to make a big impact on the dance floor.
 from $1.89
HT 016
06 Nov 17
Deep House
Want
Want - (5:30) 120 BPM Hot
Drum Wick Version - (5:31) 130 BPM
I Found The Key - (6:36) 120 BPM
Simple Gimmicks - (6:25) 122 BPM
Played by: Honey Soundsystem
Review: Okayama resident Keita Sano is part of Japan's new wave of music producers and has been weaving his way through house, techno and electronica releases with an affinity to old school processes and vintage gear. With releases clocked up on Mister Saturday Night, 1080p, Lower Parts, Row, Strictly Groove Recordings, Enother Blessing, Holic Trax and Spring Theory he has shown his eclectic tastes and zany approach to music. For Sano, making music is like keeping a diary and this year will see many more releases and his new live show. From the smooth bass driven deepness of "Want" or "Simple Gimmicks", through to the dubby hypnotic techno of "Drum Wick Key" or the classic rave reconstruction of "I Found The Key" it's a compelling listen from start to finish.
 from $1.89
PARAGRAM 010
28 Jul 17
Deep House
Keita Sano
Full Of Love - (7:16) 124 BPM
Leave The Floor - (5:12) 124 BPM
Honey - (8:38) 121 BPM Hot
On The Floor - (5:16) 125 BPM
Vood - (6:24) 121 BPM
Sucker (Part 2) - (5:21) 120 BPM
None Of Your Business - (6:20) 122 BPM
Review: Keita Sano's third artist album in as many years shows that he is one of the most talented new producers of rugged dance floor tracks. Released on Full Pupp offshoot label Rett I Fletta, it veers from the soaring acid-disco of "Full of Love" and "Honey" into the rhythmic machine dance of "Leave The Floor" and the shimmering Italo synths and snare rolls of "On The Floor". Whatever the Japanese producer may lose out by not focusing on a specific style, he more than compensates with through his adventurous approach. This is apparent as the eponymous album reaches a climax with "Vood" and "Sucker (Part 2)", the kind of throbbing hardware techno jams that wouldn't sound out of place on L.I.E.S.
 from $1.89
RIF 010
25 Nov 16
Techno
Eye
Keep An Eye Out Pt 2 - (6:15) 124 BPM
Own Signal - (4:14) 122 BPM
Smoker - (5:12) 124 BPM
TRMK - (5:12) 124 BPM
Fix - (4:26) 120 BPM
Think Twice - (5:56) 120 BPM Hot
Review: The rather prolific Keita Sano has been responsible for some terrific electronic music over the last couple of years, including must-have 12" singles on Spring Theory, Lower Parts, Mister Saturday Night and Discos Capablanca. Here he makes his first appearance on Brooklyn's Let's Play House, serving up a mini-album full of evocative house productions. Highlights come thick and fast, from the alien electronics and pulsating machine rhythms of "Own Signal", to the John Carpenter-in-space, horror-disco throb of "Fix". Arguably best of all, though, is closer "Think Twice", a relentless disco-house loop jam full of cut-up samples, heavy bass and thrusting drums.
 from $1.89
LPH 043
06 May 16
Deep House
People Are Changing EP
People Are Changing - (5:45) 123 BPM
Ant - (5:54) 122 BPM
She Was The One - (6:49) 126 BPM Hot
Review: There's a pleasant story behind this release from Mister Saturday Night, with Okayama based musician Keita Sano discovering the label's releases in the vinyl bins of his local record shop and inspired by the music was moved to produce and send Eamon and Justin a clutch of tracks. The three cuts chosen from his submissions for this People Are Changing are far removed from the glitchy, instrumental hip hop that made up Sano's Jewels EP for London label Keep Up! late last year but this only suggests a degree of strength regarding his production prowess. The title track is equal parts high octane and unhinged and really this latter aspect remains a key component of Sano's subsequent productions, with the electrically charged "She Was The One" a particular highlight.
 from $1.89
MSN 010
01 Apr 14
Techno
Cart subtotal: