Review: Bristol's Futureboogie return with some sure fire nu-disco grooves to get any party started. London's Jay Shepheard is on board with "Henry's Theme" sporting an early nineties house vibe. Next up is PBR Streetgang from Leeds doing their thing with a nice journey via a progressive house sound on "Suel Baril". There's also local Bristolian Lukas doing more of his low slung slo mo disco business and Phil Gerus with "Never Coming Back".
Review: How many long-running compilation series are still going in this day and age? Ok, well respected ones then. Sean Brosnan's Future Disco series has always delivered the goods and can always be used as a benchmark for where the nu-disco world is at any one time. This time, it's (perhaps unsurprisingly) all about the vintage house vibes so not so disco then, but still a thrilling listen. Highlights include the slinky DJ T-esque "You're The One", the ever-brilliant DJ Koze's remix of hot newcomers Mount Kimble and the deeply enchanting Axel Boman remix of "Naughty".
Review: It's been a while since Bristol's Luke Turner last released new material, with his most recent outing on Futureboogie (the Maison De Cheval project with fellow West Country dweller Christophe) appearing way back in 2011. Happily, Back To Boogie finds him in good form, delivering a series of vividly coloured house gems. There's the wide-eyed, bright-and-breezy piano house pomp of "Narwhals", the cowbell-laden late night science of electrofunk-meets-deep house jam "Bassoon" and the woozy sax, tumbling chords and booming bass of the sensual "Drunken Master" (complete with a vocal sample from a familiar favourite). If that wasn't enough, he also drops some pitched-down vocals, spooky melodies and sub-bothering rhythms on the intoxicating "Is It True?"
Review: Bristol-based rising stars Jaymo and Andy George are regular collaborators. Here, they join forces again to launch Moda Music offshoot Moda Black with a compilation of previously unreleased material. For those interested in the new wave of British and European house, it should be an essential purchase. Some of the duo's own Bristol pals make an appearance, with strong contributions from Lukas (the darting "Best In Show") and Eats Everything & Idiotproof (an excellent, peaktime-friendly remix of The 2 Bears). Elsewhere, highlights include a grandiose new cut from the duo themselves, an organ-heavy garage-meets-cocaine house banger from Disclosure, and a cacophonous rinse-out from Hot Since 82.
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