Your Love (Estate Minneapolis remix) - (4:24) 120 BPM
Review: A welcome return for Minneapolis' Dirty McKenzie, who here teams up with vocalist Sophia Shorai for a spot of seductive disco-acid fusion. The original version delivers just the right balance between Barry White-ish disco-soul foreplay and head-warping acid house tweakery - like Claudja Barry getting frisky with DJ Pierre, while the Walrus of Love watches on through a two-way mirror. The "Cocaine on Her Dress Mix", meanwhile, chugs along on a sweaty Italo tip, while the Your Love Is Gone mix turns the original into a spiralling chunk of intoxifying nu-disco prettiness. The shuffling synth bass of Bryan Gerrard's mix is certain to go down well with the Hot Creations crowd, while Faze Action's "Your Love Is Music" remix slows things right down with their irresistible brand of cosmic synth disco.
Review: Following the re-release of his excellent Your Love single in January, Minneapolis disco/house fusionist Dirty McKenzie drops a new single. "Right On Time", a hustlin' slab of hip-wigglin' disco-house with some neat deep house touches, takes its name from Loleatta Holloway's legendary line from disco classic "Love Sensation" (an accapella previously mined by Black Box and Pepe Bradock, amongst others). Loleatta's strong vocal works well over McKenzie's punchy grooves on the "Cocaine On Her Dress Remix", and even better on the deeper, woozier, Hypercolour-ish "2013 Redux". Given its familiarity, it should ensure dancefloor madness if dropped right on time (sorry).
Review: A welcome return for Minneapolis' Dirty McKenzie, who here teams up with vocalist Sophia Shorai for a spot of seductive disco-acid fusion. The original version delivers just the right balance between Barry White-ish disco-soul foreplay and head-warping acid house tweakery - like Claudja Barry getting frisky with DJ Pierre, while the Walrus of Love watches on through a two-way mirror. The "Cocaine on Her Dress Mix", meanwhile, chugs along on a sweaty Italo tip, while the Your Love Is Gone mix turns the original into a spiralling chunk of intoxifying nu-disco prettiness. As a package, it's pretty tasty; certainly, there should be something for every occasion.
Review: Minneapolis native Dirty McKenzie has previously impressed with a range of disco-influenced cuts for his own Bass United Recordings imprint. Here, he unleashes the Dirty & Sweet remix of previous single "Wonderful Things". It's a deliciously baggy concoction, like lazy West Coast rock (think the Eagles or Fleetwood Mac) fused with deep house, Balearica and just the slightest hint of disco. The original vocal is laid on top of swinging grooves, vintage keys and more dub effects that you could shake a joss stick at. It's pretty good, all told, and certainly very charming.
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