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Fall Out
Fall Out - (3:01) 121 BPM
Fall Out (Fresh '86) - (6:56) 121 BPM Hot
Fall Out (NAD Discomix Pts 1 & 2) - (12:32) 121 BPM
Fall Out (instrumental - digital bonus track) - (7:17) 121 BPM
Fall Out (NAD dub - digital bonus track) - (7:50) 121 BPM
Fall Out (NAD dub reprise - digital bonus track) - (2:42) 121 BPM
Played by: MR ABSOLUTT
Review: Emotional Rescue's vital Konduko reissue series sadly comes to an end here with a look at the label's final years. In those days it moved away from reggae, disco and boogie towards an enduring electro sound that had a vast and lasting impact on the Miami scene. The biggest tune from that time was when Noel Williams linked with local songwriter Lawrence Dermer aka Der Mer for the track reissued here. 'Fall Out' soon became a hit with its driving electro-funk rhythms. The original sits next to the later Fresh '86" mix as well as a NAD disco mix from Dan Tyler, best known as one of the Idjut Boys. It's an irresistible package of body-popping electro with hooks for days.
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ERC 146
01 Mar 24
Electro
Wishful Desire
Wishful Desire - (5:24) 58 BPM Hot
Na Wahala - (6:33) 85 BPM
Na My Life Be Dis - (10:18) 92 BPM
Memories - (6:01) 60 BPM
Review: There is always a good backstory to the music that Emotional Rescue releases and this EP is a case in point. It comes from Betty & The Code Red and Betty was the girlfriend of Tunde Obazee, a Nigerian-born artist who used music as a "non-violent tool to express his socio-political opinions on global injustice." The pair would entertain people on campus by playing anything they could get their hands on, informed by the old Edo folk songs they had grown up around. They went on to live in Italy and the US and start a family as well as lay down self-released songs that have become cult classics. A selection of them feature on this, the first of two EPs from the pair.
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ERC 142
02 Feb 24
International
Motion Of Waves
Motion Of Waves - (7:44) 59 BPM Hot
Motion Of Waves (Cassette mix) - (6:39) 59 BPM
We Travel Dark Waters - (9:39) 123 BPM
Review: Group Du Jour was founded in Portland, Oregon in 1983 and have had a storied career spanning the decades since. They have always brought together live, ethnic and electronic sounds with folk and modern pop, later getting ever more experimental. Early albums Forgotten Colors in 1986 and Wonderful Vision in 1988 are groundbreaking affairs, the latter of which gave rise to 'Motion Of Waves', which is something of a cult favourite for deep diggers. It is a rich instrumental groove that layers up synthesiser, flute, guitar and haunting vocals sitting over a brilliantly electric beat. The whole thing was a live one-take recording and is perfectly suited to both sunset and sunup moments of dancing pleasure.
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ERC 099
19 Jan 24
Balearic/Downtempo
Fall Out
Fall Out (vocal) - (7:17) 121 BPM
Fall Out (instrumental) - (3:01) 121 BPM
Fall Out (Fresh '86) - (6:56) 121 BPM
Fall Out (NAD dub) - (7:50) 121 BPM Hot
Fall Out (NAD dub reprise) - (2:42) 121 BPM
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ERC 145
15 Dec 23
Electro
Fantasy
Fantasy - (4:33) 140 BPM
Fantasy (instrumental) - (5:07) 140 BPM
Fantasy (Jonny Rock Discomix) - (6:49) 140 BPM
Fantasy (Jonny Rock Rub dub) - (3:02) 140 BPM
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ERC 149
15 Dec 23
Electro
Computer Age
Computer Age (club mix) - (4:57) 60 BPM
Computer Age (dub mix) - (4:56) 60 BPM
Computer Age (Universal Cave Discomix) - (6:51) 120 BPM
Computer Age (Universal Cave Cyberspace dub) - (6:46) 120 BPM Hot
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ERC 148
16 Nov 23
Indie/Alternative
Illusion
Illusion - (6:08) 89 BPM Hot
Illusion (version) - (4:27) 89 BPM
Illusion (DJ Duckcomb Discomix) - (7:37) 89 BPM
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ERC 103
15 Nov 23
Reggae Classics/Ska
Sun Country
Sun Country - (4:56) 113 BPM Hot
Sun Country (instrumental) - (5:06) 113 BPM
Sun Country (40 Thieves Discomix) - (9:25) 113 BPM
Sun Country (Bonus mix) - (4:57) 113 BPM
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ERC 147
15 Nov 23
Disco/Nu-Disco
Computer Age
Computer Age (club mix) - (4:57) 120 BPM
Computer Age (dub mix) - (4:56) 120 BPM
Computer Age (Universal Cave Discomix) - (6:51) 120 BPM
Computer Age (Universal Cave Cyberspace dub - Digital Bonus Track) - (6:46) 120 BPM Hot
Review: King Sporty is a remarkably versatile artist, a fact not widely known. He embarked on his musical journey in the 1970s, crafting reggae and soul 7-inch records. As the 1980s dawned, he seamlessly transitioned into disco, boogie, hip-hop, and electro, demonstrating his chameleonic musical prowess. With the advent of house music in the 1990s, he once again adapted and evolved. This latest release from Emotional Rescue delves into that later phase of King Sporty's career. "Computer Music" is a pulsating four-to-the-floor track infused with electrifying elements and a laid-back breakbeat that beckons you into its depths. Farsighted chords conjure a tranquil sense of cosmic grandeur, complemented by a filtered vocal that exudes a futuristic aura. The EP also includes a dub version, and the Universal Cave Discomix by the esteemed Philadelphia DJ and production crew. It's a nostalgic yet forward-looking EP that seamlessly fuses the retro and the future.
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ERC 148
20 Oct 23
Disco/Nu-Disco
Ethno Groove
Ethno Groove - (5:36) 102 BPM
Ethno Groove (New Age To Bokaye mix) - (4:36) 100 BPM
Ethno Groove (Double Beat Explosion mix) - (7:51) 112 BPM Hot
Ethno Groove (Tribal mix) - (5:13) 102 BPM
Review: As one of the finest and most stylishly eclectic labels out there, you never know where Emotional Rescue will go next. This time out they head into a world of Afro-cosmic, a scene initially pioneered by early and groundbreaking Italian DJ Danielle Baldelli. Boyake's 1990 gem 'Ethno Groove' stands out as a classic of the genre and joins the dots between the early house and techno sounds that were sweeping Italy with new age ideals, Afro drums and chunky tribal percussion next to Balearic synths. It features syncopated analogue beats and live percussion and as well as the original, this EP features two of the further mixes that came in 1994. All are heady, head-turning and mind-melting pumpers.
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ERC 140
22 Sep 23
Balearic/Downtempo
Illusion
Illusion - (6:08) 89 BPM Hot
Illusion (version) - (4:27) 89 BPM
Illusion (DJ Duckcomb Discomix) - (7:37) 89 BPM
Review: Noted reggae vocalist Barry Biggs comes under the Emotional Rescue microscope here with celebrated LA digger Patrick Billard aka DJ Duckcomb remixing one of his cuts. First up is the original version of 'Illusion' which has big pianos over the clean digital dub. The soaring vocal is obscured by plenty of lush effects and melodies. After a version twists and contorts the original, the DJ Duckcomb Discomix slows things down and ups the dazzling disco vibes but keeps the dub dubby bottom end to ensure plenty of dance floor impact. This is a classy one as ever from this label.
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ERC 103
15 Sep 23
Dub
Far Away (6 Songs Of Reggae & Dub Music)
Far Away - (4:00) 86 BPM Hot
Different Language - (3:00) 86 BPM
Whirl - (3:50) 64 BPM
Natty Vision - (4:37) 86 BPM
Fear - (3:17) 72 BPM
No 4 - (3:22) 72 BPM
Review: The sounds of 80s dub reggae coming out of the alternative and post-punk scenes of a rebuilt but divided (West and East) Germany is explored on a sampler of The Vision. A consciousness dream built by Hanover homegrown, Felix Wolter aka Dubvisionist with cohorts Sister Natty and Tygrr, they explored the meeting of cultures of that moment, combining their background in and love of rock, krautrock, punk and post-punk, diving deep into an adoration of reggae and dub, especially emanating from discovering On-U Sound. Later encouraged by Adrian Sherwood himself during a pilgrimage to London, The Vision was born. Working from riddims rather than songs, jamming continuously before vocals are added, arranging and then dubbed live on the mixing desk, utilised as instrument over a mere sound tool. Their debut '10 Tracks Of Reggae & Dub Music', from which this release is culled, was released in 1987, seeing the band go on to release and tour for the following decade, with spin off bands, projects, producing and a studio continuing up until today. A live band exploring the studio with their interpretation of dub reggae in all its forms, the songs Far Away, Different Language and Whirl showcase Sister Natty's conscious style atop roots and steppers riddims. The African Headcharge-inspired Natty Vision, possibly the release highlight, opens to percussion jams before the spoken words of Fear and speaker shacking, On-U-dubs-clash-crash of No 4 complete this EP sampler with ears wide.
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ERC 139
08 Jun 23
Reggae Classics/Ska
Golddigger
Golddigger (12" mix) - (7:13) 105 BPM
Golddigger (Tape mix 1) - (7:07) 106 BPM
Golddigger (Jura Soundsystem Discodub) - (10:08) 106 BPM Hot
Golddigger (Tape mix 2 - Digital Bonus) - (8:52) 106 BPM
Golddigger (Jura Soundsystem dub - Digital Bonus) - (8:20) 106 BPM
Review: The label is delighted to present Mataya's Golddigger, an aptly named diggers' delight of the last few years that has been causing a stir, licensed and remastered from the original tapes, offering a previously unreleased Tape Mix (plus additional unreleased Digital Bonus) and wonderful disco dub mix from (Isle Of) Jura Soundsystem. Mataya Clifford Chewaluza was born in Zimbabwe, moving to London as the late 60s were in full swing and soon found himself part of the West London music scene. A multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and producer, releasing albums for RCA and Virgin, as well as a series of singles and 12s for Do It and his own Black Magic Records. Golddigger was released in 1988, the theme, a story of the 80s City predatory nightlife romancing, with London's Street Soul influences featured heavily, as well as Mataya's love of reggae, but as with Adu's Burkina Faso, there is a strong feel of African rhythm and swing and the curious lo-fi private press production make this a collectors curio that has seen dealer copies snapped up from LA (Smiling C) to Toronto (Seance Centre) and London (Perfect Lives). Teaming up with Jura Soundsystem for a second time, label head Kevin Griffiths surpasses his recent remix of Adu, with a 10 minutes disco dub extravaganza. The street soul swing is cut'n'pasted with keys and dub fx, around an arrangement that drops, spins and keeping that quirky, left field gravitas that makes this an Emotional Rescue.
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ERC 134
26 May 23
Balearic/Downtempo
Burkina Faso (Wagadugu Blues)
Burkina Faso (Wagadugu Blues) - (4:49) 111 BPM
Burkina Faso (Wagadugu dub) - (4:49) 111 BPM
Burkina Faso (Jura Soundsystem Discodub) - (7:47) 111 BPM Hot
Review: Emotional Rescue continues its quest to bring obscure, left of centre dance to a wider audience with a reissue of Adu's reggae-pop cut Burkina Faso, starting the next series of releases where the label teams up with DJ / producer for a series of reissues featuring their edit / mixes that add to and update the original for today's dancefloor. South Saharan / West African emigre to Brixton long-term, musical and politically active resident, Rauf Adu would go on to a minor European wide hit in his supremely catchy Human To Human - checked You Tube for numerous 80s Euro-pop show appearances - the label goes back to the start, with his debut 7" release in 1982 for Copasetic Records and the reggae-pop inspired Burkina Faso. A laidback Compass Point drum and bass underpins with rock guitar and Adu's exaltations of youth and home, backed with flowing, layered harmonies across a call and response chorus. Simply a fun song to shuffle and ting, of its time but like an 80s pop-steppa. This is expanded further in the simple, but effective Dub mix, stripping everything back to highlight Adu's guitar slays and backing vox. For remix duties, the label welcomes fellow head of Isle Of Jura to get behind the desk and create some extended disco dub fun. The last 5 years have seen the Isle Of Jura label go from strength to strength and has just been topped with the arrival of in-house project, Jura Soundsystem's debut LP. The Adelaide best Brit, Kevin Griffith's has been providing additional production, mixes and dubs for his label since inception and here he presents a soundsystem remix that cuts, edits, extends and dubs Burkina Faso, teasing the instrumental intro before riding the songs groove to offer the version for today's DJ heads.
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ERC 133
28 Apr 23
Reggae Classics/Ska
Nowhere Like Here (Love Songs From The Caribbean And Diaspora)
Various
Avalanche - "Your Love Is Such A Good Thing" - (4:26) 63 BPM
Paul Thompson - "Can I Take You Home?" - (4:26) 87 BPM Hot
Keith Robinson - "Keep On Dancing" - (8:11) 105 BPM
Ras Ibuna - "Black Beauty" - (4:05) 73 BPM
Warp Speed - "Take It To The Night" - (4:38) 111 BPM
Majority - "Caroline" - (3:39) 100 BPM
Keith Robinson - "Never Let Go" - (5:32) 112 BPM
Burning Flames - "Can't Let Go" - (5:37) 79 BPM
Review: Emotional Rescue is delighted to debut a first. Rather than a straight reissue of an (obscure) classic or a collection of music by an artist or label, here is a compilation of various artists centered around a sound and movement - reggae-tinged music and how it influenced and spread from the Caribbean and diaspora. Drawn from the off kilter digging of archivist, DJ and collector Bruno (perfectliv.es), Nowhere Like Here is not a follow up, but a sideways accompaniment, to his recent and already cult like 'Perfect Motion' collection of left field pop and new wave, recently self-released with Flo Dill (NTS). This is a special release to celebrate the label's 10th year and beyond, offering a treasure trove of lo-fi and often pop inspired reggae cuts, mixing heartfelt Lovers Rock style paeans and quirky private press oddities, all guaranteed to 'make-a-move and tap', these are, in the main ridiculously rare or impossible to find alternative bombs, that are just as sound system rocking and massive bass line quaking showcases of the enduring legacy of this Jamaican music phenomenon. As with much of the early 80s period, the music community was in the throes of a do-it-yourself cultural renaissance as small labels, where crazy limited, one-off White Label Only's came and went. Songs like Avalanche's Your Love Is Such A Good Thing or Warp Speed's Take It To The Night were part of the claiming the means of production in to their own hands, pressing up the records and self-distributing. This raw, naive exuberance can be heard in the songs themselves. This is not reggae or Lovers as known, but something more expressive. Musical, simply produced, but with intelligible and uplifting optimism that is just superlatively catchy. While Paul Thompson's Can I Take You Home and Ras Ibuna's Black Beauty are more straight-ahead Lover's style cuts, there is the parallel dance pop private pressing vibrations of the two Keith Robinson songs and Majority's Caroline included - all part of a thread; a joining of the dots that Nowhere Like Here is at its most basic, a warmth the whole album exudes. This is not a Lovers Rock Hits of some, but a left-of-center versioning, fitting the ethos of Emotional Rescue by presenting something most will not have heard before and all the better for it.
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ERC 131
14 Apr 23
Reggae Classics/Ska
Utan Rymddrakt Pa Uranus
Utan Rymddrakt Pa Uranus I - (2:38) 79 BPM
Utan Rymddrakt Pa Uranus II - (2:59) 79 BPM
Utan Rymddrakt Pa Uranus (Gary The Tall re-edit) - (5:10) 79 BPM Hot
Review: Emotional Rescue dives back in the world of post punk experiments and early synthesised electronics to present another of the label's iconoclastic collectors specials with a look at Stockholm's Staalfagel. Born in 1977, Erik Fritjofsson and Petter Brundell merged and formed Staalfagel out of the suburbs of Jakobsberg. Like so many at the time, the duo was tired of Prog, Jazz and Symphonic Rock and formulated something new and against at the same moment; a time where drummers were jettisoned in place of drum machines and the inspirations of artists like Creedence Clearwater Revival, Devo and Pere Ubu were thrown in the mix to fervent results. With Micke Kjell soon joining on bass, they toured Sweden constantly, the manic machine beat, beating guitars and strange synth sounds defeated the throng and led to a considerable following. Recorded live to tape with no overdubs or mixing, the faithful CR 78 drum machine, the results radiate energy. Releasing just 4 records in 2 years (1980 - 1982), Utan Rymddrakt Pa Uranus appeared as their last ever release. Jettisoning the punky-funk vocals of previous releases, the single is a pure electronic groove. Funk bass and guitar atop, its short form simplicity is perfection distilled in 2 parts of less than 3 minutes, conjoined like some reggae dream, with 'Uranus II' acting the dub version counterpoint. Discovered and shared by long-time friend, DJ and collector, Gary The Tall steps out from behind the decks and microphone of his long running NTS show to present an exemplary "Reversion". Teaming up with master producer and label affiliate, Timothy J Fairplay on engineering duties, they keep the originals' straightforward charm, deceptively editing, looping and reversing with aplomb, for a killer re-edit.
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ERC 130
07 Apr 23
Indie/Alternative
Revelation
Rally Rally Round - (6:05) 62 BPM
Rally Rally Round (version) - (6:33) 62 BPM
Me And My Dread - (7:34) 73 BPM
Revelation / Dub Wise - (7:25) 72 BPM
Babylon - (4:28) 65 BPM
No Go - (4:02) 65 BPM
Rebel - (5:49) 66 BPM Hot
Militant Dub - (6:19) 64 BPM
Review: UK lover's rock/roots reggae group Dambala has been at the forefront of Emotional Rescue's revival of these sounds in recent years. After a haunting EP last summer we now get an immersive full-length that takes us back to the melting pot of sounds that was London in the 70s and 80s. Revelations is actually a collection of singles from the band recorded between 1978 and 1980 pressed on nice loud wax for heavy DJ deployment. There is a melancholic mood to the synths in these tunes, with weighty dub, fat bass, and skilled guitar all adding the sort of detail that occupies the mind as much as the body.
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ERC 115
17 Feb 23
Dub
Boy Child
Boy Child - (5:22) 113 BPM
You Got To Me - (9:27) 121 BPM
Boy Child (Felix Dickinson Discomix) - (8:11) 113 BPM Hot
Review: The Emotional Rescue reissue series of Noel Williams aka King Sporty working with other artists and singers on the Konduko label's roster comes to completion with the deep funk disco of The Prolifics' Boy Child. Formed in 1970 as part of "Senator" Nolan Jones' New Orleans soul and funk label Hep' Me Records, the bands early deep southern soul saw them release a series of 7"s for Hep' Me and Avco, plus an Xmas single for EMI and the minor hit A Place Called Home, recorded at the infamous Musle Shoals studios, backed by the Rhythm Section band who, from the early 60s, turned out hit after hit, from When A Man Loves A Women to Brown Sugar. Landing on the newly inked Drive label, set up in '72 by Henry Stone as a sub label of his burgeoning T.K Records empire, their developing move in to funk saw them featured alongside Funky Nassau, Jimmy Castor and Peter Brown. It is here the connection with Noel Williams was formed. While putting together the "Konduko Six Pack" showcase album, the band were invited to the Miami Sound Studios for sessions that brought us both title cut Boy Child and the accompanying You Got Me. All brass and claps, Boy Child is as funky as Williams got, backing the groups soul vocals, a story of first born's energetic path in life and a mothers love. The backing from Deep Rockers band bring the swing, the trippy keys and wide bottom end has made this a secret drop for many. You Got Me on the other hand is true King Sporty, a driving 9-minute disco boogie cut, where the warm harmonies lay down this uplifting, killer dance floor stop. To close, the flip is again given over for reinterpretation, welcoming back Felix Dickinson to expertly cut, loop and dub. A special personal song for Dickinson, his subtle extension teases the intro for DJ play, before letting things fly - "the little show-off" as the song notes. With a near 30-year DJ and production career in place, his Discomix is a fitting way to complete this cycle of reissues of this benchmark label, for now.
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ERC 129
02 Sep 22
Disco/Nu-Disco
Midnight Shift Demos
Here Comes Love (demo) - (5:03) 121 BPM
Mr Zak (demo) - (4:13) 112 BPM
Played by: ROTCIV
Review: Continuing the label's special single releases that capture the nascent 80s post punk, dub, funk and pop - as examined on releases by The Jellies, Woo, Phantom Band, 4AM and more - here a discovery of unheard demos from Dislocation Dance's Midnight Shift album. As part of the eighties Manchester scene, the band's pop and jazz sensibilities have continued to garner attention, offering a rightful place in the city's rich music history.
With the closure of Richard Boon's New Hormones label in 1982, they came to the attention of Geoff Travis' Rough Trade. Creating a home studio in the basement of an old rambling farmhouse in Withington, Ian Runacres (guitar, vocals), with lyricist Paul Emmerson (bass), set to work creating demos to garner a deal. Inspired by the funk-disco of Dr Buzzards Original Savannah Band debut album, Here Comes Love was written using Roland TR-606 drum machine, guitars, bass and (cheap) keyboard, its magical and lo-fi charmed quality melts hearts.
On Mr Zak, the fun Runacres had is evident. Written as an indie song, but with Aztec Camera and Burt Bacharrach on his mind, with Andy Diagram (trumpet) and Kathryn Way (vocals), hides a structure matching the album version, but which in its rudimentary instrumentation and production is unique and outshines the later version, to encase a specific period and innocence, of time.
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ERC 111
19 Apr 22
Indie/Alternative
Something Got A Hold On Me
Something Got A Hold On Me - (9:55) 119 BPM
Something Got A Hold On Me (Psychemagick Discomix) - (12:43) 117 BPM Hot
Review: The super rarity disco funk Something Got A Hold On Me by Chuck Armstrong gets its first ever official reissue, as Emotional Rescue continues its series of looking at some of the artists working with King Sporty's Konduko label. A long time South Florida native, Armstrong released numerous gospel toned soul 7"s for labels across the US, starting in 1962 with Cleveland's Gemini Records before going on to release with Detroit's Black Rock and Nashville's Sound Stage 7. First working with Noel Williams on the 1973 single, Black Foxy Woman, before releasing his now sought-after album Shakin' Up in 1976, he returned to Konduko 3 years later to explore the shift to disco and boogie with William's masterly production. Coming in at 10 minutes of deep, bottom rattling disco funk, William's teamed Armstrong's vocals of hypnotising love with his in-house Root Rockers band to devastating result. Their unrelenting groove and horns, plus Betty Wright & co's backing vocals counteracting with William's studio skills, is further exemplified in a wonderful dub laden Discomix by Psychemagik. Having released a sneaky edit a few years ago, it seemed fitting to bring the duo of beat diggers, tape manipulators and world travelling DJs, into the official fold by commissioning a new rework that extends, loops and arranges this classic around a nice heavy dose of dub effects for daze.
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ERC 127
15 Apr 22
Disco/Nu-Disco
Concrete Jungle
Concrete Jungle - (4:50) 94 BPM Hot
Young Girl - (2:39) 124 BPM
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ERC 136
01 Apr 22
Funk
Dance To The Music
Dance To The Music (Part 1) - (2:46) 146 BPM Hot
Dance To The Music (Part 2) - (2:26) 146 BPM
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ERC 138
01 Apr 22
Funk
The Chosen Few
Wandering - (3:04) 86 BPM
Funky Buttercup - (2:49) 114 BPM Hot
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ERC 137
01 Apr 22
Funk
In The Rain
In The Rain - (3:26) 73 BPM Hot
Night And Day - (3:00) 101 BPM
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ERC 135
01 Apr 22
Funk
Keep On Moving
Keep On Moving - (4:35) 128 BPM
Do Want You Want To Do To It - (3:56) 120 BPM
Keep On Moving ((NAD Discomix) - (6:54) 128 BPM Hot
Review: Emotional Rescue returns for a third series of Konduko lost classics. After shining a light via the King Sporty and Noel Williams reissues, we're now looking at artists who released with the label, working closely with Williams to bring his unique sound to their performance. First up are Phillip James and Lloyd Campbell, a.k.a. The Blues Busters. One of the most successful vocal duos to come out of 1960's Jamaica. Progressing from cabaret shows to touring with Sam Cooke in the space of a year, they went on to record singles with the likes of Bluebeat, Treasure Isle and Trojan. Moving onto New York, their Cooke inspired soul harmonies proved popular on albums for Dynamic Sounds and Scepter, before making the flight to Miami and letting the funk-machine that was Noel Williams loose. The resultant album, 'You've Got To Keep On Moving' offers the two highly prized songs; 'Do What You Want To Do To It' and 'Keep On Moving'. These driving disco-funk bombs are backed by the in-house Deep Root Rockers band and Betty James on vocals. The remix, as always, is given to a favoured producer - the welcomed back Dan Tyler (Idjut Boys / Noid) and his NAD moniker. He turns Keep On Moving in to an unrelenting long-form disco-dub that could just be an anthem for a new summer of love.
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ERC 126
18 Mar 22
Disco/Nu-Disco
I Want You (inc. NAD Discomix)
I Want You - (5:12) 117 BPM
I Want You (dub) - (5:13) 116 BPM
I Want You (NAD Discomix) - (10:12) 117 BPM Hot
Review: Following the collaborative releases with DJ Duckcomb, Emotional Rescue teams with discodub specialist NAD aka Dan Tyler (Idjut Boys) in the continual documentation of the crucial role played by the Caribbean diaspora in Britain's music history. Of the many who have made a mark, Clifton 'Sonny' Roberts maybe one of the most unheralded. Upon arrival in the early migration from the Caribbean, Roberts used his carpentry vocation to build and operate the first Jamaican recording studio and then black owned record shop in the country. Working alongside and sharing offices with a young Chris Blackwell and Trojan founder, Lee Gopthal, Roberts' trailblazing through his Planetone and Orbitone labels were pivotal in bringing first Ska, then Reggae and on to Lovers Rock to prominence, as well as releasing influential Afrobeat and rising Disco sounds of the day. It is on the sub-label Cartridge that the mega-rarity I Want You appeared in summer 1982. Teaming up with vocalist Joseph 'Remy' Martin, the original 12" is a wonderful mixture of all their influences; soulful vocals, unrelenting boogie groove, afro keys, all pinned by reggae bass. A heavily saturated Discomix is then created by Dan Tyler aka NAD. A dub masterclass with live desk filter passes and flanging, all running through spring reverb for a true Tubby disco-rockers ride, this is a sound system treasure with more to follow soon...
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ERC 117
25 Feb 22
Disco/Nu-Disco
I Remember Mama (inc. NAD Discomix)
I Remember Mama - (5:13) 104 BPM
Sound Design - (5:36) 101 BPM
I Remember Mama (NAD Discomix) - (11:10) 101 BPM Hot
Review: Emotional Rescue presents the first ever reissue Sugar Minott's I Remember Mama. Recorded in Soho in mid-80s London, the Boogie meets Reggae song comes in vocal and instrumental mixes, as well as a wonderfully teasing long Discomix by NAD aka Dan Tyler (Idjut Boys). Having grown up and become a star out of Kingston, JA, with over fifty albums and hundreds of singles for the likes of Studio One and Black Roots labels, the legendary vocalist was a pioneer of the Dancehall and then later Lovers Rock sounds. Based in London for much of the 1980s, a chance meeting in the Wackies offices he met producer Steve Parr, who had recently opened the Sound Design Studio next door. Hatching the idea to create a label to showcase their capabilities, Parr played all the instruments except the distinctive sax by friend Andy MacDonald, while Minott's delivery is at his prime, storytelling in the Jamaica tradition of hardship and praise. The "Sound Design" instrumental / version sees the studio team craft a disco meets reggae in a cod-style to wonderful, almost Balearic effect. The collaboration with Dan Tyler continues, as he again works his desk dubbing magic. Extending and editing between the two mixes, teasing the instrumental before finally bringing the sax and vocals together for a 'discodub' finale.
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ERC 118
28 Jan 22
Disco/Nu-Disco
Too Confusing
Too Confusing - (4:42) 111 BPM
Surrender - (3:37) 86 BPM
Too Confusing (Demo) - (4:51) 109 BPM
Review: Emotional Rescue returns to early 1980s Manchester with the previously unreleased music of Michael James Pollard and his beautiful distillation of indie pop in Too Confusing and bedsit cover version of Ashford and Simpson's Surrender. While studying photography at Manchester Polytechnic, (MJ) Pollard lived and played in a band in a ramshackle house in Walley Range. In the cellar studio he would write and record his own songs using their guitars, fretless bass and keys, as well as his own Casio VL-Tone VL-1 and Simmons Clap Trap to augment his drums onto a 4 track TEAC. By 1983, and now solo, he was recording out of Dislocation Dance's studio (ERC111), had secured a Peel Session and via Factory Records' Lindsay Reade, was discussing with Fundacao Atlantica about releasing an album. Working with singer Sioux Goddard as a duo, they put down 8 songs in 2 weeks in summer '84. However, Fundacao Atlantica's financial difficulties and soon closure meant the songs were lost until now. Recovered off the original tapes and lovingly restored, Too Confusing captures the optimism of the sessions, a summer love melody of forlorn youth. Surrender accompanies, recorded back in that cellar in '81, with friend Stephanie Danziger on vocals, its lo-fi simplicity is a perfect take on an all-time classic, making this a newly prized gem of British indie pop history.
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ERC 113
22 Jan 22
Indie/Alternative
You're In My Pocket
You're In My Pocket - (5:51) 115 BPM
You're In My Pocket ((instrumental)) - (7:11) 115 BPM
You're In My Pocket ((Nick The Record Discomix)) - (8:08) 115 BPM Hot
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ERC 128
01 Jan 22
Disco/Nu-Disco
Swinging London
One Million Hamburgers - (5:31) 79 BPM
Swinging London Pt 1 - (2:00) 62 BPM
I Woke Up - (2:56) 67 BPM
Swinging London Pt 2 - (5:19) 67 BPM Hot
Studded Leather Jacket - (3:02) 75 BPM
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ERC 114
01 Dec 21
Dub
Check Out Your Mind
Check Out Your Mind - (6:23) 113 BPM
Check Out Your Mind ((instrumental)) - (6:20) 114 BPM
Check Out Your Mind ((NAD Discomix)) - (12:20) 113 BPM Hot
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ERC 119
01 Nov 21
Disco/Nu-Disco
Ron Next Door
Ron Next Door (alternative mix) - (5:47) 105 BPM Hot
Sitting On Top Of The World - (5:23) 92 BPM
Ron Next Door (dub mix - digital bonus track) - (5:35) 105 BPM
Review: Happenstance can be a fortuitous element. A union-funded single discovered in a dusty store, a long disbanded band found, leads to unreleased post punk dubs in a box of unreleased demos. Formed during the mid-80s in the downbeat town of Walsall, their music is a blend of disparate influences from 50's crooners, blues and reggae to Killing Joke and The Bunnymen; Ron's Neighbours were out of step with the perfect pop of the C86 indie generation. Their only single,
To The Fight, a split 7 inch was supported by the Trade Union Resource Centre, while many gigs were benefits for striking miners, leading to a loyal local following. Engineered by Ozzy Osbourne's brother Tony, tracks were recorded at an 8 track bedroom / home studio, while a terraced house served as rehearsal space. Here Ron Next Door was born. When a tape recorder was left running it captured the long-suffering neighbour for posterity. His outburst gave the band and song, its name. Experimenting with drum machines, the resultant jam track, here in its alternative mix, languished unheard until now. Ron's 'Black Country' tones lead to driving bass / percussion against crashing Stratocasters and repeating, refrained vox - a post punk dub turned symphony. B side Sitting On Top of the World is an indie anthem, becoming their theme, a blend of grandiose and banal that characterised their songs.
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ERC 112
29 Oct 21
Indie/Alternative
I Remember Mama
I Remember Mama - (4:06) 102 BPM Hot
Hard Times - (4:19) 101 BPM
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ERC 125
14 May 21
Disco/Nu-Disco
In The Rain
In The Rain - (3:28) 73 BPM
In The Rain (Mukatsuku dub) - (4:10) 71 BPM Hot
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ERC 120
14 May 21
Roots/Lovers Rock
Lorraine
Lorraine - (4:10) 79 BPM
Lorraine (Lexx dub) - (4:13) 79 BPM Hot
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ERC 122
14 May 21
Roots/Lovers Rock
I Want To Be Free
I Want To Be Free - (3:32) 100 BPM
Freedom - (3:41) 100 BPM Hot
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ERC 123
14 May 21
Roots/Lovers Rock
Be Thankful
Be Thankful (7" mix) - (5:03) 92 BPM Hot
Be Thankful (Slowly dub) - (4:24) 92 BPM
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ERC 124
14 May 21
Roots/Lovers Rock
Crazy Kind Of Feeling
Crazy Kind Of Feeling (7" mix) - (4:17) 95 BPM
Crazy Kind Of Feeling (dub take 2) - (5:10) 95 BPM Hot
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ERC 121
14 May 21
Roots/Lovers Rock
24 Hrs
Before Sunrise - (4:44) 54 BPM
Sunrise - (3:27) 142 BPM
Morning - (2:55) 102 BPM
Noon & Afternoon - (5:14) 105 BPM
Sunset - (3:32) 120 BPM
Night - (20:16) 102 BPM
Ramon - (7:06) 119 BPM
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ERC 110
14 May 21
Jazz
Double Talk
Double Talk - (4:27) 101 BPM Hot
Dubble Dub - (4:19) 101 BPM
Double Talk (DJ Duckcomb Discomix) - (7:26) 101 BPM
Review: The second in the series of DJ Duckcomb-affiliated reissues brings the Jamaica / London connection to light, with a reissue of the Brixton based band Red Cloud under the spotlight. Double Talk was their debut release, coming on House / Freestyle / Reggae label Dancefloor Records, first explored by Emotional Rescue several years ago. After meeting with label head, Jeffrey Collins, in his then London base, the band went on release 2 albums, a 12" and 7" with him, as well as notably being Floyd Lloyd Seivright's backing band. The original 1983 12"" - now a highly sought after digger's disco reggae bomb - Double Talk is a perfect summer Lovers jam. A tale of sweat talking, cross loving and loss, with redemption and strength, all backed by an uplifting drum and bass, with guitar, keys and piano highlighting the JA climbs instilled in dem sound. Dubble Dub brings it all down, stripping away and lifting the interplay between keys and piano, allowing guitar to ride above warm bass grooves. Duckcomb then returns with his now trademark riding the vocal'n'dub, gently teasing'n'pulling, looping'n'flipping, before letting the echoplex loose to just let the wonderful groove bump'n'grind.
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ERC 102
25 Dec 20
Reggae Classics/Ska
Marching In Time 2
Gimme More Lovin (instrumental Muezzin mix) - (5:48) 96 BPM Hot
Yeh Naina Yaad Hai - (4:57) 100 BPM
Sick Of Love - (4:18) 65 BPM
A Lulu A Bobe Danz - (2:57) 91 BPM
Listen To The Earthbeat / The Driving Force - (3:05) 101 BPM
Review: Emotional Rescue presents the 2nd EP (of 4) highlighting the music of International Noise Orchestra. Centered around Ulrich Hornberg and Wolfgang Sperner, aka producers Gemini Brothers, this world supergroup released 5 LPs and 2 EPs in just 4 years. Again showcasing their rhythm, calm and power, a metaphysical, real sensitivity and intellectualism, all wrapped around the groove. Starting with their own instrumental remix of Gimme Move Lovin', this little known 12" B side has long been a play for heads and allows the band's Pop Balearic, esoteric meets electronics to shine, layering Fairlight samples over a funky bass 4/4 around some '88 Amnesia pool dive. Next the anthem, Yeh Naina Yaad Hai, as Asha Bhosle's beautiful vocals from the Manzil Manzil soundtrack, are mixed with drum machines to create a dream Bollywood meeting. Again there are Glynnis Thomas (Savage Progress) vocals, now atop a sax laden Synth Pop brain, mind and body dance. Alias, Internationales Ger?uschorchester offer wonderful jazz leanings for A Lulu A Bobe Danz, where the bop takes a leftfield embrace. To close then, Mr Richard Strange returns, invoking The Driving Force, returning to the idiosyncratic, percussive Earthbeat. Listen!
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ERC 093
06 Nov 20
Balearic/Downtempo
Crazy King Of Feeling
Crazy King Of Feeling - (5:17) 95 BPM Hot
Crazy King Of Feeling (dub Take 1) - (5:15) 95 BPM
Crazy King Of Feeling (DJ Duckcomb Disco mix) - (7:48) 94 BPM
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ERC 101
29 Oct 20
Disco/Nu-Disco
Everything Is Fine
Everything Is Fine - (3:14) 86 BPM Hot
Every Dub - (3:20) 86 BPM
Everything Is Fine (Chuggy Discomix) - (7:20) 85 BPM
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ERC 106
29 Oct 20
Reggae Classics/Ska
Come On Sister
Come On Sister - (6:35) 106 BPM Hot
Come On Sister (instrumental) - (5:37) 106 BPM
Come On Sister (Bruno discomix) - (8:10) 106 BPM
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ERC 105
29 Oct 20
Disco/Nu-Disco
Street Talk
Street Talk - (5:28) 137 BPM
Street Talk (dub) - (5:05) 137 BPM
Street Talk (Rune Lindbaek discomix) - (7:42) 69 BPM Hot
Street Talk (rap) - (4:33) 137 BPM
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ERC 108
29 Oct 20
Funk
Music Street
Music Street - (4:56) 137 BPM Hot
Music Street (instrumental) - (4:40) 137 BPM
Music Street (Universal Cave Discomix) - (8:44) 137 BPM
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ERC 109
29 Oct 20
Euro Dance/Pop Dance
Shoot From The Hip
Shoot From The Hip - (3:51) 61 BPM
Shoot It From The Hip (instrumental) - (3:53) 61 BPM
Shoot It From The Hip (Diesel & Jarvis Discomix) - (8:45) 61 BPM Hot
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ERC 107
29 Oct 20
Leftfield
Double Talk
Double Talk - (4:29) 101 BPM
Dubble Dub - (4:20) 101 BPM Hot
Double Talk (DJ Duckcomb Discomix) - (7:29) 101 BPM
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ERC 102
29 Oct 20
Leftfield
Everything Is Fine
Everything Is Fine - (3:14) 86 BPM Hot
Every Dub - (3:20) 86 BPM
Everything Is Fine (Chuggy Discomix) - (7:20) 85 BPM
Review: To close the 3 EP reissue series of Neville King and Lee Laing's King & City label, the all female group Charisma are presented with their summer infused Lovers cut, Everything Is Fine. Three Lewisham friends, Angela Richardson on lead vocals, with Geselle and Janie backing, were active from 1982 to 1990, but are really remembered for the early recordings made with Neville King. Their debut, Everything Is Fine rides the Lovers sound at its peak. Written with One Blood's Lloyd Robinson, with the rest of band of Robinson brothers providing the rhythm section, this is pure South London sound system music. Recorded again at TMC (Tooting Music Centre) Recording Studios - working alongside the likes of Dillinger, Tradition and New Musik - Everything Is Fine rides a beautiful soul reggae rhythm as Trevor (Drums) and Lloyd (Bass) Robinson set the foundations, while One Blood provide the Dub mix. A true love's lament, a song of hope, serenity and pure vibes. Label head Chuggy slides behind the mixing desk for an extended Discomix that stretches, loops and dubs the vocal and dub back forth, to close a glimpse at this uniquely British phenomenon, taking reggae closer to it's heart and soul.
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ERC 106
23 Oct 20
Disco/Nu-Disco
Be Thankful
Be Thankful (original mix) - (7:56) 92 BPM Hot
Be Thankful (Lexx Discomix) - (7:22) 92 BPM
Review: The King & City label is the subject of three reissues, starting with One Blood's classic Lovers Rock take of William DeVaughn's soul anthem, Be Thankful. Taking the influence of reggae from the Caribbean diaspora within the cultural melting pot of 70s London, the birth of Lovers Rock, often-dubbed 'romantic reggae', is a uniquely black British sound, developed against a backdrop of riots, racial tension and sound systems. A style suited to the London scene, it represents an apolitical counterpoint to the then dominant conscious Rastafarian sound and continued the soulful and commonly love-themed rocksteady style. Active during the scene's peak, King & City was launched by Neville King and Lee Laing to champion the sound and alongside other producers like Dennis Bovell, created genre-defining hits. Formed in 1979 One Blood was made up of the 5 Robinson brothers - Errol, Jerry, Lloyd, Trevor and Paul - and recording at the legendary TMC studios, went on to release two albums and countless singles. Be Thankful pays homage to DeVaughn's original, with smooth vocals gliding atop tight drum and bass, vocal jumping up dub pom acapella to summer perfection. The tapes here passed to cohort Lexx, crafting a wonderful discodub that is all groove, expertly cutting back and forth... diamonds in the back, sunroof top.
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ERC 104
09 Oct 20
Roots/Lovers Rock
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