Technicolour is a Ninja Tune sub-label. Technicolour has every bit channeled its parent label's musical restlessness with submerged techno, degraded hip-hop, machine jazz and more.
Review: Technicolour welcomes the super fresh sounds of emerging producer Elkka to its label following a dose of new music from DJ Boring and Studio Barnhus debutant, Sofia Kourtesis. Infusing elements of pop and R&B into a framework of outsider house and synth-led music, Elkka hits all the right notes in the summery and house-felt vibes of "Burnt Orange". With sampled loops and staccato melodies paired with a flow of acoustic drum patterns in "Alexandra", the pure synth and percussive sound of "Euphoric Melodies" rates up there as some of the best next to contemporary producers like Upsammy or Barker. With "Flowers" and "Morning Fuzz" cut from a similar template of tonal noise floors, subtle arpeggios and whimsical vocal elements, Elkka delivers a wholly inspired and new sound to the Ninja Tune sublabel.
Review: Having impressed via EP on some seriously good underground labels - think Lost Palms, EPH White and Shall Not Fade for starters - DJ Boring has been snapped up by Ninja Tune's big bucks Technicolour offshoot. The London-based producer's first outing for the imprint is headed up by title track "Like Water", a busy and bustling deep house number that cloaks rolling house beats in dreamy, sustained chords, colourful unfurling melodies and sharp, trance-like synth sounds. Elsewhere, "Another Day" is a warmer, chunkier and even more kaleidoscopic take on the same pleasingly off-kilter house sound, "Stockholm Syndrome" is a more classical deep house number that boasts weighty sub-bass and sparkling riffs, and "Seems Like Yesterday" is a melodious and ear-pleasing deep neo-trance affair.
Review: Deep house from the atmospheric and abstract side is the order of the day on this three-tracker from fast-rising Octo Octa. 'I Need You' alternates extended beatless passages with a fast n' furious (but quite light-touch) breakbeat, augmented both with wordless vox, a melancholy "I need you", shimmering synths and the occasional woodwind toot. 'Bodies Meld Together' is a driftaway, late-night affair made for weary 6am floors, and is again lavishly layered with synth washes and twitchy sounds, while 'Loops For Healing' is a more traditional, Balearic kinda groove with cut-up female vocal snips and piano chords so lush you could bathe in 'em.
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