Review: Formula brings the foliage to Timeless Towers and it's all spiky and green - just how we like it. 'Cactus' takes the lead with the fartiest siren we've heard this side of freedom weekend. It's backed up by plenty more equally stench-fuelled thumpers - 'Mutant Speaker' is pure theatre with its big cathedral-like riff, 'Sonical' is brings the horns and the finger clicking funk while 'Track Days' is so racy, it'll syphon your petrol without you even realising. Last but not least we have a collab with Spadez - 'Flatout', a grizzly floor slammer that will have you reaching for a seatbelt, even though you're actually standing up and not even in a car. Va-va-voom.
Review: Harley D rides into Timeless Audio with the Movements EPs that boldly takes off with the orchestral R&B crescendos of its title track that so brilliantly drops into a wickedly stripped-back groove. With some jungle rhythms paying homage to the night lights of the UK' capital in "London", something shuffling, stepped-up and punctuated hits the spot in "You Are Now Free To Move". Dope. Higher tempo UKG energy steps up in "The Way Your Moving" for a more soulful number with sweet vocals to boot next to the disjointed beat scene vibe of "Down" - think Flying Lotus 'Tea Leaf Dreaming" - drum and bass style. And for the more hardcore heads out there, get you subtle tear out throwback from "Free". Ride baby, Ride.
Review: Over on Juno regular Timeless Audio, Kastro and Parallel are giving each other the collaborative treatment in a really cool, well put-together EP that'll please heads from all sides of the scene. The first comes from the pair themselves, and they've flipped the original into a brooding, creeping piece of music that feels cold, tight and packed with latent aggression just waiting to emerge. 'The Firing Line' by Parallel wears its heart slightly more in its sleeve, as he rolls out amidst a flowing arrangement of bouncing sine stabs and carving bass patches. Wicked.
Review: Timeless continue to build their armoury with gnarly, nasty grizzlers as Addicted and Jammez tap in for some murky manoeuvres. 'Bumpa' takes the lead with its auto-tuned vocal before the lads go solo with two originals a-piece; Addicted's 'Keeping Fire' is a raspy little groaner while 'Warp' is pure stripped-back wobble tension. Jammez meanwhile gets all horny on 'No Time' before getting all slinky with another auto-tune vocal-led bass plucker 'Fuente'. Bueno.
Review: Having established themselves over the last year with killer free downloads from some of the most exciting names in the new-generation movement of artists, Timeless Audio continue to develop their brand with this crucial collection from Secret Sound and friends on their second full paid release. Four massive collaborations deep, across the EP we find Secret Sound tagging in the likes of Jando on the growling stepper 'Code Red', we see Drowzee jumping on board to turn on all the lights on the grotty bass jammer 'Home Alone' while Lockerz join the fray with Secret Sound on the roughhouse tear-up 'Embrace'. Last but not least Magenta opts-in on the bouncy title track 'Vibrations'. Vibes.
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