Through their signature status as a record label, close sister-labels Fent Plates and Yellow Flower, their expert, lauded vinyl pressing and mastering services and widespread, targeted record distribution and facilitation avenues, White Peach Records have cemented their eminent position as one of the leading ventures across the entirety of the mammoth, inter-connected yet wholly unique dubstep, grime & 140 genres. Fronted by the impeccably talented producer, DJ and all-round businessman Zha, White Peach was formed in 2011 to great acclaim from all pockets of the storied 140BPM spectrum. One of the most important creative collectives in this bracket, they’ve released essential cuts from Bengal Sound, Taiko, Glume & Phossa, TMSV, Mr. K, DE-TU, Sukh Knight, EVA808, Youngstar and of course bossman Zha amongst many others, never once resting on their laurels when it comes to pushing the sound, scene and industry forward. Now-iconic, effortlessly noticeable artwork, a supreme sonic aesthetic that blends naturally between gritty dubstep, beautifully melodic 140 and sub-low vocal numbers, White Peach is a gleaming diamond of the electronic scene, with 2021 looking like their most promising year yet.
Review: It's been a little while since we found ourselves dipping into a new drop from the White Peach imprint, a label that continuously impresses with sharp, well thought out releases. This time around, they invite the techy flavours of Ourman inside for a delicious display of new school dubstep heat. We begin with the floating percussive clinks and hypnotic melodic sweeps of 'Dizzy', a seriously cool title track, leading the way with a fabulous use of delicate sampling techniques. Next, the more moody textures of 'Emergence' usher forth, again rotating around jittering half time drums, before the slightly slower, more time-dance influenced shuffles of 'Drunken Bell' give us a clunky yet hard hitting third addition. Finally, 'Broken' unleashes a dizzying display of unorthodox melodic manoeuvres and rhythmic expression, styling it out with wonky arrangements to send any dance into an absolute tizz.
Review: London beatcrafter Shudan returns to White Peach after making his debut on their anniversary release last September. Now armed with his first full-flavoured EP we get a real taste of his styles: from the wavy airs and graces of "Fushigidane" we're suddenly hurled into a stark, dark world of razor riddims, bashy beats and a really cool sweary samples. From the straight-up bubble brutality of "Arctic Garms" to the D&B inspired bass ripples of "TM13", Shudan makes his mean and masterful message clear.
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