Kyle Hall, DJ Koze, and Lee Gamble Remix Mount Kimbie on Upcoming 12″; Hear Hall’s Rework Now

London duo Mount Kimbie has announced it will follow up its sophomore LP, Cold Spring Fault Less Youth, with the forthcoming CSFLY Remixes 12″. Set to drop on October 29, the three-track effort brings together Detroit mainstay Kyle Hall (who just yesterday shared a remix of SoCal beat alchemist Nosaj Thing), unpredicatble German house artist DJ Koze, and UK sound collagist Lee Gamble, all three delivering remixes of either “You Took Your Time” or “Made to Stray.” Before Mount Kimbie’s CSFLY Remixes 12″ appears late next month via Warp, its tracklist and a full stream of “You Took Your Time (Kyle Hall Remix)” are included below.

A1 You Took Your Time (Kyle Hall Remix)
B1 Made To Stray (DJ Koze Remix)
B2 You Took Your Time (Lee Gamble Remix)

Video: Misty Conditions “Dank”

Cross-continental duo Misty Conditions (a.k.a Henry Collins and Richard Wilson) is clearly enamored with the rolling possibilities of blending dubstep and trap music. Not unlike Baconhead‘s recent hard-hitting remix of “Drizzle,” “Dank,” a new track that is set to appear on Misty Conditions’ forthcoming D’Zzzz LP for Planet Mu, finds the pair diving head-first into the mind-warping, body-numbing sensations associated with its title. The video adds another dimension to the already psychedelic production, combining swirling backgrounds with animated, headless bodies that seem to be running through an endless landscape. It’s the kind of visual accompaniment that could offer little more than what’s plainly visible, or, with the right mindset, could seem to offer layers of cloudy meaning to explore.

SecondCity “What You Need”

UK house outfit SecondCity has been trickling out its own ’90s throwbacks online for a short while now, and saw its first official release—The Story EP—via Huxley’s Saints & Sonnets imprint back in June. With the exclusive “What You Need,” the production team propels familiar vocal sampling, massive filter sweeps, and anticipated beat sequences into an ageless, welcoming space. Using a hospitable tone palette of comforting bass, figure-hugging kicks, and crisp cymbals, SecondCity’s cut plays out like a warm blanket of dancefloor nostalgia.

What You Need

Mr. G to Release New 12″ via Running Back; Preview It Now

Veteran house producer Mr. G (a.k.a Colin McBean) recently shared a mix he put together for Rekids regular Radio Show, one that focused on his love of old-school soul and funk. Now, McBean is set to issue his next release via Gerd Janson’s Running Back label. Apparently inspired by the back-to-back set Janson and Ben UFO played at this year’s Need I Say More fest, Mr. G’s The Old Miami 12″ sees the producer returning to his harsh, driving production style, delivering two tracks that are said to feature “heavy bass [and] mean percussion.” Though the record’s release date has yet to be announced, clips of The Old Miami‘s two sides can be heard here.

Simian Mobile Disco Readies New EP

We’d be lying if we said we weren’t still thoroughly enamored with Simian Mobile Disco‘s XLR8R Pick’d Unpatterns LP from last year, so it’s easy to imagine our excitement when we found out today that the duo of James Ford and Jas Shaw will soon release its first offering of brand-new original material since 2012. The Tong Zi Dan EP is named after a Chinese delicacy which translates to “virgin boy eggs,” a fitting title for a record which will arrive via SMD’s own Delicacies label. Before it arrives as a two-track 12″—complete with Mike Dehnert’s remix of the title track on the b-side—on October 7 and as a four-track digital package on October 21, Tong Zi Dan‘s artwork and tracklist can be found below.

1. Tong Zi Dan
2. Tong Zi Dan (Mike Dehnert Remix)
3. Escamoles
4. Smalahove

Listen to The Field’s New Album for Kompakt Now

It seems as if there has been a bit less fanfare that usual surrounding the release of Cupid’s Head, the fourth full-length album set to arrive from Swedish ambient-techno auteur The Field on September 30. However, despite the fact that the producer born Axel Willner and releasing label Kompakt haven’t been inundating our news feed with music videos, remixes, and whatever other promotional tools, they are sticking with the tried-and-true formula of allowing the LP to hit the internet as a full stream ahead of its release date. At six tracks and nearly an hour long, Cupid’s Head isn’t exactly a breezy listen, but its dense productions are so detailed and immersive that it will likely float by effortlessly as listeners find themselves entranced by the music’s thick atmospheres and locked-groove rhythms. The Field’s latest album can be heard in its entirety in the player below.

Dusky Careless

House-leaning London duo Dusky (a.k.a. Alfie Granger-Howell and Nick Harriman) burst out of the gate in 2011 with its full-length debut, Stick By This, for Anjunadeep, and has stayed busy since with a steady stream of propulsive EPs and singles. The pair’s latest release, a four-track EP for Aus entitled Careless, finds the producers hunkering down with one ear attuned to classic dancefloor signifiers while the other remains focused on keeping their sonics clean and bright.

Careless‘ most notable tune might be “Esperanto Juggler,” a wide-screened, mid-tempo house track with several interweaving melodic synth lines and a lurid, pitched-down vocal snippet. As always, Dusky’s music sounds impeccable; there’s little question that mixdown and mastering is an essential part of the duo’s creative process. “Rise for Love” works in a similar tempo, albeit with a slightly more aggressive sonic edge. An ominous background swell and a prominent vocal contribute to a fluid arrangement that starts off minimal and sparse, but eventually swells into something full and detailed without giving the listener a chance to notice the track’s seams. “Words Later On” also rolls out a slinky, minimal intro, but the track expands into a breathless climax, layering a hollow bass with disco-sourced hi-hats and a driving, one-note synth punctuation; despite this abundance of elements, the entire composition fits together elegantly and effortlessly. It’s only the opening track, “Careless,” that works within a more traditional dance framework, making quick work of a bouncy bass pattern and a familiar house underpinning.

Once again, Dusky has put together a release full of highly functional tunes, with the polished sonics to match. The duo is clearly talented, although one can’t help but wonder if these producers are capable of pushing things a bit further. At this point, the pair’s reliability is bordering on predictability. We’ve heard plenty of solid tunes from Dusky; it would be nice to hear some truly great ones.

Cid Rim “Mute City (Joseph Marinetti Remix)”

On the heels of Cid Rim‘s Mute City EP for the LuckyMe label, the Veinna-based producer has rounded up a trio of remixes for a few of the EP’s tracks, including this one from London upstart Joseph Marinetti. Also a member of the LuckyMe crew, Marinetti uses his rework to take Cid Rim’s original production into more skipping territory, allowing the remix’s rhythms to serve as the driving force while repurposed organ stabs and wispy atmospheres provide the track with its textural landscape. In the end, Marinetti’s take on “Mute City” is subtle and effective, which should help it stand out next to the reworks from Mike Slott and Autre Ne Veut that are slated to appear on the forthcoming Mute City Remixes EP, dropping on October 1.

Mute City (Joseph Marinetti Remix)

Huerco S. Colonial Patterns

Colonial Patterns has drawn many comparisons to Basic Channel. After all, both the native Kansan’s debut album on the Software label and the work of the legendary German duo share a fondness for recordings that sound equally muddy and metallic. They really know how to get the most out of that murk, playing for ghostly absence and overwhelming physical presence in one fell swoop. But when did Basic Channel ever channel anything as freighted with historical significance as colonialism, as heavy as Native-American genocide? Referencing something of real-world consequence doesn’t necessarily make for more consequential music, and the Ernestus–von Oswald catalog is in no danger of a coup from the currently New York–based Huerco S. But the comparison downplays this album’s uniqueness. This is body music in a distinctly different form, superficial similarities aside. According to interviews, the album grew out of Huerco S.’ fascination with the mound-building cultures that originally inhabited the region he grew up in. It’s heavy stuff, literally and conceptually, but it functions just fine without pretentions. Colonial Patterns does indeed sound and feel like—to paraphrase the artist himself—digging holes and filling them back in. It’s a work of and inspired by ritualized labor, haunted by the irretrievable loss of a culture.

But on to the music itself: it’s creepy and earthen, abstract enough to fall asleep to, but like Aphex Twin’s Selected Ambient Works Volume II, virtually ensures you’ll wake up in a state of existential panic while it’s still playing. This is a difficult row to till, and it speaks well of Huerco S.’ long-term artistic viability that he’s not just cranking out the “outsider house” people have often associated him with. “‘Ii?zhiid” contains the kind of orgiastic sampler abuse that marks Madteo’s productions, but is much more coherent, even celebratory, than one would expect from that producer. Huerco S. has a talent for latching on to the weird piping that connects notes on a cheap synth, and reassembles those sounds into masses that suggest entropy but have a kind of autochthonous persistence. The wooden motif on “Ragtime U.S.A. (Warning)” could almost be an OS alert sound, so it’s not as if he’s trying to dwell in some past era. Huerco S. has an uncanny knack for the uncanny acoustics of a digital world, even if it sounds like he records onto tape. (He doesn’t.)

“Prinzif,” on the other hand, comes across like some unholy alliance of a grotty, lost Frak tape and a Ken Burns documentary, were such a pan-and-scan monstrosity possible. Add to that the album’s visceral artwork—which somehow looks like a sepia-toned Discharge record cover—and the LP’s tonal consistency breaks open even further. These resonances are more than likely accidental, not that it matters. It’s kind of like a techno scrying mirror—what we see in Colonial Patterns is determined by our conditioning and expectations, but, freakily, it seems to come from outside of ourselves.

Clancy “Giving You Up”

The Dirt Crew record outpost recently launched a sub-label called Spiel, the first release from which will be a 12″ by London artist Clancy. The digital exclusive from the three-song What You Do EP (out on September 30), “Giving You Up” is a muscled house track that sleekly slips around beneath flickering street lights. A ghostly vocal sample rotates over Clancy’s distant percussion and lurking basslines, as pads are stretched thin helping to propel each consistent build-up before the track finally peaks.

Giving You Up

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