OL Make Things EP

Over the course of his career, longstanding Moscow beat maestro OL has taken his sound down more than a few leftfield turns. Where his equally compelling Muscovite mates 813 and Lapti have been more stylistically consistent, OL has wandered all over the spectrum, offering everything from the slow-motion soul of cuts like “IWM” to the deeper, more subtle sounds of his latest effort, the vinyl-only Make Things. OL has a knack for absorbing current trends, but this tendency doesn’t feel derivative; his music is more like a nebulous hodgepodge that befits his status as a SoundCloud producer. That said, with just two tracks, Make Things comes across as too little of a potentially good thing.

Regardless, OL’s new EP presents some invigorating, subtly danceable material, its two tunes both working with the same basic tools of arrangement. In short, both songs have been built with the same kit, and both leave tons of room for each pad, kick, and keyboard to breathe. The title track is intriguing from the outset, opening up with strong, stabbing synth chords and acrobatic usages of a standard fist-pumping vocal sample before a start-stop beat comes in to guide things along. “Get Depressed” picks up in the lead track’s echoes, only the stutter has been replaced by a four-to-the-floor beat and complemented with open rides and retreating 808 claps, the entire composition topped by a smoky layer of hiss. OL tastefully turns his synth stabs into organ licks, and a pointed, gloomy bass number slowly swaggers its way out.

At the EP’s end, however, it’s likely that many listeners will be left wanting more. OL’s use of negative space and darker palettes on Make Things should excite beat-scene heads and house-music aficionados alike, but the momentum from these tunes dead ends right as it’s picking up steam. After last year’s meatier Body Varial, this release seems abbreviated, and one can’t help but excitedly wonder how OL would have fared if he had chosen to properly stretch his legs beyond the 10-minute mark.

Podcast 314: Huerco S. Decibel Mix

Huerco S. is having a good year. Back in January, the Kansas-born producer was featured as part of our Bubblin’ Up Week series, which spotlighted acts we expected to be doing big things in 2013. Nine months later, he’s releasing his full-length debut, Colonial Patterns, which drops today via the Software label, and is widely being hailed as an innovative new voice in electronic music. He’s also been tapped to perform at the XLR8R showcase this Thursday night at Seattle’s annual Decibel Festival. Given that, we figured there was no better candidate to oversee a special Decibel edition of our podcast series.

Now based in Brooklyn, Huerco S. dabbles in house music, but his artistic vision extends well beyond the usual parameters of that genre. He’s just as likely to work with sheets of distortion or spacey synthscapes as he is a classic house groove, and that tendency also colors his work here. The podcast is filled with choice selections from house music’s past and present, but Huerco S. doesn’t shy away from indulging in the occasional bout of noise or airy introspection. Recent months may have seen Huerco S.’ profile rise on the back of a fair amount of hype, but after hearing Colonial Patterns and this mix, it’s also apparent that he has the tools, the taste, and the talent to transcend current notions of whatever is fashionable at the moment.

01 The Hers “Mankind Exotica”
02 Die Gärten “Neunte Ritual: Reinkarnation”
03 Local Artist “Sun Raw” (Proibito)
04 Tase “Square” (Atelier)
05 Robert Owens “Your Mind (Passion) (Ron Hardy Edit Mix 2)” (Warehouse Box Tracks)
06 Dario Zenker “Chris De Slurgh” (Ilian Tape)
07 Infiniti “Thought Process” (Tresor)
08 Polynomial “Short Scum” (Acido)
09 STL “Groove Diz” (Something)
10 Crass “Banned from the Roxy (Secret Musik Edit)”
11 Marcellus Pittman “An Afternoon’s Delight (Dub)” (Seventh Sign)
12 Newworldaquarium “Indianenkrijs”
13 Lucretio “A Mountain” (Machine State)
14 Pirahnahead feat. Yamina Brock “I Do Love U” (Third Ear)
15 Joey Washington “Just Us (Bop Til You Drop)” (Strictly Rhythm)
16 Wanexa “The Man from Colours” (Discomagic)
17 Dreesvn “Moonwalk” (Acido)

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EVM128 “Make Me Feel (Palace Remix)”

On October 7, creative collective Somethinksounds will drop a new EP from London-based producer EVM128. This digital-only remix of “Make Me Feel (feat. BB. James)”—one of the record’s two original productions—comes from East Londoner Palace (a.k.a. Sam Walker), who has devised a minimal version of the cut. Warping James’ vocals in a chamber of reverb, the functional piece pairs a clean, insistent rhythm with layers of ringing and delayed synth thrusts. The long-form, unwavering design of “Make Me Feel (Palace Remix)” is a no-frills exhibition of DJ utility and restraint. Ahead of its release, EVM128’s Make Me Feel EP can be streamed in full after the jump.

Make Me Feel (Palace Remix)

Tropic of Cancer Restless Idylls

Nobody looks to Camella Lobo’s Tropic of Cancer project for innovation. Since her debut in 2009, the Los Angeles-based artist has minutely chiseled away at a kind of monolithic sadness, and all of her songs have felt like variations on this theme. The problem with taking such a steadfast approach, of course, is keeping one’s sound fresh, and making minor changes feel like major breakthroughs. Lobo’s initial run of singles already cohered into a 2011 compilation, The End of All Things, which, while consistent, didn’t feel like an album, as it lacked the variety and attention to sequencing one expects from the format. Restless Idylls follows up another run of singles, and though a couple of them do factor in here, this time the artist ably buffers them with new material. Overall, it is an album that will not take those who know her catalog by surprise, and yet it has enough slight deviations to feel like a new chapter.

The project’s hallmarks are all on display: bare, unchanging drum-machine motors, a droning synth/guitar fog, and largely unintelligible lyrics delivered in a muffled moan. The title of the fifth track, “The Seasons Won’t Change and Neither Will You,” seems to sum up Lobo’s motives. Sullenness might normally be thought of as a teenage trait, but Tropic of Cancer adapts it to adulthood; Restless Idylls‘ dread seems rooted in an eternal jadedness, the feeling that all the races have been run and the rest of life, like the monotonous arrangements, stretches out as a barren plain. The track’s title also applies to Lobo’s location in perpetually sunny Los Angeles, and the project is at its best when it lets in even the smallest hint of that light. “Children of a Lesser God” already arrived last year on the I Feel Nothing EP, but its chiaroscuro California-gothic arrangement sets it apart as this album’s clear centerpiece. Lobo doesn’t often let her melodies poke through, but here she does, letting gorgeous, crestfallen surf guitar penetrate ebbing synth strings. While the remainder is painted in darker hues, there are enough switches to keep things diverse. Propulsive early single “More Alone” falls closest to her prior work, and it should play gateway to these nuanced variations. On “Plant Lilies at My Head” and “Hardest Day,” she incorporates the spectral twang of so many 1980s ethereal acts, while on “Court of Devotion,” her brooding vocals come to the fore, almost to the point of intelligibility. She trades her ticking drum machines for tumbling wooden ones on “Wake the Night” and “Rites of the Wild,” bringing to mind her sometime labelmates Raime; on the latter, an eerie windchime punctuates the mix. Still, all of these flirtations fall within the project’s carefully defined parameters. As such, most of them are perhaps unlikely to win new fans. In the scope of the Tropic of Cancer catalog though, Restless Idylls is Lobo’s most polished statement yet.

Video: T.Williams “On My Own (feat. Tala)”

London DJ/producer T. Williams recently released his Feelings Within Feelings EP via PMR, and is following up that occasion with a brand-new video for one of its lively cuts. Hitting the sweet spot between soulful pop stunner and a club-ready house track, “On My Own” makes smart use of Tala’s pristine vocals to up the energy level and work in some subtle pitch processing. The song’s visuals follow T. Williams as he stumbles around an urban landscape, eventually morphing into some sort of laser-shooting mutant all by his lonesome.

Milo McBride “Losaand”

Like many young producers who wake up one morning to discover a folder of 808 drum samples on their laptops, Milo McBride stumbled into electronic music via a winding musical path. Following a stint playing garage rock in his own Milo and the Fuzz trio, he turned his attention to more synthesized pursuits, and has been refining his array of space-fostering club tracks ever since. His latest production, “Losaand,” is a melancholic take on what post-apocalyptic dance music might sound like—the spare kick and hollow atmosphere seem less concerned with actually moving bodies than with the idea of movement in space. McBride explores the concept with a layer of chords that creep in from below and seem to only hint at the notes they contain. Despite “Losaand”‘s sepulchral interior, the intent of its subtly aching production and its ability to connect with the listener are crystal clear.

Losaand

Various Artists Kill Yourself Dancing: The Story of Sunset Records Inc. Chicago 1985-89

Curated by house archivist and DJ Jerome Derradji, Kill Yourself Dancing: The Story of Sunset Records Inc. Chicago 1985-89 contains 21 remastered tracks from the archives of Sunset Records, a label that has largely been neglected in the story of Chicago house. Founded in 1985 by Matt Warren, Miguel Garcia, and Ralphi Rosario, the label grew out of a DJ collective called Sunset Mobile Disco that, beginning in the early ’80s, was famed on Chicago’s North Side for having the most powerful soundsystem around, and for its eclectic mixes featuring disco, new wave, and salsa. This eclecticism carried over into the label, whose productions were distinguished by their new-wave, Italo, and freestyle influences, in contrast to the more classic Chicago house sound epitomized by the labels Trax and DJ International.

The compilation’s opening track, the titular “Kill Yourself Dancing,” is a joint production from Rosario and Warren under the name Razz, and comes barreling out of the gate with its hyper-aggressive use of claps, electro bassline, and repeated vocal refrain, which simply implores, “Kill!” Master Plan’s “Electric Baile (Commercial Mix)” showcases the label’s more Italo- and boogie-influenced side with its irresistible groove, icy synths, and faux-European vocals from Pepper Gomez. Similarly, Kajsa’s “Try Try Again (House Mix)” offers a thick electro bassline, horror-movie synths, and uplifting house piano, which culminates with vocals chanting the track’s title. There is a surprising diversity to the tracks on Kill Yourself Dancing; alongside the new-wave- and pop-leaning flourishes on many of the tracks are some early examples of straight-up jack and acid tracks. White Knight’s “White Knight Jacks (Club Mix)” is exactly what the title suggests and features impressively tough and skeletal beats, while the same group’s “Acid Dub” is decent enough, but fails to differentiate itself from every other acid track floating around at the same time.

On the whole, Kill Yourself Dancing offers up a selection of obscure and largely undiscovered gems. There’s nothing of the caliber of, say, Marshall Jefferson’s “Move Your Body” or Frankie Knuckles’ “Let the Music (Use You),” but that’s not why collections like this exist. Like Derradji’s previous compilations, 122 BPM: The Birth Of House Music and In The Dark: The Soul Of Detroit & The American Boogie Down, Kill Yourself Dancing has a completist mandate, and accompanied by a comprehensive 23-page booklet detailing the label’s brief history, the collection offers an intriguing alternate vantage point of Chicago house.

Karenn Announces UK and European Tour, Shares Free Download

The duo of Pariah and Blawan, Karenn has announced a forthcoming fall/winter tour, sending along with the list of dates a free download of its debut release. 2011’s Sheworks001 12″ can be nabbed as three WAV files by simply entering an email address here, and the details of Karenn’s upcoming performances—which will take place around parts of the UK and all over Europe—can be found below.

Video: Sinjin Hawke & Morri$ “Ferrofluid”

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Occasional collaborators Sinjin Hawke and Night Slugs affiliate Morri$ have hooked up a mesmerizing new video for “Ferrofluid,” the pair’s as-yet-unreleased new track.Apparently set to appear on what will be the inaugural release for the Fractal Fantasy label, “Ferrofluid” is an expectedly futuristic sounding affair, one bolstered by an array of bass-heavy sounds and covered from head to toe in far-reaching synthscapes and cascading melodies. It all adds up to make “Ferrofluid” a dramatic soundtrack to an ascension towards the stars, or—as it is here—to a mind-warping display of glossy, black fluid contorting in sync with the bombastic track.

Arts the Beatdoctor “Moebius’ Travels”

At the very least, Dutch producer Arts the Beatdoctor deserves some credit for naming this track just about perfectly. “Moebius’ Travels”—a cut which stems from the man’s forthcoming Lazy Thunder EP—is certainly a journey, one which wastes little time before jumping into its refracted sonics and full-throttle boom-bap. As the good “Doctor” navigates through his dense expedition, he slowly begins to peel back the pieces, eventually finding himself in the midst of a placid breakdown. He falls right back into the thick of his sonic travels shortly thereafter, and the extra melody that jumps into the mix for the track’s latter half only makes “Moebius’ Travels” even more of a worthwhile journey. Arts The Beatdoctor’s Lazy Thunder EP is out tomorrow, complete with additional remixes from Sam a la Bamalot and Flako.

Moebius Travels

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