Download a New Mix from Mumdance

London producer and 909 enthusiast Jack Adams (a.k.a. Mumdance) has just handed over Level Six, a new mix which arrives as part of his ongoing Different Circles podcast series. Featuring new and exclusive music from Paul Woolford’s Special Request moniker, LA duo Nguzunguzu, UK bass mainstay Mickey Pearce, Distal, and others, Adams’ brand-new mix follows soon after the recently released Twists and Turns mixtape, and makes for a dynamic and quick-witted take on what modern club music has to offer. To celebrate all of Mumdance’s current goings-on, Adams is throwing a party this Friday, August 2 at the Notting Hill Arts Club—featuring appearances by Murlo, Temple, Chris Yaxley, and Mumdance himself. The flier for that show, as well as the full stream and download of Level Six, can be found below.

Video Premiere: Murlo “Irises”

London-based producer Murlo—who was profiled in our Bubblin’ Up series last year—is set to release an EP via prolific UK label Unknown to the Unknown. Taken from Adder, which will drop on August 12 as part of the UTTU’s digital-only Summer Jamz series, “Irises” finds the soca-influenced producer in a typically hybrid mode, with the track’s inherent playfulness coming out in its jaunty synthline and hyper-kinetic, syncopated beats. The accompanying video was directed by Murlo himself, and features a number of bizarre video game renderings of ancient ruins. In addition to the clip for “Irises,” UTTU has also shared a teaser for the EP’s title track, which can be viewed below.

CFCF Announces Sophomore Album, Shares New Track

Montreal-based musician/producer CFCF (a.k.a. Mike Silver) has shared details of his forthcoming second album, Outside, the follow-up to his 2009 debut, Continent. More recently, Silver has released a pair of EPs, called Exercises and Music for Objects, that drew from avant-garde composition and its hypnotic repetition; Outside is said to find a middle ground between those two releases and the producer’s more beat-driven debut. CFCF’s new record is set to be released on October 22 via Paper Bag and Dummy, but before then, its tracklist and artwork can be found below, where lead single “Jump Out of the Train” can also be streamed.

1.Beyond Light
2. Jump Out Of The Train

3. Strange Form Of Life
4. Find
5. The Breath
6. Feeling. Holding
7. The Forest At Night
8. Transcend
9. The Crossing
10. Walking In The Dust

Diinch “Reaching Out”*Voodoo Village*

New Zealand-based producer Diinch has just released his debut EP, Reaching Out, via Memphis label Voodoo Village. The five-track release—which features remixes from Chromatic, Sage Caswell, and Pr!ntz—nicely showcases the budding artist’s glistening house chops, and its title track is no exception. “Reaching Out” builds slowly with its syncopated beats and precisely timed chords, before plateauing out into a glittering 4/4. Diinch’s entire Reaching Out EP can be streamed after the jump.

Reaching Out

Deepchord Announces New Album

Prolific Detroit artist Rod Modell has been making experimental dub-techno under the Deepchord moniker since 2000, and has today announced the project’s latest full-length, 20 Electrostatic Soundfields. The album is planned for a release via Modell’s longtime label home, Soma, marking his third release for the outpost. 20 Electrostatic Soundfields is said to be more ambient than its predecessors, and according to the press release, its 20 tracks are “an assemblage of conceptual audioscapes culled from video soundtrack and installation works made between 2008 and 2012.” The press release also notes that “the album has an otherworldly, nocturnal feeling that would sit well on a David Lynch soundtrack.” Before 20 Electrostatic Soundfields is released on September 30, its tracklist and artwork can be viewed below. Additionally, the full-length will be preceded by a three-track, limited-edition picture disc, entitled De Wallen, although no further details of that release are currently available.

01. Driftwood
02. De Wallen
03. Lavender
04. Praying Wheel
05. Whispering Pines
06. Plankton
07. Aerosphere
08. Raval
09. Oceanic
10. Fern
11. Morning
12. Barcelona
13. Bronze
14. Lotus Leaves
15. Larger Air
16. Amsterdam Remnant 6
17. Seaweed
18. Trompettersteeg
19. Day’s End
20. Rooftop

Jon Hopkins, Paul Woolford, and More Added to Unknown Festival

As the date draws nearer for Croatia’s much anticipated Unknown Festival, a final round of performers has been added to the already stacked lineup. Joining previously mentioned heavyweights like Disclosure, Four Tet, Richie Hawtin, SBTRKT, Jamie xx, Moderat, Jessie Ware, Actress, and Julio Bashmore, XLR8R favorite Jon Hopkins (pictured above) will perform a live set, and Paul Woolford, Ryan Elliott, Mark E, and FCL have all been slated for DJ sets. The festival’s full lineup, slated to take place between September 10 and 14 on the idyllic Adriatic coastline city of Rovinj, can be perused here.

Marcel Dettmann Announces Second Album for Ostgut Ton

Reigning Berghain resident and all-around Berlin techno giant Marcel Dettmann has announced that his second full-length record, simply called Dettmann II, will be released next month via Berghain label Ostgut Ton. Dettmann’s debut long-player came out three years ago, but the Berlin producer has certainly kept busy in the interim—including regular DJ appearances in Ibiza and across Europe, as well as making a very dancefloor-leaning podcast for XLR8R last month. Featuring collaborations with vocalist Emika and techno stalwarts Levon Vincent and Rene Pawlowitz, the upcoming album is said to mix the hard-edged techno that Dettmann has become known for with a smattering of ambient and minimalist-leaning cuts. Before it drops on September 16, the full tracklist and artwork for Dettmann II can be viewed below.

01. Arise
02. Throb
03. Ductil
04. Shiver
05. Lightworks
06. Soar
07. Outback
08. Seduction feat. Emika
09. Radar
10. Corridor
11. Stranger
12. Aim

Oneohtrix Point Never Shares New Track

Synth- and sample-obsessed Brooklyn experimentalist Oneohtrix Point Never is still about two months from the release of his next LP, R Plus Seven, and has just shared the first full track from that record, the cyclical and shapeshifting “Problem Areas.” These aren’t the first new sounds we’ve heard from the artist born Daniel Lopatin as of late; he also shared an intriguing video which was soundtracked by an excerpt of the mind-bendingly formless and mechanical “Still Life.” Speaking on his new track, Lopatin says, “I wanted to characterize a linear world with cracks in its edifice. One with a veneer of being breakable, but that instead just bends and stretches endlessly like rubber, preventing you from ever understanding its true properties. The proverbial ‘endless vista,’ but with an end.” Warp is still set to drop R Plus Seven on October 1, but before then, Oneohtrix Point Never’s “Problem Areas” can be heard below, where some of his upcoming tour dates can also be found.

September 12, 2013: EMPAC Theater (Troy, NY)
September 14, 2013: Festival Ceremonia (Mexico City, Mexico)
September 17, 2013: Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Cathedral (Brooklyn, NY)
September 22, 2013: Sacrum Profanum (Kraków, Poland)
September 26, 2013: Howard Asembly Room w/ Cut Hands + Helm (Leeds, United Kingdom)
September 27, 2013: Le Trabendo w/ Forest Swords (Paris, France)
September 28, 2013: Today’s Art Festival (The Hague, The Netherlands)
October 1, 2013: Centre for Contemporary Arts (Glasgow, United Kingdom)
October 3, 2013: Islington Assembly Hall w/ Sculpture (London, United Kingdom)
October 4, 2013: Berghain w/ Stellar Om Source + Lorenzo Senni (Berlin, Germany)
October 5, 2013: De Kreun w/ Stellar Om Source (Kortrijk, Belgium)
November 16, 2013: Walker Art Center w/ Tim Hecker (Minneapolis, MN)
November 23, 2013: ATP Weekender @ Pontins Holiday Centre (East Sussex, United Kingdom)

Download a New Mix from Scuba

Appearing today seemingly out of nowhere, Scuba‘s third installment of his monthly After Hours mix series is now available to stream and download for free. The Hotflush label boss—who we recently spoke with at length about the closing of his famed Berlin club night, Sub:stance—has delivered a sizable DJ set, a 22-track, hour-long offering which runs the gamut from the more stripped-down sounds of Basic Soul Unit and Paul Rose’s own SCB moniker to big-room summer jams like Paul Woolford’s “Untitled” and “I Can Tell (By The Way You Move),” the new single from George FitzGerald. Appearances from the likes of Four Tet, DJ Koze, Boddika & Joy O, Efdemin, and Mathew Johnson also help make Scuba’s After Hours Part 3 an excellent listen. The whole thing can be heard below, where the tracklist is also available.

01. SDC – Petrichor
02. David Gtronic – Salto Del Angel (dub mix)
03. Dense & Pika – Mooger Fooger
04. Miguel Lobo & Larry Peters – State Of Mind (Re-UP remix)
05. Pherox – Lovers & Leavers
06. Pedestrian – Hoyle Road
07. Jean Bresan – You Don’t Know Me
08. Basic Soul Unit – Things Pass
09. Pele & Shawnecy – you and me
10. Efdemin – There Will Be Singing (DJ Koze remix)
11. Matthew Jonson – Lost Forever In A Happy Crowd
12. Jichael Mackson – Snuff
13. Four Tet – Peace For Earth
14. Dense & Pika – Vomee
15. Nikols Mendonca – Detroit
16. Andre Winter – Green Light
17. Paul Woolford – Untitled
18. Vitor Munhoz – Earrings
19. SCB – Closer
20. Boddika & Joy O – Tricky’s Team
21. KH – TEXT022
22. George FitzGerald – I Can Tell (By The Way You Move)

Hi, Doctor Nick! – Quick Tips for Tougher Drums and “How Old Is Too Old?” When It Comes to Making Music

It’s too bad that Nick Hook can’t earn some extra frequent flyer miles or something for doling out advice while he’s on the road, because the guy is constantly hopping around the globe. Still, no matter where he is, our favorite street shaman—and resident advice columnist—manages to string together a few pearls of wisdom for our readers every Thursday morning. Doctor Nick has seen the world (or at least a sizable chunk of it) and has picked up plenty of knowledge along the way. Best of all, he wants to share it with the world. Drop him a line at [email protected], and he’ll do the rest.

Yooo… I’m back on my crazy travel grind. New Zealand was incredible. I got to hang with Serato for a week and kinda got to see where the future of DJing is going while I was actually in the future (New Zealand). Dudes are really onto some innovative shit and I feel really honored and blessed that I get to be a part of these things.

I also stopped in LA to say hi to some friends. I gave Gaslamp Killer a hug and wished him well. I’m back in New York tonight to play with SBTRKT, and I’ll be in SF on Friday with HudMo and Jacques Greene and a bunch of others. Then I give this lecture in San Francisco on Saturday afternoon at Pyramind. Can’t stop won’t stop.

Anyways, I’m feeling super inspired and blessed to be here. Thanks for questions. Send more. [email protected]. Tell your friends you love them. I love you.

xxxx

Hi Doctor Nick,
I am 59 and retire next year. I have spent all my life in art and design, teaching, making, creating. Thing is, I don’t want to make artwork anymore. I want to make music—mostly deep house—and I have spent three years setting up a very nice Reason-based home studio. And I think I KNOW and FEEL what this is about and CAN DO THIS. I am a creative person. I have a lifetime of creative strategies and a massive music collection. I have always listened to what is fresh. Trouble is, I am probably 30 to 40 years older than everybody else setting out on this road and I don’t want to appear to be “the oldest swinger in town” and a bit of a prat. I got stared at last year at the Eastern Electrics festival and was definitely the oldest person there. But I LOVE THIS MUSIC. Will anyone take me seriously? How old is too old?
Chris

I love this question. It’s perhaps the best one we’ve ever had. I admire you so much. I have the same thoughts to do exactly what you are doing when I’m that age, but I want to learn art history, or psychology, or something just completely new and have time to dedicate to it. It’s probably a pipe dream because I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to retire, but hey, one can dream.

I don’t think you are too old at all. I think it would be sick if we rolled up to the club and there was an old dude smashing it.

Personally I think the strategy to take is to finish the music and get it out there without anyone knowing anything about you. You obviously aren’t in a rush, so make some amazing music that you are confident about and get it going.

I was at dinner last night with a few friends—friends that owned labels and actually another new friend that has just made a number-one song in the UK—and the consensus at the table was that we all think it’s not too old and that it’s actually amazing and inspiring. This is actually one of the things I really like about DJing versus being in a more traditional “band”—sometimes, it’s not 100% about youth, although maybe not so much lately with EDM and all this wild nonsense happening.

The more I do this, I’ve also realized that the more people have an idea of who you are and what you do, the more it lets you be liberal in terms of how you DJ and what music you play. Whether you are an idiot like me who has an advice column and has put out a few records or you’re a more real established guy, people want you to be you. Once people know you, you can be a server instead of a servant. Think about it—two people can play the same exact record and one would clear the floor. It’s all about context; it’s fascinating, but completely real. So I think your strongest approach would be having records that are out and then you create a story that you are the old dude that was like, “I’m retired and I make beats now.” I’d write about that if I had a blog or a newspaper. And that kinda relates to most press. Where’s the story? Are you interesting? If you are boring, someone probably isn’t gonna want to write about you.

Anyways, send me those demos when you are done. I got two dudes interested already.

Hi Doctor Nick,
I’m fascinated by music with complex rhythms and tuff drums. I recently purchased my first outboard piece (Korg ER-1), which I love, as you can create some great (weird) drum sounds. However, I do find it a bit limited in what I can do rhythmically using the step sequencer. Is there anything out there that will offer me tuff drums and more complex rhythms?
Calum

Try hooking a MIDI in and MIDI out cable into your Korg. Then you can use your DAW (Ableton/Logic/Pro Tools/etc.) to send it MIDI notes. You should be able to send it triplets or play notes on a regular keyboard that aren’t quantized and it will then play them back. If you don’t use a computer, you could also sequence it with an MPC. It should be super easy. Also, if you MIDI in a drum pad, like a Roland or Alesis, you could play the notes with sticks on your own.

Hi, Doctor Nick! appears every Thursday on XLR8R. Do you have a question for Doctor Nick? Please submit your inquires to [email protected]. Nick Hook can help you.

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