Bubblin’ Up: DJ QU

Ramon Quezada (a.k.a. DJ QU) lives and breathes house music, even if he’s not exactly sure what it is anymore. “House and techno used to be the one thing,” he says. “Now, Derrick May is techno and Kerri Chandler is house, but I never saw the difference.” As far as he’s concerned, if the music can be traced in some way to the deep house that first began to emerge from Chicago in the late ’80s, then it’s suitable for his record bag. Often lauded as a DJ’s DJ, Quezada also heads up his own Strength Music imprint, a label that’s low on hype, high on quality, and home to releases from deep-house luminaries such as Jus-Ed and Fred P., not to mention a myriad of records from DJ QU himself.

Quezada’s love for house music began in his native New Jersey, where his initial passion manifested itself via his participation in competitive house dancing. House dancing? Quezada is amused by the confusion as to what exactly house dancing is. “Where I grew up, everyone knew what house dancing was, but now I have to keep explaining it,” he says. Imagine something akin to hip-hop’s B-Boy and breakdance culture, albeit with a house-music soundtrack, and that’s what occupied much of Quezada’s youthful years. To be clear, it had nothing to do with raving, a separate scene which was undeniably popping at the time. “I had a perception of raving as not what we were into, that the music and the style was not what we were into, that the kids there were there to do drugs and try to party for two days straight.” Quezada does make a point to qualify this statement, continuing, “I didn’t really step into raving, so I could be totally wrong, but that was the perception.”

Regardless, Quezada’s hardcore dancing days eventually faded. Although he does occasionally still make his way onto the dancefloor and “get a sweat on,” as he puts it, he eventually made the transition behind the decks and became DJ QU. After years of honing his craft, he also started making his own tracks, although his early efforts were hampered by a lack of equipment, and, more importantly, funds. Thankfully, those days are behind him. “I was in financial ruin for half of my life,” he deadpans, “but I’m good now.”

“Slidin Thru”

In the midst of his studio learning curve, he launched Strength Music, primarily as an outlet for himself. For Quezada, nothing is more important than being able to release his own music on his own timeline. “I never want to hear the words, ‘It’s good, but…,'” he says with a laugh. After dropping a series of singles over the past few years, in May he finally released his first full-length album, Gymnastics, an effort Quezada says was more than a year in the making. Highlights include the gurgling acid pulse and menacing vocal loops of “Get Sum,” the angular synth and loosely funky piano melody of “Slidin Thru,” and the workmanlike funk and infectiously off-kilter squeal of “Mixing Room.” Gymnastics is an incredibly detailed, fully realized album, and now that it’s complete, DJ QU in no rush to make another, although he promises more 12″s are in the pipeline, along with some new additions to the Strength roster.

“Mixing Room”

Beyond that, Quezada continues to maintain a busy DJ schedule, and although he’s an unabashed vinyl purist, his approach to DJing is anything but static. “When I was younger and DJing in my bedroom, it was all about the deepest or most obscure tracks,” he says. “Lots of people work a 40-hour week and when they go out, they don’t want to think about the music that’s being played. A good DJ should be able to accommodate that.” That approach is apparently serving him well, as he’s increasingly traveling the globe to spread his deep-house gospel. Yet he also remains hopeful about the state of nightlife back home, saying “New York isn’t where it was 15 years ago, but I feel like it’s starting to get back to that late-’80s/early-’90s place, with loft parties and people going out for the music.” For Quezada, it really is about the music—house music, to be exact.

Gymnastics is available now on Strength Music.

Guti “Lucio El Anarquista (feat. Daniel Melingo)”

What’s with the South America-Germany connection? Unfortunate historical connections aside, it seems as though many young South American producers have managed to link up with the scene in Germany. Case in point is recent Düsseldorf transplant Guti Podliszewski. Yet, there’s something about Guti’s story that makes him more intriguing than some of his compatriots, as in his native Argentina, he’s known less as a producer of house music and more as the front man for swaggering rock band Jovenes Pordioseros. Since then, Guti has made quite a splash on the house scene with his jazzy and improvisatory take on the genre. With a grip of releases under his belt since 2007, Guti’s just dropped Patio de Juegos (album art featured above), his first solo album since assuming the role of dance music producer. As a teaser, he sent over “Lucio El Anarquista (feat. Daniel Melingo),” a tight house track with Latin percussion, a funky Rhodes line, and raspy vocals provided by Argentine tango singer Daniel Melingo. Patio de Juegos is out now on Desolat.

Lucio El Anarquista (feat. Daniel Melingo)

Canblaster Totem

Riding the line between nostalgia and innovation must be an incredibly difficult task for today’s electronic dance music producer. The present is a unique situation in which the forward-looking but esoteric sounds of post-dubstep/electro Europe are counterbalanced by the intense nostalgia of chillwave, nu-disco, and the classic house revival. Maybe it’s due to this polarity that tracks with balance tend to stand out. One such release is Totem, the latest three-track single from French producer Cédric Steffens (a.k.a. Canblaster) on France’s innovative Marble imprint.

This comes as no surprise, as Canblaster’s musical background is diverse (as evidenced by his 50 tracks in 67 minutes XLR8R podcast), and he’s been able to draw from his interests to create an eclectic and growing catalog. For Totem, Canblaster fuses his club-oriented futuristic bass aesthetic with the similarly forward-leaning, though now retro, sound of Underground Resistance’s Galaxy 2 Galaxy project. In the process, something is created that sounds futuristic while bringing to mind moments of the past. And it’s particularly pronounced on closely related stand-out tracks “Air Totem” and “Stone Totem,” which both draw liberally from the sound palette developed by Galaxy 2 Galaxy on classics like “Hi-Tech Jazz” and “Timeline.” It’s a tricky maneuver when the source material is so revered, but the finesse is in Canblaster’s ability to synthesize the general mood and tonal character without falling into blatant imitation or hero worship.

That same concept is used on b-side “Delphes (Feat. Sam Tiba),” which ties a similarly jazzy techno vibe to an almost-broken UK funky rhythm. The only negative point comes in what sounds like a mastering decision: the singles are all harshly compressed to the point that a lot of the dynamic range is lost to gain an almost electro-like flatness. It’s a shame because this sort of jazzy techno gains so much when it’s given room to breath. That being said, Totem isn’t that much worse for it, and it stands as a club-friendly exercise in blending past and future to create something new for the present.

Help Contribute to a Documentary on the ’90s SF Rave Scene

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Not lucky enough to be hanging around San Francisco in the ravey glory days of the early ’90s? If not, don’t worry: The Gathering‘s Martin O’Brien and Wicked Soundsystem’s DJ Jenö have got you covered with a brand new, as-yet-unnamed documentary exploring the rave culture San Francisco once played host to. Featuring everyone from the promoters on down to the ravers themselves, the documentary promises to establish San Francisco as the epicenter of American rave culture in the pantheon of cultural history. The film is currently in post-production, but the producers are still on the lookout for material. If you or anyone you know has old photos, negatives, video tapes, or anything else from the period of 1989-1994, contact producer Mike Koeppel. Those interested in the project’s progress can follow the film’s development on its rather active Facebook page, but for now, check out the clip above, which features the likes of DJ Harvey, Thomas Bullock, Jenö, Garth, Markie Mark, and many others.

Damu “She’s Liquid”

Bubblin’ Manchester tunesmith Damu just dropped his first ever record, the four-track Mermaid EP, via UK music hub Local Action, and has some big plans to celebrate it. First of all, he’ll be partying with fellow DJ/producers Mosca, T.Williams, and xxxy, among others, at the Local Action & Orca Recordings party in London (details here). Secondly, he’s unleashed this hyperactive tune for you eager listeners as an exclusive download. “She’s Liquid” exists over on the noisier end of the juke spectrum; Damu’s breakneck 808 rhythms jump and skitter underneath a heavy barrage of arpeggiating synths and spacey sound effects. If you want to hear more from the producer, you can stream the title track of his debut EP after the jump.

She’s Liquid

M83 “Midnight City”

It’s been a long and fruitful journey for M83‘s Anthony Gonzalez. Started in the early ’00s, the once-duo-but-now-solo project has been pumping out albums of top-tier electronic shoegaze for the better part of a decade. That said, M83’s been kind of quiet since the release of 2008’s excellent Saturdays=Youth, but it seems that the time off was a necessary evil: Gonzalez recently announced the imminent arrival of Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming, an epic double LP due out October 18. With that release date slowly approaching, Gonzalez has been dropping some teasers to keep us interested, the latest of which is “Midnight City,” the album opener. It’s a great start and marks a logical progression for his sound, complete with chords pulled from ’80s pop music, atmospheric production worthy of Kevin Shields, and a structure that resembles the euphoric ebb-and-flow of trance.

Midnight City

James Blake “Order” b/w “Pan”

In the two years that have passed since Untold‘s Hemlock imprint debuted the work of the (then referred to as) “South London producer, keyboardist and live vocalist for Mount Kimbie” we’ve come to know as UK wunderkind James Blake, a lot has happened. With touchstone releases for Hessle Audio and R&S to his name, we’ve seen Blake go from burgeoning producer of R&B-tinged post-dubstep to bass music innovator, and, with the release of his polarizing debut LP earlier this year, to an indie darling of sorts, tapping a wide range of listeners well beyond the bass music spectrum. Now, we find Blake at an impasse of sorts, returning to the imprint that kicked off his solo career, and one can’t help but see a certain narrative taking shape.

Fortunately, the South Londoner seems to have plenty of tricks up his sleeve as proven by the somewhat unexpected, but welcome, twist of style that has resulted in two songs completely vacant of Blake’s trademark R&B infusion—or vocals. “Order” b/w “Pan” are instead a pair of starkly minimal tracks that find the producer incredibly focused on deep, dark sounds. The a-side, “Order,” feels like a warm-up in comparison to its counterpart. Led by a slow-brewing core rhythm, which remains virtually untouched throughout the tune, Blake incorporates a few choice slices of detailed percussion along with a small array of high-pitched, at times almost squealing, drones. “Pan” is a much more textural and enveloping outing, pairing tiny percussion percolations and ghostly pads with absolutely gut-rattling bass. With the precision of a surgeon, Blake places ever more intricate patterns of hiss and noise atop the desolate core, somehow evoking a tribal movement from such obviously mechanical sources. Whereas “Order” is the palate cleanser—acting as an introduction to this side of Blake’s production—”Pan” is a complete composition, one that proves his work is just as impressive even when it is stripped bare of its usual allure.

Listen to Machinedrum’s ‘Room(s)’ LP Now

Last week, we unveiled our feature on globetrotting producer Travis Stewart and his forthcoming Machinedrum album for Planet Mu, entitled Room(s). Now, thanks to Hype Machine, you can listen to that record before it’s released next week. Stream the 11 atmospheric, “drum-heavy” tracks that make up Stewart’s brand-new LP in the player below.

Listen to Tim Hecker’s Exclusive Mix for XLR8R

Many of you tried to access this file yesterday, and of course, it broke the internet. But some kind soul has managed to repost it here for your downloading pleasure. —Ed.

A few months back, when we first got wind of Ravedeath, 1972, the latest LP from XLR8Rfeatured artist Tim Hecker, we thought: What a brilliant idea it would be to have the Canadian noisemaker share with us a mix of even more glacial and angelic soundscapes—maybe a nice collection of his unreleased or back-catalogued material along with a handful of tracks that resonate within him as an artist. Well, in hindsight, maybe we were a bit naive to think Hecker would turn in the customary assemblage of tracks one figures to hear, as he has instead delivered an extremely long (not exaggerating at all here) mix, which is as unexpected as it is intriguing.

It should really come as no surprise that the Montreal-based producer is fond of the pioneering minimalist composer and performer La Monte Young, who among other things, was integral in forming the legendary collective/performance group Theatre of Eternal Music. But it surely will come as a surprise that for his mix, Hecker has decided to take Young’s and Marian Zazeela’s 1969 album The Black Record and elongate it to not two, not three, but over 13 times its original length, clocking this mix in at exactly 10 hours. It’s sort of the equivalent of spelling “drone” as “drooooooooooooone,” except way more interesting. You can download the cleverly titled Really Eternal Music / Your Bloated Hard Drive mix here if you think your internet connection, hard drive, and mind are all ready for what’s in store.

Mungolian Jet Set to Drop ‘Schlungs’ in October

Years after Norwegian psych-disco duo Mungolian Jet Set unleashed its double album, We Gave it All Away…Now We Are Taking it Back, via Smalltown Supersound, we’ve received word of a follow-up LP. The forthcoming record is called Schlungs, and will feature eight tracks, all of which were composed by the production outfit alone (a first for them, actually). It is said to tell the “tales of fatal alien abductions and ghosts of murderous (but snazzily dressed) transvestites, as well as confessions of dark and illusory multimedia desires and dispatches from the borderline state of the all-consuming hyperrealism of the Internet,” and will include “drunken synths and obscure samplings of the psychedelic past, bleeping and squeaking through a jungle of tree frogs” and “funky guitars, ethereal soundscapes… hummable hooks, sexy, sassy urban beats, and tunes you can chew your bubblegum to” in its musical arsenal. So, it’s going to be weird, apparently. You can check out the artwork and tracklist for Mungolian Jet Set’s Schlungs before it’s released on October 11, below.

01. 2010 – A Space Woodysey
02. Moon Jocks n Prog Rocks
03. Shelton’s On A Bender
04. Bella Lanay
05. Ties n Downs
06. We Are The Shining
07. Moonstruck
08. Smoke n Mirrors

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