Podcast 184: Nicolas Jaar

Nicolas Jaar is only 21 years old, but he’s already had quite the life. Much of his childhood was spent in Chile, but his formative years were spent in NY, where he entered the world of electronic music and released his first record before he completed high school, on the renowned Wolf + Lamb label no less. These days, he’s actually pursuing a college degree at Brown, but he still finds the time to DJ around the globe, produce, and run his own imprint, Clown and Sunset. Next week, Jaar will be releasing his full-length debut, Space Is Only Noise, via the Circus Company label, so we figured it would be a fine time to enlist him for the XLR8R podcast series. His exclusive mix does not disappoint, as it’s heavy on his own pensive, jazz- and soul-tinged productions, including several unreleased songs and remixes. Jaar is ostensibly a house artist, but this mix explores different moods, tempos, styles, and eras; it even manages to squeeze in tracks from Bob Dylan and Pharoah Sanders without losing the plot. We imagine that we’ll be hearing lots more from Jaar in the years to come, but the man already appears to be operating at the top of his game.

01 Bob Dylan “Love Sick” (Sony)
02 Nicolas Jaar “What My Last Girl Put Me Through”
03 Wendy Rene “After Laughter Comes Tears (Nicolas Jaar Edit)”
04 Nicolas Jaar “Materials (Nico’s Bluewave Edit)”
05 The Enticers “Thief (Live Set Edit)”
06 Pharoah Sanders “Meeting John Coltrane”
07 Nicolas Jaar “Variations” (Circus Company)
08 Nicolas Jaar “Hage Chahine (feat. Will Epstein)” (Wolf+ Lamb)
09 Nicolas Jaar “Dubliners” (Clown & Sunset)
10 Nicolas Jaar “Colomb” (Circus Company)
11 Nicolas Jaar “Avalanche (Tribute to Leonard Cohen)”
12 Nicolas Jaar “Russian Dolls” (Clown & Sunset)
13 Nicolas Jaar “Encore”

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Salva Complex Housing

There are many meaningful artistic layers to San Francisco producer Paul Salva‘s debut, Complex Housing. First, there’s the title’s clever play on housing complexes—prefab city dwellings where people live fascinatingly intricate lives. Similarly, Salva’s album initially sounds like standard computer-driven urban music, but listen closer and plenty of twists, variations, and colorful nuances pop out unexpectedly. Salva is in league with other contemporary crunk-bass programmers such as Lazer Sword, Eskmo, Shigeto, and Teebs, as his sounds are grounded with thick, punchy lead synth riffs, arpeggiated electronic sequences, and plodding handclap beats. “40 Karats,” for example, features sleazoid soul vocals from Tuscon’s Zackey Force Funk and sounds like an OutKast/Zapp hybrid with its funky, low-slung bass grooves and sexy raps. But the songs on Complex Housing don’t linger on one path too long—”Keys Open Doors” bubbles and shakes with percussive UK funky rhythms while “Baroque” walks with glistening padded steps into future-garage territory. Amid the blurred bass genres, Salva’s musicality and command of his virtual instrument arsenal is impressive—dude can program a beat with the best of them—but his keyboard mastery is what shines most. Along with the album’s 10 original compositions, guests like Lazer Sword’s Lando Kal, Machinedrum, and labelmate My Dry Wet Mess remix four of the album’s ringers. The result is party grooves without a genre agenda. The songs slap, spasm, and gallop in a wonderfully complex beat orgy. This house is on fire.

Contakt “AuH20”

As a DJ in NY’s illustrious TURRBOTAX® crew, Contakt is responsible for spreading the good word of next-level house, techno, and bass tunes. As a producer signed to the burgeoning Local Action label, the NYC-based artist is responsible for crafting those sounds himself, and he does so with apparent skill and aplomb. (And—in the interest of full disclosure—as an XLR8R employee, he helps keep our game tight in all manner of ways.) Contakt’s first release, the Not Forgotten 12″, dropped just yesterday, and now we have a track that didn’t make it onto that slab of vinyl. Like the aforementioned single, “AuH20” kicks off with stomping beats and deep pads that collectively evoke both the past, present, and future of dance music, with a heavier slant on the latter of those eras. Contakt continues to mix in large helpings of squelchy low-end melodies, catchy synth hooks, and ricocheting percussion through the song’s four minutes, not once losing sight of the two elements that form its foundation. (via Dummy)

AuH20

AuH20

AuH20

LCD Soundsystem to Play Final Concert at Madison Square Garden in April

On April 2, DFA label head James Murphy and his LCD Soundsystem will join the likes of The Arcade Fire, Jay-Z, and Rammstein with a headlining performance at the legendary Madison Square Garden in New York City. Sadly, this landmark concert will also be the band’s last. The show is billed as LCD Soundsystem: The Long Goodbye, a three-hour, career-spanning performance that will feature Murphy with his band of DFA staples—Gavin Russom, Tyler Pope, Nancy Whang, Pat Mahoney, Al Doyle, and Matt Thornley—with an additional choir, string and horn sections, special guests appearing throughout the night, and the iconic Liquid Liquid opening the whole affair. Apparently, LCD Soundsystem and the other performers will be adhering to a strictly black-and-white dress code, and ask that those in attendance do the same. So, if you’ve got a tux or a little black dress handy, go ahead and grab yourself a ticket on February 11, here, and no matter what you’ve got on, you can watch some live clips with anticipation, below.

Belong “Perfect Life”

Though dark, muddled, and vintage-inspired sounds are nothing out of the ordinary at this point, New Orleans’ duo Belong has been mining the depths of such music for about five years now, and is releasing a brand-new LP soon via Chicago label Kranky, too. This cut, called “Perfect Life,” lies just about in the center of the outfit’s forthcoming Common Era album (pictured above), and shines with a murky glow through the layered shadows of distorted synth hooks, distant drum-machine patterns, and dense white noise. It’s like New Order performing its first single from the bottom of the ocean, or a transmission of a band like, say, Cold Cave, broadcast from the opposite end of our galaxy. You can see how the rest of Belong’s record compares when it drops on March 21.

Perfect Life

Disco Legend John Morales to Release ‘M+M Mixes Volume 2’

Disco DJ legend John Morales is prepping Vol. 2 of the M+M Mixes series—a compilation of unreleased disco remixes from Morales and frequent collaborator Sergio Munzibai. The compilation will be released on March 29 and features two discs of material, most of it ’80s-era boogie disco from such familiars as Teddy Pendergrass, WAR, Loleatta Holloway, and Inner Life. Morales will also tour in support of the release, making an appearance at the Winter Music Conference and a select number of TBD dates through out Europe. Take a gander at the album cover and the entire tracklist below.

CD 1
1. Caught Up – Inner Life
2. Hooked On Your Love – Fantastic Aleems
3. The More I Get – Teddy Pendergrass
4. Don’t Give Me Up – Harold Melvin
5. Heartless – Evelyn Thomas
6. Get Down Friday Night – Fantastic Aleems
7. Now Is Tomorrow – Brass Construction
8. Slipping Into Darkness- WAR
9. Young Hearts Run Free – Candi Staton
CD 2
1. Dreamin – Loleatta Holloway
2. The Player – First Choice
3. Dancing Into The Stars – Logg
4. Rio De Janeiro – Gary Criss
5. You And I – Brenda Gooch
6. Magic Bird Of Fire – Salsoul Orchestra
7. If You’re Gonna Love Me – Inner Life
8. My Love Is Free – Double Exposure
9. Make It Last Forever – Inner Life

Video: Phil Manley “FT2 Theme”

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Musician/producer/engineer Phil Manley (of Trans Am, Jonas Reinhardt, and The Fucking Champs fame) recently shared with us the title track from his brand-new LP for Thrill Jockey, called Life Coach, and now we’re treated to a funny video from the San Francisco-based artist. Director Kerry McLaughlin (the woman behind XLR8R TV, Lazer Sword’s “Gucci Sweatshirt” video, and other fine video productions) tells the story of Manley’s alter-ego, a ponytail-sporting, turtleneck-wearing, Bluetooth-using ‘life coach’ who utilizes his headset’s transformative powers for good—and maybe a bit for mischief. Watch as the protagonist traipses about San Francisco, encountering the city’s denizens who aren’t having the best of days, and, subsequently, showing them the way, as a proper life coach should.

Listen to Derrick Carter’s Remix of Hercules & Love Affair

The NYC-based, Andy Butler-fronted, vintage disco- and house-loving ensemble Hercules & Love Affair just unleashed its second LP of such classically inspired music, entitled Blue Songs—the first single of which is a song by the name of “My House.” Given that that tune is so heavily indebted to old-school Chicago house, it’s no surprise at all that one of the godfathers of that scene, Derrick Carter, was commissioned to remix the catchy number. And what the artist crafted is nothing short of what one would expect from such a seasoned DJ/producer; his version of “My House” pulsates deeply with the thick sounds of analog gear and the kind of slick energy his hometown is renowned for. You can take a listen to the thumping, nine-minute remix below, and if you’d like to see Hercules & Love Affair perform its song live, head over to The Guardian. (via Mixmag)

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James Blake James Blake

The buzz about James Blake has been building for well over a year via a series of well-received post-post-dubstep releases on au courant imprints Hemlock, Hessle Audio, and R&S. A professional association with Mount Kimbie, the experimental bass duo with whom he shares some noble qualities—a nerdy-but-cool bravura, pioneering spirit, and youthful ambition—has also aided in his ascent.

Hype for Blake’s self-titled debut full-length accelerated in late 2010 with the release of Blake’s cover of Feist’s “Limit to Your Love,” which charted briefly in the UK. Then, thanks largely to sympathetic critical attention for his initial creative spurt and a growing and increasingly devoted fan base, Blake finished second in the BBC Sound of 2011 poll. At 21, tags like “musical genius” were being tossed around before his career was able to fully set into a solid foundation. That’s not his fault, but pitching expectations too high seldom helps anyone in this business.

At first glance, instrumentally and in terms of its production values, James Blake (the LP) sounds not unlike the James Blake we’ve come to expect. The quirky time signatures that take their cues from urban sources (hip-hop and grime) remain. Chopped-up rhythms and the occasional fat synth twist and tease, before disappearing and leaving only Blake’s voice to bear the weight. It’s a risky decision to develop the project essentially as a cycle of ballads, re-branding the artist as a personality rather than a producer.

That’s a tough sell—a trap, really—one that more seasoned bass artists like Kode9 and Shackleton wisely avoid at all costs. With some music, the fewer windows into the soul, the better. The self can stand in the way of expressing the art, and so it does here.

Having said that, Blake’s voice, which on earlier recordings was smartly cut, edited, and altered with cleverly rendered effects, has impressive range. Other reviewers evoke names like David Sylvian, Antony Hegarty, and Jamie Lidell, and they’re not far off. Let’s add another: Mark Hollis, the former Talk Talk vocalist whose somber 1998 self-titled LP was a brilliant final statement of withdrawal from the fast lane of 1980s synth-pop.

But Blake’s voice and poetry strain to take us anywhere we haven’t already been with more experienced inner-space travelers at the helm. Furthermore, his music has become inexplicably ponderous and static, at times seeming to stop dead in its tracks and not move forward at all.

The saving graces are few. Blake takes what was, to borrow a cutting phrase from Julian Cope, “MOR slop,” and re-makes “Limit to Your Love” into a dark, dirge-like melodrama that seems to fit him hand in glove. He gives it a slow swing using stark piano, some bass wobble and hum, and a funereal drum beat. It’s edgy and good. On “I Mind,” Blake sneaks in tropical bass and drum patterns that help turn a moribund mood at the song’s beginning into a near-celebration as it begins to fade.

“Measurements” and “Unluck” more than hint at Blake’s interest in gospel and soul, though there is something missing here, too. Call it authenticity, or real passion. Call it out for what it is: The kind of genuine detail that is nailed in hundreds of African-American churches every Sunday.

The best track is the haunting “The Wilhelm Scream,” which features Blake at his lyrical best: “I don’t know about my dreams/I don’t know about my love/All that I know is that I’m fallin, fallin, fallin, fallin.” It’s also got a sonic charge to it that fails to materialize on any other song on the LP, giving us that physical and emotional kick in the head we’ve wanted all along.

Listen to James Blake in full here.

Video: Small Black “Photojournalist”

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New York chill-poppers Small Black have sent over this video for their dreamy indie-casio-pop tune, “Photojournalist” (the MP3 for which we posted quite a few months back), from their debut LP, New Chain. The video features a rather abstract storyline that involves a few girls (most likely the same girl at different ages?) buying fruit, opening a locker, applying make-up, and visiting an aquarium. A single symbolic bouquet floating in shallow water and some slick image overlaying leaves this one pretty open to interpretation. We’re leaning towards the coming-of-age-story side of things, but that’s the beauty of ambiguous art—you can make of it what you want. New Chain (which you can read our review of here) is out now on Jagjaguwar. Check the band’s upcoming tour dates on their way to SXSW after the jump.

Small Black Tour Dates:
02/08 Morgantown, WV- 123 Pleasant Street
02/25 Brooklyn, NY- Knitting Factory w/ Sun Airway, Arches
02/26 Haverford, PA- Haverford College- Lunt Basement w/ Liam the Younger
03/10 Chapel Hill, NC- Local 506 w/ Cults, Sun Airway
03/11 Atlanta, GA- Drunken Unicorn w/ Cults, Sun Airway
03/12 Birmingham, AL- Bottletree w/ Cults, Sun Airway
03/13 New Orleans, LA- The Saturn Bar w/ Cults, Toro Y Moi, Sun Airway, Cloud Nothings
03/14 Baton Rouge, LA- Spanish Moon w/ Cults, Sun Airway
03/15 Houston, TX- Fitzgerald’s w/ Cults, Sun Airway
03/16 Austin, TX- South By Southwest
03/17 Austin, TX- South By Southwest
03/18 Austin, TX- South By Southwest
03/19 Austin, TX- South By Southwest

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