Isolee Announces European Dates

You likely already know about Rajko “Isolee” Muller‘s new album, Well Spent Youth, which we’ve reviewed here. To support the record, he’s arranged a brief tour of Europe starting next week, with a Japanese date as well. Check them out below, and stay tuned to XLR8R.com in the coming months for our exclusive In the Studio feature with Muller.

Isolee Tour Dates

2/11/ ES / Barcelona / Nitsa / Mini-Mutek
2/12/ TR / Istanbul / Club TBA
2/19/ DE / Leipzig / Distillery
2/26/ AT / Graz / Dom im Berg / Elevate Weekender
3/4/ FR / Paris / Social Club – PAMPA NIGHT
3/11/ SI / Ljubljana / Klub K4
3/26/ BE / Brussels / Libertine Supersport – PAMPA NIGHT
4/16/ IT / Bologna / Link
4/24/ CH / Geneva / Le Zoo / Usine / Electron Festival
5/2/ JP / Tokyo / Womb Club

Podcast 183: Oriol

London producer Oriol sports quite the musical pedigree—the man studied saxophone for four years at the esteemed Berklee College of Music. But even with all that academic training, he couldn’t be stopped from jumping on the computer and trying his hand at beatmaking, an effort that eventually resulted in last year’s stellar debut on Planet Mu, Night and Day. In a way, his music successfully updates ’70s soul and ’80s electro-funk, and that trend continues on his installment of the XLR8R podcast series. We’re told that as a non-DJ, Oriol doesn’t normally assemble proper mixes, but here he’s done an admirable job combining new cuts from the likes of FaltyDL and Jacques Greene along with a few of his own tracks and some vintage selections from jazz legends like Quincy Jones and John Coltrane. It’s a different sort of listening experience than many of our podcasts, but the breezy, soulful sounds within are an appropriate companion to Oriol’s headphone-friendly productions.

01 FaltyDL “Play With My Heart” (Planet Mu)
02 Oriol “Night And Day (Edit)” (Planet Mu)
03 Jacques Greene “The Look” (LuckyMe)
04 Santos “Time Of Our Lives (Atjazz Love Soul Mix)” (Yoruba)
05 Oriol “Untitled”
06 Quincy Jones “Somethin’ Special” (UMG)
07 Funkadelic “Oh I” (Warner Bros)
08 Leon Ware “Don’t Stay Away” (Elektra)
09 Oriol “Fantasy For N” (Planet Mu)
10 Michael Franks “Island Life” (Warner Bros)
11 Oriol “Solar” (Planet Mu)
12 John Coltrane “Wise One” (Impulse)

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XLR8R_Podcast_Oriol_2011_02_01

Com Truise “Innerfacer”

Com Truise: still a horrible name, but, thankfully, a quality producer. Here, the recently signed Ghostly artist shares a free download of a bonus track from his re-released Cyanide Sisters EP. “Innerfacer” is a bit more intense and more heavily indebted to sci-fi soundtracks than, say, the light-hearted synth-pop of his “Slow Peels” tune. A restless synth melody is surrounded by booming, motorik drum-machine beats and woozily floating space noise on the slow-grooving number; the song only strays from this basic recipe during a brief reprieve. Tunesmith Seth Haley is seemingly confident with the immediate catchiness of his bassline, the song’s sole hook, as every other sound he introduces feels like window dressing for its low-frequency core. We hope to hear more of these bedroom-born sounds when Com Truise drops his Ghostly debut—a love story between androids in the vein of Philip K. Dick, called Galactic Melt—in May.

Innerfacer

Innerfacer

Innerfacer

Video: James Blake “The Wilhelm Scream”

Like his slow-brewing music, James Blake‘s new video for “The Wilhelm Scream,” a choice track from his forthcoming self-titled debut LP, is an exercise in soul and subtlety. Watch as the image of Blake’s head and upper torso is washed with color and blurry lens effects, only revealing a clear picture of the artist in portions as the song builds in restrained intensity. Also like the song, the main idea behind this clip repeats itself into oblivion, allowing just slight-but-brilliant changes that gradually appear throughout its near five-minute runtime. A beautifully mesmerizing song paired with beautifully mesmerizing images. What could you ask for? (via Pitchfork)

The Dirtbombs “Bug In the Bassbin (Kyle Hall Remix)”

Okay, let us spell this out for you: The folks at Scion A/V came up with the idea of asking Detroit garage rock outfit The Dirtbombs to cover some classic Detroit techno cuts (read about that here), songs like “Sharevari,” “Good Life,” and Innerzone Orchestra’s “Bug In the Bassbin.” As if that wasn’t enough, they’ve now commissioned Detroit’s new hope for the dancefloor, Kyle Hall (pictured above), to remix that jangly cover joint into a churning dance tune. Like a game of telephone, what comes out on the other side of this somewhat complicated exchange is merely a shadow of Carl Craig’s original track. “Bug In the Bassbin (Kyle Hall Remix)” is a grooving mess of crunchy, distorted, and corroded sounds in the best way possible—the shuffling percussion jumps and skips from ear to ear, the bassline is distant and blown out, and all other noise seems to bubble up from the toxic concoction of Hall’s dirty samples of The Dirtbombs’ cover of Craig’s production. Basically, it’s pure Detroit.

Bug In The Bassbin (Kyle Hall Remix)

Listen to Salva’s Debut LP Over on FACT Now

Just over a week before the release of the debut album by LA-via-SF producer and Frite Nite label boss Salva, entitled Complex Housing, FACT is hosting an exclusive stream of the full-length record. Salva’s 14-song LP—which features 10 original cuts of funky, UK-influenced beat and bass music and four remixes from the likes of Machine Drum and Lando Kal of Lazer Sword—is available to hear in full until it drops on February 8 via the Friends of Friends label. Head over here to catch the magic of Complex Housing.

Worthy “Big Perm (Femme En Fourrure Remix)”

A choice cut from San Francisco producer and Dirtybird acolyte Worthy‘s recently released Big Perm EP, “Big Perm (Femme En Fourrure Remix)” softens the sharp tech-house edges of the original track with a bit of sultry, female vocal work, hypnotic percussion loops, and filtered synth stabs. Still, the rubbery bounce and deep low-end of Worthy’s new single remains perfectly intact, providing the base for every chilly sound effect Helsinki’s Femme En Fourrure (pictured above) see fit to lay atop it. The remix is minimal and austere, to be sure, but eventually reaches its own restrained climax. It’s a perfect counterpart to the rest of Worthy’s boisterous Big Perm EP, which you can listen to in full here.

Big Perm (Femme En Fourrure Remix)

Big Perm (Femme En Fourrure Remix)

Teebs Releases Limited-Edition ‘Ardour B-Sides’ Via My Hollow Drum

Just today, LA-based beatmaker Teebs announced the release of a limited-edition run of handmade CDs, which feature remixes by the producer and b-sides from his debut LP, the lovely Ardour. Over on the website for beat collective My Hollow Drum, you can purchase one (or more) of the 150 discs for $7.00 each, with some extra goodies thrown in for good measure. Also, when Teebs announced the release on his blog, he offered a free download of other rarities that were “never meant to be released.” Download those 10 tracks here, get your copy of Ardour B-Sideshere, and check out an example of the handmade artwork and the CD’s tracklist below.

1. Neck Feathers Daedelus GLK (Teebs Remix)
2. Probably
3. There Is A Difference (Autumn’s Trash)
4. Blessed Assurance
5. Just For You (Flipped Gaby Vocals)
6. Sunrise Remedy (New Love)

Tigerbeat6 Announces Brand-New Download Series, Offers Free Kid606 Track

Bay Area-turned-Berlin-based electronic music hub Tigerbeat6 just announced that a brand-new series of songs will drop “weekly/monthly” for free download on its Soundcloud. Called ¡Ándale!, the string of MP3-only tracks will be available for only a short time until the song is traded out for the next free cut, all of which will culminate in a small, digital release available at the end of each month. Label boss Kid606 kicks off the series with his wobble-heavy “Daylight Bangin'” tune, which we’ve embedded for you below. Down there you can also check out the artwork and full tracklist for the first volume of ¡Ándale!.

1. Kid606 – Daylight Bangin’
2. Cardopusher – Morning Attempts
3. Wascal – Set Up
4. Luke’s Anger – Warble Tone
5. Exillon – Mind War Electro

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Royalty “Don’t Break Me”

Before the release of the self-titled debut from London-based duo Royalty, we are treated to a fresh cut from that EP’s five tracks. Championed by the likes of Dâm-Funk and Rinse FM’s Alexander Nut, the outfit seems destined for big things, and the slick future-funk of “Don’t Break Me” only speaks further to such predictions. Somewhere in between Daft Punk’s robotic revelry, Kraftwerk’s chilly minimalism, and Jimmy Edgar’s austere sex appeal, you’ll find Royalty’s Chesca and Elliot Yorke working out deep low-end melodies, incessant dance rhythms, alien vocoder sounds, and icy synthlines—all of which perfectly create the duo’s retro-futuristic motif. You can catch more of the newcomers’ tunes when the Royalty EP drops on Feburary 24 as the first release from the Five Easy Pieces label.

Don’t Break Me

Don’t Break Me

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