We’ve been anticipating the release of the first Games EP for a little bit now, and while we still have to wait until November 2 for the whole thing to drop, we’ve got a special preview from the record here. One of the six tracks from the That We Play EP, “Shadows in Bloom” shows the duo of Daniel Lopatin (a.k.a. Oneohtrix Point Never) and Joel Ford (of Tiger City) working with some chopped-up ’80s pop samples, motorik basslines, and eerie synth melodies. We look forward to hearing what Games’ other five tunes bring to the table. (via Altered Zones and Gorilla vs. Bear)
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Following that awesome double a-side 12″ Soul Jazz released for Four Tet and Mala a while back, and after the release of the label’s heavy-hitting Future Bass compilation, leftfield dance tune don Untold will drop his own single. The record comes out on October 11 with his contribution to the Bass compilation, “Fly Girls,” on one side, and a brand-new tune called “Come Follow Me” on the other. We expect another solid helping of next-level post-what-have-you productions from the Hemlock label head when that 12″ drops. You can check out the labels below.
Well, this is a bit different from what we’ve come to expect from the recently Bubblin’-featured artist Canblaster, but we’re into it all the same. French producer Cedric Steffens leans a bit heavy on the original kuduro sound for his remix of “Spark” by J-Wow (of Buraka Som Sistema fame, pictured above), but still manages to squeeze a heavy helping of club-ready house into the mix. But while the beats may change between four-on-the-floor steadiness and a skittering electro-tinged bounce, the thickly layered synths and assorted sound effects remain constant—keeping the listener (read: dancefloor patron) focused among the hectic back and forth. (via Discobelle)
Over on FADER‘s website, you can stream a brand-new song from UK garage-stepper SBTRKT. The tune is called “Step in Shadows” and is the title track from the DJ/producer’s forthcoming EP for Young Turks. All we really know about that release is that it comes out on November 1 and its main cut is pretty sweet. We’ll figure the rest out later, but for now, you can stream SBTRKT’s “Shadows” below.
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Coming soon via Japan’s Endless Flight label are a couple of records paying tribute to pioneering Krautrock trio Moebius, Plank, Neumeier. The band was renowned for its 1983 album Zero Set, which blended the ideas of Krautrock with modern synth sounds and fresh genres of the time, and two of the members, Dieter Moebius and Mani Neumeier, followed that record up 24 years later with a sequel dedicated to the memory of Conny Plank, who died of cancer in 1987, called Zero Set II. From II comes the material reworked for the records to be released via Endless Flight. Minimal-techno icon Ricardo Villalobos takes the album’s opening track, “Mango Solo,” and turns it into a 33-minute opus spread across two sides of vinyl. The other record comes courtesy of Balearic/Kraut/disco experimentalist Prins Thomas (pictured above), who transforms Moebius & Neumeier’s “Jiro” into his own lengthy track split in two parts. Moebius & Neumeier Zero Set II Reconstruct Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 will be released some time next month.
Our former neighbors in Lazer Sword may have left San Francisco for the greener pastures of Los Angeles and Berlin, but we’re not mad at them. SF may already be missing the boys’ future blap, but it’s a safe bet that those dudes are missing burritos even more. A few weeks back, we posted “Batman,” the debut single from the duo’s forthcoming self-titled debut album, which drops on November 2. Now we’re premiering this “Batman” remix from LA duo Nguzunguzu; in their hands, the song has a bit of an ADD feel, starting off as an ominous half-time R&B cut before suddenly jumping into a brief interlude of hyperactive future-house about 2/3 of the way through. It’s all a bit nuts, but that’s how Nguzunguzu rolls, and it’s hard to argue with the results. You can cop the full “Batman” 12″, which also includes a remix from Rustie along with individual efforts from Lazer Sword members Low Limit and Lando Kal, right here.
It’s almost ironic that since the release of his landmark debut album, 2008’s Shedding the Past, German producer Rene Pawlowitz (a.k.a. Shed) has been viewed a savior of modern techno. His music is wildly unpredictable and doesn’t quite mesh with the genre’s obsession with rigid structure and functionalism. Held up as one of the cornerstones of the world-famous Berlin scene, Pawlowitz clashes sharply with the city’s obsession with dark, steely techno and bright tech-house grooves.
Shed’s musical vision is unaffected by the poisonous purism or close-mindedness that so often lurks in local scenes, especially one as long-established as Berlin’s unparalleled techno community. Instead, his music is colored by a distinct and ravenous hunger for the new and unexplored. Reflecting that hunger, Pawlowitz is uncommonly prolific: On top of nearly 20 releases as Shed, Pawlowitz has also made dancefloor-destroying singles as WAX and Equalized, and has explored a dubbier side as STP and Panamax Project.
Pawlowitz has been releasing music since 2003, first on Delsin and his own Soloaction label, the latter of which would eventually yield another label, Subsolo, where Shed’s pan-genre tendencies and excursions outside of techno are front and center. But for his 2008 debut LP, Pawlowitz signed to Ostgut Ton, aligning himself with the resident DJs of Berlin’s legendary Berghain club, who have used the label as their personal playground—and molded it into one of the finest institutions in modern techno, an imprint at the forefront of the more experimental side of Berlin. Still, Pawlowitz’s earliest productions for Soloaction and Delsin sound like something that could only come from Shed, paying homage to classic techno but infused with lifelike percussion and unpredictable breakbeat patterns.
His unique mishmash of styles is influenced by all manner of childhood experiences. First, the radio, and then when he got older, his grandfather. “He was kind of a facility manager in a big location for diverse events,” Pawlowitz informs. “And so I got into music technically during my holidays in Frankfurt as a child. Playing on stages, sitting behind big mixers, watching musicians…”
“44a (Hardwax Forever!)”
Berlin record shop Hard Wax—founded by dub-techno don Moritz von Oswald and currently serving as day-job employer for Marcel Dettmann, among others—proved enormously influential in his move towards techno. “I’ve been buying my records there since 1992. Hard Wax is responsible for my taste in music. My records are sorted in the same way as the assortment in the Hard Wax store!” he exclaims.
In Pawlowitz’s case, history isn’t foremost in his mind. His debut LP, Shedding the Past, um, sheds a bit of light onto the idea. “I was always thinking about the past,” he explains. “And in the meantime, I forgot the today. And to release myself and my music from this kind of depression, I created this; Shed sheds the past.” That first album was a sprawling but cohesive record that effectively swallowed up past techno tropes and spit them out in a glossy, but thoughtful, travelogue through the style’s history.
For all its variety and experimen-tation, it sounded of one mind. His new, second Shed LP, The Traveller, is a deconstruction of the unified sound of his first album, taking it apart and laying out the constituent ingredients in plain view for all to see. The Traveller takes on a much more fragmented feel than the gluey progression of Shedding the Past, though it’s the kind of wonderful fragmentation where every single track impresses in a different way. An album’s album, each of The Traveller‘s tracks is a brief and vibrant vignette, from the epic, near-dubstep crawl of “The Bot” to the sexy slam-and-swell of “44A (Hardwax Forever!)” to the gauzy shoegaze wash of the title track to the sputtering jungle closer, “Leave Things.”
“The Bot”
There’s a fragile cohesion found in these shattered remains: If Shedding the Past was a journey, then The Traveller is an outright circumnavigation of electronic music, with blips of land masses floating by, each with its own unique character. Pawlowitz himself seems to believe it. “This time it was [about] creating a long-player,” he intones. “All the tracks were made for the album. It grew from track to track. I think it’s more contiguous than the first. All but one of the tracks were made in two months.”
That kind of quick genesis shines through in the album’s breakneck pace, less than 50 minutes spanning 14 diverse tracks. The album format is important to Pawlowitz, an affinity that certainly not all dance music producers share or even understand. “An album must be diverse—a techno album as well. Eight straight tracks with an arty-farty intro and outro make no sense to me,” he says. He’s not concerned with how well his albums work on the dancefloor, recognizing that an album is something meant to be listened to personally. “For listening at home, it’s not necessary to have a seven-minute track,” he says matter-of-factly. “My tracks end before you get bored!”
It’s clear that Pawlowitz is no standard techno producer, and he’s perhaps known best for his extensive use of the breakbeat, which dangles and thrashes in a majority of his productions. “There is more space, more groove,” he says. “[The breakbeat] gives me freedom and more possibilities with where the track can end up. When you start with a straight drum, you’re captured in that. Everybody can build a straight drum—that’s not interesting to me.”
But it’s not just his use of the breakbeat that sets him apart from his German peers; it’s also his open love for UK bass music. The UK’s hardcore continuum seems to course through The Traveller, from hardcore to jungle to dubstep, as the tempos dip and rise and time signatures are melted and deformed. Pawlowitz rattles off a list of his favorite producers of the moment—names like Pursuit Grooves, Instra:mental, dBridge, Zomby—and all but one are from the UK. Of course, he resists that style of categorization. “It’s not standardized,” he declares. “Just cool music.”
Amidst all this talk of breaking boundaries and avoiding what he refers to as “standardization,” there’s one thing that Shed unequivocally loves: true techno music, which he calls “Full of energy and vigor/Not yet touched, used, or exploited,” in a memorable spoken-word passage on Shedding the Past. To him, it’s perhaps more of an ideology than an identifiable sound. So would he consider his music “techno”? “Yes,” he answers, emphatically. “It’s electronic—hard beats, deep bass. Always good to have it on a big PA and to dance to. Almost always.”
This fresh cut of lush, low-slung, and dubby rhythms comes to us off the latest EP by London’s Om Unit, entitled The Corridor. DJ Plasticman’s Terrorhythm label dropped that five-song release the day before yesterday, and handed over “Cradle” for us to give to you today. The tune fits somewhere between mellower dubstep, Scuba-style techno, and shuffling beat music, and borrows equally from each genre’s sound palette—slow, bulbous basslines, textural ambiance, and loads of delayed polyrhythms. You can slap any name you like on it, but we’ll just go ahead and call it good electronic music. You can listen to and buy all of The Corridor EP here, including a remix of the title track by Ghostly‘s Shigeto.
Solo artist and longtime keyboardist for Canada’s Cobblestone JazzDanuel Tate will soon follow up his two EPs for the Wagon Repair label with a full-length solo album. Mexican Hotbox is a genre-spanning LP that will be released on November 22. Its 11 songs are said to be full of the elements of jazz, swing, Latin guitars, funk, modern electronics, and a whole lot of dance music. You can check out the artwork and tracklist for Tate’s Mexican Hotbox record before it’s released, below.
01. Mexican Hotbox 02. Big Spender 03. If I Want To 04. Careful Mind 05. OK Then 06. California Can Can 07. Shooting Blanks 08. I’ll Be Your Whatever 09. Cinnamon Sugar 10. Populatio 11. City Kids
It’s an ideal pairing: the dreamy electronics of LA’s Active Child with the airy shoegaze of NY’s School of Seven Bells (pictured above). The two outfits will be sharing wax space on a split 7″ coming out on October 26 courtesy of Lefse, with each artist contributing a remix of the other’s music. Active Child nabs a track off of School of Seven Bells’ latest album, Disconnect From Desire, and strips the song of its synth-propelled driving force, instead giving it a bright swirl of harp and vocal arrangements centered around a slow drum-machine beat. That said, synths still play a large part in this remix of “Heart Is Strange,” and after the mid-point of the song, a warm bass timbre slowly rises into the forefront of the production, giving the rest of the floating sonics something sturdy to hold on to.