Silkie to Release Single Series; New Album Coming in 2011

One of London’s many outstanding dubstep patrons, Silkie, has some pretty big plans in the works leading up to the release of his new sophomore album. Before City Limits Volume 2 is released in early 2011 via Deep Medi, the prolific producer and head of Anti Social Entertainment will drop a series of four two-song singles, entitled City Limits Volume 1.2, City Limits Volume 1.3, etc. Each single will feature new, exclusive music and original artwork representing Silkie’s growth as a producer between his debut and upcoming second album, starting with the release of Volume 1.2 on October 4. You can check out the cover and artwork for that record below.

1. Bass Junkie
2. ’80s Baby

Bubblin’: Canblaster

Who:Canblaster
Where: Douai, France

Cedric Steffens used to compose music for videogames. But after founding the Club Cheval crew in early 2009 with fellow Frenchmen Myd, Sam Tiba, and Panteros666, the 22-year-old DJ and producer set his sights on the club. Citing Basement Jaxx as a major influence, Canblaster’s tunes brim with energy and often take an everything-but-the-kitchen-sink approach, borrowing from old-school rave, classic house, Detroit techno, UK funky, Latin and African rhythms, and whatever else strikes his fancy. Apparently it’s working, as he’s been tapped for remixes by Drop the Lime, Teki Latex, Style of Eye, Rusko, and others, including electronic music legends Underworld, who recruited the entire Club Cheval team to re-work one of their songs. There’s also plenty of original Canblaster music on the way—his debut, the Jetpack EP, came out last month on Sound of Sumo, and will soon be followed by a second EP on the Nightshifters label.

Watch: “Jetpack”

Listen: Jetpack Mixtape

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Tracklist:
Technasia – Sounds of Solar Oscilations
Canblaster – J.A.P.A.N Claps (Ballroom Mix)
The Living Islands – Empire (Sam Tiba remix)
Canblaster – ????? (Forthcoming Nightshifters)
NGUZUNUGUZU – Got U (Canblaster & Berou remix)
Manaré – Blitzkrieg Riddim
Hercules – 7 Ways
Zeppy Zep – Marillon
DJ MikeQ – Diva Work (feat. Sweet Pussy Pauline)
Kingdom – Fogs
Canblaster – JETPACK
The Cheerz – Esta Loca (Myd remix)
The Mike Deliquent Project – Dancehall
Imperial Tiger Orchestra – Djemeregne (Canblaster remix)
Loops of Fury – Rack ’em (Bambounou remix, Canblaster reedit)
Toddla T feat. Wayne Marshall – Sky Surfing (Douster remix)
Lorenzo Vektor – Turn it Up (Canblaster remix)
Four Tet – Sing (Mosca remix)
Deep Chord – Vantage Isle
Canblaster – Thunderdome Got Crunk (Chaos in the CDB Smooth Crunk Edit)

The Sight Below to Tour West Coast with Pantha du Prince, Release New Solo Album

Earlier this year, both Seattle’s curator of sublime ambiance, Rafael Anton Irisarri (a.k.a. The Sight Below, pictured above), and Berlin’s heir to the minimal techno throne, Hendrik Weber (a.k.a. Pantha du Prince), released albums loved by those of us at XLR8R HQ. The two records, It All Falls Apart and Black Noise, respectively, were both rooted in the ideas of entrancing rhythms, thick aural texture, and poignant melodies, among other similarities, so it’s exciting that the two solo producers will take to the road together for a string of live performances. Irisarri and Weber will start off their tour of the West Coast at The Echo in Los Angeles on September 17, before heading north to play Seattle’s Decibel Festival. Before those concerts, you can download “Burn Me From the Inside Out” and “Fervent” by The Sight Below, preview and purchase the new album by Irisarri, The North Bend (out this week on Room 40), and check out all the stops on the tour below.

09.17 Los Angeles, CA @ The Echo
09.18 San Francisco, CA @ The Independent
09.20 Portland, OR @ Holocene
09.21 Vancouver, BC @ Biltmore Cabaret
09.22 Seattle, WA @ Decibel Festival (Pantha Du Prince)
09.23 Seattle, WA @ Decibel Festival (The Sight Below as Rafael Anton Irisarri)

Battle Cats: From the rise of house in the ’80s to today’s juke and footwork scenes, Chicago’s circle keeps expanding

“It’s so fucking hot in here!” is the cry heard from almost everybody in the building. That includes the DJs, the spectators recording video with their iPods, the girlfriends sitting on stray chairs and buckets, and the kids with red plastic cups full of liquor—but rarely from the individuals doing the actual moving. That is, until one of them passes out from exhaustion. It’s Sunday night in the Englewood neighborhood on Chicago’s south side, and I’m fighting through a circle of spectators to get a good view of the action at an event called Da War Zone. And no better time, too, for the dancers to the left of me—The Legends Clique—look like the Voltron of footworkers. They’re comprised of the original members of the legendary Chicago dance crews Wolf Pac and Terra Squad, and the way the scales are tipped tonight, it’s not looking favorable for the opposing team.

For Chicago’s indigenous juke and footwork scene, a sweaty vacant warehouse, a school gymnasium, a rec center, a house party, or an El train platform can serve as a “place of the way,” much like a dojo. And don’t get it twisted—a martial-arts space on 57th and Claremont is where we are right now. But it could be any number of ever-changing locations on the south side. These days, two recurring gatherings take place: Da War Zone, organized by videographer and promoter Wala “Walacam” Williams, and Battle Groundz, started by dancer AG of Terra Squad and the Leaders of the New School crew. On a good night, you’ll find over 200 kids in attendance, and if not, you’ll at least catch a pretty good practice session.

Lite Bulb

Shootings, fights, and lack of usable space might prevent the scene from having a permanent shelter or center, but, still, the city’s footwork culture thrives. Here, kids leave behind street life for a different kind of quarrel—one that involves their feet rather than their hands. The energy involved is not completely unlike that of a fistfight, and someone’s bound to leave the battle feeling a bit wounded. Dancers make up their own routines on the floor, with their shuffling feet following the lower frequencies and their bodies popping to the claps. A good footwork routine, full of “soul trains,” “Pocahontases,” and “ghosts,” will have symmetry—the patterns that happen on the left side are followed through on the right—and gimmicks are frowned upon. And the music that accompanies these events is equally confrontational—like a Jamaican soundclash—pitting DJ versus DJ, dubplate versus dubplate. Tonight, DJs T-Why, Rashad, Earl, Manny, Spinn, Roc, Traxman, and RP Boo provide the soundtrack: A clattering maelstrom of toms, snares, and bass stuttering out of a portable PA, like an extremely pitched-up take on house, techno, Miami bass, and hip-hop all rolling at you at 160 bpm.

It’s debatable what supposed “wave” the juke and footwork scenes are currently in. There was a time when it was relegated to public-access TV, the Bud Billiken Parade and Picnic (an annual African-American gathering in Chicago whose aim is to promote the betterment of the city’s youth), underground battles, and high-school dances. Then there was Dude N Nem’s 2007 “Watch My Feet” video, which blew up on MTV for a sec. And now that teens from the city have begun littering the web with thousands of videos, and juke and footwork tracks are ending up in the crates of London DJs, it’s, well, headed off on another tangent. But you could safely say that the initial seeds were taking root long before most modern footworkers were even conceived.

Lite Bulb

In 1985, the House-O-Matics dance group, home to many pioneering dancers and DJs-to-be, was formed by Ronnie Sloan. They’d battle the likes of U Phi U and House Arrest 2 at local venues like The Warehouse and the Boys and Girls Club. Armando’s “Land of Confusion,” Frankie Knuckles’ “It’s a Cold World,” and later Cajmere’s massive “Percolator” were hugely popular records that influenced the era, as well as anything legendary house DJ Ron Hardy played. “I was going to The Muzic Box in ’87 at 15 years old, and I heard Ron Hardy spin and loved it,” reminisces veteran DJ and producer Traxman (a.k.a. Cornelius Ferguson). “That was the first place I heard ‘Acid Trax.’ He played it like three times. People lost their minds.”

At the same time, Dance Mania Records came on the scene, and would eventually amass a catalog of roughly 300 twelve-inches between 1985 and 2001. Heavier bass, synth- and drum-machine presets, and curse words were abundant, and simplicity played a large role in how the music was made. Most referred to the new sound as “trax,” or “beat trax,” but “ghetto house” became the more prevalent name. Jammin Gerald, Houz Mon, Parris Mitchell, DJ Deeon, DJ Funk, and DJ Slugo all cut their teeth in this era, turning the heads of many East Coast and European DJs. Eventually the word “jukin'” was coined, a phrase used to describe a banging party. “Juke” latched itself onto the later years of the Dance Mania catalog, a movement led by the likes of Gant Man, DJ Puncho, and DJ Greedy.

Deryon Webster

Juke saw some success in the late ’90s and early 2000s, even garnishing major-label singles like Beyonce’s “Check On it” and R Kelly’s “Real Talk” with remixes, but this wasn’t a push in favor of the footworkers. A style of juke with less commercial aim—and more focus on the dance crews—was being kept alive by DJ Clent (“Back Up Off Me”) and DJ PJ (“Chase Me”), both southsiders living in the area of the city known as the Low End. Their drum patterns became more distanced from house music’s origins, and the new sound began to resemble what dance crews are slugging it out to today.

“Like the saying goes, ‘We don’t dance no more. All we do is juke.’ That’s what started killing the parties,” explains westside-born Kavain Space, known to most as RP Boo. On his mantle, there’s a trophy given to him by Wala Williams bearing the words “Creator of Footwork Music,” the other, more twisted substrain of juke. In the last decade, Boo’s drum programming and sample mutilation immensely influenced underground music here, permanently changing the way footwork tracks were made. Armed with a display-model Roland R-70 drum machine and an Akai SO1 sampler, RP would create what he called “concept tracks”—jump-off points that opened the minds of many. These concepts became the first real footwork tracks, stemming from Boo’s involvement with House-O-Matics in the earliest days of the crew’s existence. “I was given an option of either ‘You’re going to dance, or you’re going to spin,’ and I was more into music so I stopped dancing,” he recalls about the time the crew’s founder, Ronnie Sloan, asked him choose his creative direction in life. Newer groups established in the ’90s, such as The Dungeon, Wolf Pac, and Gutter Thugs, needed some fresh material, and RP provided it.

In 1997, RP created “Baby Come On,” a track built from an Ol’ Dirty Bastard vocal sample that repeats itself until it becomes almost unrecognizable. Later songs like “Ice Cream,” “That’s What the Speakers Are For,” and “11-47-99” (a.k.a. “The Godzilla Track”) would continue to turn parties out, causing people to get to so excited and riled up that brawls would break out. He also once left DJ Clent so dumbfounded after dropping a remix of his own track at a party, that it caused him to have an asthma attack. The structure of a modern-day footwork track was changed from then on, with scattered triplets and pulsating bass replacing house music’s four-on-the-floor blueprint.

DJ Rashad

The early 2000s not only marked a time of change in the structure of the music, but the structure of footwork battles as well. “It was about pride back then,” says DJ Rashad (a.k.a. Rashad Harden), a former House-O-Matics and Wolf Pac crew member, and recent signee to England’s Planet Mu Records. “Everything was very organized at the time. When you’d go to a party, when you battle, everyone had their own turn. If you lost, you lost; it wasn’t just about who was the coldest,” he recounts. “Nowadays, people battle and might lose, but still think they won. There were more girls back then, too!”

Along with his colleague DJ Spinn, Rashad ran with the style that RP Boo masterminded, to this day providing footworkers with tracks that even change the dancing itself. “Most people, especially those outside the city, weren’t ready for the footwork sound when it was created—they couldn’t understand it,” says Rashad, who is now a mentor to the younger producers, many of whom have set up in the basement studio of Spinn’s Markham home in the south suburbs to work on tracks.

DJ Spinn

DJ Earl and DJ Manny are just a couple of those kids who you might find there. “I started going to Battle Groundz while I was in Creation [dance crew], and [Prince] Charles would get tracks from people like DJ Solo and Clent for us to hear,” says the 19-year-old DJ Earl (a.k.a. Earl Smith). “I was making footwork tracks at the time, but I couldn’t really get over the curve. I didn’t really know what a good track was supposed to sound like, but I had a passion for music. I asked Rashad if they were willing to recruit me, and when they did they taught me almost everything.”

It’s that cross-generational, cross-cultural pollination that is proving to be what the future holds in store for this music. Since Farley “Jackmaster” Funk’s “Love Can’t Turn Around” charted #10 on the UK charts in 1986, transatlantic conversation about electronic dance music has been flourishing. As an extension of that back-and-forth, the venerable experimental label Planet Mu recently signed three artists from the Chicago scene: DJ Roc, for his album, The Crack Capone; DJ Rashad’s Itz Not Rite EP; and one of the scene’s biggest UK exports, DJ Nate, who released his “Hatas Our Motivation” single and Da Track Genious LP on the label. Mike Paradinas (a.k.a. ?-Ziq, and owner of Planet Mu) first discovered footwork on YouTube, through a coworker. “I was really into Nate’s sound,” he says, “which seemed (and still seems) very removed from the rest of the scene. He has this very odd sense of rhythm, and his percussion seems more influenced by hip-hop/crunk than Chicago house, which I don’t hear in a lot of other footwork tracks.” Three or four years ago, Nate (a.k.a. Nathan Clark) and a few other young producers, like DJ Elmoe and DJ Yung Tellum, began uploading their tracks onto the web, exposing the more broken, twisted side of juke to the masses. On the ground in Chicago, these artists had minimal impact, existing as part of a digital underground seemingly removed from the actual physical juke and footwork scenes, but their music undoubtedly turned the heads of many overseas and on the ‘net. As a result, folks that were generally off the trail of juke’s evolution were all of a sudden name-dropping Nate, tastemaker sites like 20jazzfunkgreats and writers such as The New Yorker’s Sasha Frere-Jones began blogging about his music, and Nate’s tracks started showing up in mixes by everyone from Salem to UK funky/bass DJs.

Regardless of what strain of juke has been doing the influencing, you need only listen to Addison Groove’s dubstep-tempo footwork track “Footcrab,” Girl Unit’s “I.R.L.,” and French juke enthusiasts DJ Hilti and Kaptain Cadillac to find the connections between Chicago and the dance music coming from across the pond. With more transatlantic touring going on, there’s hope for even stronger bonds to be made. “We’ve been collecting and playing this stuff for ages!” says DJ/producer Bok Bok (a.k.a. Alex Sushon, of London’s Night Slugs crew). “It just fits into the greater whole for us. Chicago makes sense as one of the global hubs for ghetto innovation.”

It’s now 11 p.m., and Da War Zone is shutting down. What goes down inside the circle tends to stay there, and while a few salty losers may have stormed out in defeat, the community remains one of the healthiest outlets available to both young and old residents of Chicago. “I’ve been on the wrong side of the tracks before, and because of footworking, I’m a much more positive person today,” explains Lite Bulb, a passionate 20-year-old footworker and member of the Terra Squad, with seven years under his dancing belt. He just lost his friend and teammate Miah to gun violence a few weeks back, so he relies on the scene’s community for support. “They are my lifetime brothers,” he says. “I’m their baby brother, they brought me up.” It’s obvious that his, and many others’, evolution in this scene is as natural as anything else. “I love footworking, it’s second nature to me,” he continues. “I do it when I’m sleeping, I do it when I wake up. I do it when I’m at work, and at school. The money part—I don’t really care about making money from footworking. I do what I do for the love.”

The music creeps to a silent halt, everyone is shooed out the door, and people are dismantling the soundsystem. These 200 or so kids just took in a piece of footwork history 10 minutes ago, the first time the entire Legends Clique had danced together in battle—and anyone with the cajones to face ’em are now licking their wounds. It’s a massacre like I’ve never seen before, but everyone walks away with limbs intact. Outside, everyone crowds around parked cars, socializing and smoking blunts like nothing even happened.

Listen to DJ Rashad’s exclusive podcast here.

Daedelus “Fates Say”

This fresh new tune from LA beat scene icon Daedelus not only turns the Men Without Hats classic “Safety Dance” into a quasi-anagram for its title, but also seems to sample a few other bits of the ’80s hit. Along with the female voice spelling out nothing in particular, producer Alfred Darlington tosses in a snippet of the original’s bassline and some huge vintage-sounding claps with his own staccato synth melody and herky-jerky percussion. Catch this track on vinyl, with five others by Daedelus and four from fellow LA beatsmith Teebs, when Dublin’s All City label drops its sixth installment of the ongoing LA 10″ series later this month.

Fates Say

Stream the New Album from El Guincho

Next week, Barcelona pop wizard El Guincho (a.k.a. Pablo Díaz-Reixa) will be unveiling his sophomore full-length, Pop Negro, on the Young Turks label. While his 2008 debut, Alegranza!, found Díaz-Reixa liberally sampling vintage tropicalia and Latin music, this time around he’s crafting his own sounds, but his penchant for pop songwriting hasn’t suffered in the least. Look for an in-depth conversation with El Guincho to appear on XLR8R in the weeks ahead, but in the meantime, Pop Negro will be streaming right here for the next two weeks.

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Lamin Fofana “Dance In Yr Blood”

It was a long journey for producer Lamin Fofana from his West African birthplace of Guinea to Sierra Leone to his current residence in Harlem, New York—an experience which no doubt left an indelible mark on him personally, and subsequently, on his music. And yet, listening to “Dance In Yr Blood”—the first song from Matt Shadetek’s XLR8R podcast and the last track on Fofana’s forthcoming debut EP, What Elijah Said—is far more reminiscent of traversing the techno and bass music hotbeds of Europe than traveling across the African continent before winding up overseas in America. The slamming kick drum, the pulse of the bass tone, the wafting vocal samples, and the various warped sound effects all push a strangely subdued and late-night club vibe on “Blood,” and make for a rather disconcerting finale to Fofana’s debut. It all starts to make sense after reading this quote offered by the producer (and borrowed from the New York Times’ 1975 obituary for Nation of Islam founder Elijah Muhammad) to describe his music: “Yet, he would refer to the Mother Plane, a mysterious space ship with superior beings, giant black gods or something like that, that patrolled the universe, keeping an eye on the devil and ready to rescue Black Muslims from Armageddon.

What Elijah Said will be released on September 21 via Dutty Artz.

Dance In Yr Blood

Dance In Yr Blood

The Orb and Youth Compile Three-Disc WAU! Mr. Modo Compilation

Looks like The Orb’s co-founder, Alex Paterson (pictured above, front and center), has been quite busy lately. A while back, the classic mixtape he made alongside Thomas Fehlmann for Coldcut’s radio show back in 1991 was reintroduced to the world, and more recently, Paterson joined forces with Martin Glover (a.k.a. Youth) and Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour on the forthcoming Metallic Spheres album. Now, Paterson and Glover will revisit the days of late-’80s acid-house with a lengthy compilation telling the story of their WAU! Mr. Modo label. Entitled The Orb & Youth Present: Impossible Oddities, the release features classics and rarities from the likes of Insync, Mystic Knights, Indica Allstars, Readymade, Eternity, Uncle 22, and, of course, The Orb. The mix album will packaged along with artwork by The KLF’s Jimmy Cauty, a poster made up of music press cuttings from the ’80s and ’90s, and a bonus third disc featuring a DJ mix of WAU! Mr. Modo tracks by The Orb. You can check out the cover and tracklist before Impossible Oddities is released on November 9.

CD1
1. THE ORB ‘Little Fluffy Clouds’ [Demo Version] **
2. ETERNITY ‘Ashram House’ (Extended Mix)
3. THE ORB ‘Tripping On Sunshine’ (Live Mix)
4. DISCOTEC 2000 ‘Feel This’
5. STP TWENTY THREE ‘Let Jimi Take Over’ (Ultramix 1)
6. JOHNSON DEAN FEAT LYNDA LAW – ‘Somebody Somewhere’(Black Country Mix)
7. UNCLE 22 – ‘LOVE’
8. PARADISE X ‘2 Much’ (Out Of This World Mix)
9. DELKOM ‘Superjack’ (Orbital Infusion 2000)
10. SUN ELECTRIC ‘O’Locco’ (Orbital Therapy Part 1)
11. INDICA ALL STARS ‘Open Our Eyes’ (Original)
12. INDICA ALL STARS ‘Open Our Eyes’ (New Style Version)
13. MYSTIC KNIGHTS ‘Filo Funk’

CD2
1. ZOE ‘Sunshine On A Rainy Day’ [Reformation version] **
2. BLOWFLY ‘Work Your Body’ (Work Your Body Mix)
3. ETERNITY ‘Blackcurrant’
4. INSYNC ‘Reflection’
5. READYMADE ‘See Saw’ (Victor)
6. STP TWENTY THREE ‘Some Lovin’ (Just A Beat) (Massive Mix)
7. UNCLE 22 ‘Sulpher Salsa’
8. LYNDSEY HOLLODAY ‘Feel The Love’
9. INSYNC ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ (Original Mix)
10. MYSTIC KNIGHTS ‘The Wrath Of Khan’ (Long Play Mix)
11. UNCLE 22 ‘Is It House?’
12. SOUND IRITATION ‘Seventh Seal’

CD 3
1. UNCLE 22 ‘The Man From…’
2. SUN ELECTRIC ‘O’Locco’ (Orbital Therapy Part 5)
3. STP TWENTYTHREE ‘Goldfinger’ (Alpine Drive Mix)
4. PARADISE X ‘2 Much’ (Out Of This World Mix)
5. GEORGETTE DELLA ROSA ‘D’ya Wanna’ (Roots Mix)
6. READYMADE ‘Ambient State‘ (Edit)
7. INSYNC ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ (Ambient Mix)
8. MYSTIC KNIGHTS ‘Filo Funk’
9. JAM ON THE MUTHA ‘Hotel California’ (Orbitally Ambient Mix)
10. APPOLO XI ‘Peace’ (In The Middle East)
11. STP TWENTYTHREE ‘I’m Gonna Love You’ (Pablo Style Mix)
12. DELKOM ‘Superjack” (Neutron Infusion 9000)

**PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

Brenmar “Back Beating”

This internet exclusive comes to us courtesy of Brooklyn’s Brenmar and a snippet of what sounds like fellow New Yorker Beyonce. The diva’s sampled voice provides the track with a repetitive—but not tiresome—hook that proclaims the song title over a buoyant house rhythm and bulbous bassline. The meat of “Back Beating” is eventually joined with an elastic lead synth and some melodic stabs, making for a tune that is quite solid in its altogether straightforwardness and not-so-flashy aesthetic. Take this one to the club with you while you wait for Brenmar’s upcoming four-song EP—which includes remixes from Ikonika & Optimum and DJ Rashad—to be released in late October on Discobelle.

Back Beating

Back Beating

Listen to the New EP From ZZK’s Frikstailers

The latest addition to ZZK‘s growing stable of cumbia futurists is Argentina’s Frikstailers (pronounced “freak stylers”). The duo has already put together a mixtape for its new label, and just today, released the four-song Bicho de Luz EP. Frikstailers will soon be heading to North America to kick off a quick tour of the States with label mate El G. You can check out those dates, along with a full preview of the beat-heavy new EP, below.

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Sept. 25 – Chicago, IL @ Smart Bar
Sept. 26 – Austin, TX @ Beauty Bar
Sept. 27 – San Francisco, CA @ Red Devil Lounge
Sept. 28 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Echo
Sept. 29 – Seattle, WA @ Nectar
Oct. 1 – New York, NY @ Coco66
Oct. 2 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Iron City Brewery

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