Check Out the New Track From Heaps Decent, Produced by A-Trak

There’s a bit of back-story here, so bear with us: Australian music-pushing nonprofit Heaps Decent has been working for over three years with its country’s musically inclined youth, doing its best to provide resources and opportunities to help further the Down Under music scene. In September of last year, A-Trak was in the Aussies’ hood with the Parklife tour, and Heaps Decent snagged the producer to contribute a little of his downtime to the Riverina Juvenile Justice Centre. He spent the day making music with some of the institution’s kids, particularly MC Huz and The Riverina Crew, who all dropped flows, played didgeridoos, and yelped out wild noises for their contribution. Now, after all the hard work and extremely long wait, “Anywhere But Here” is now available for stream and download. Check it out below. (via Heaps Decent)

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Heaps Decent feat MC Huz & The Riverina Crew – Anywhere But Here (Produced by A-Trak) by Heaps Decent

Christian Fennesz, David Daniell, Tony Buck to Release Live Album this August

Austrian ambient soundscape producer Christian Fennesz joined forces with German drummer Tony Buck and Chicago-based experimental composer David Daniell (pictured above) for a collaborative performance at the Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, Tennessee, back in February ’09. The material that was recorded from the live set is being released as an album August 24 on Thrill Jockey. Simply called Knoxville, the forthcoming release features four expansive compositions that incorporate all of the forward-thinking musician’s styles. Check out the cover and tracklist below.

Unüberwindbare Wände
Heat From Light
Antonia
Diamond Mind

Veux “Late Key”

When we stop to think about it, there’s not a whole lot separating the kids of the chillwave scene from those in beat music’s many disparate hubs. Both genres are made up primarily of youngsters creating music inspired by electronic manipulations and the not-so-distant past, and, whether decidedly melodic or not, offer a great deal to the world’s private and public dancefloors. Keeping that in mind, this new project from LA’s Matthewdavid and Atlanta’s Dog Bite, Veux, is less of a surprise. This first taste from the collaboration, “Late Key” (that’s the cover for it up there), is a poignant number that matches loads of twinkling pop-friendly melodies, distant-but-hard-hitting dance beats, massive bass drops, and even a large amount of guitar and vocal work to great effect. We’re not going to try to coin a new genre title for Veux’s marriage of recent production styles. We’ll just call it good.

Late Key

Watch King Midas Sound’s New Video for “Lost”

From King Midas Sound‘s Waiting For You album, “Lost” was given the full music video treatment by filmmaker and band photographer Niall O’Brien. The jazzy, trip-hop-indebted single is paired with rich imagery of singer Roger Robinson aimlessly exploring the low-lit streets of London while interior shots of him staring in the mirror or laying on a bed are slowly faded in and out. Bits of band mates The Bug and Hitomi are also interspersed for good measure, and the resulting short film is as equally elusive and accessible as King Midas Sound (who just wrapped up a performance at Mutek) itself. (via Fact)

Watch Delorean and John Talabot perform “Sunshine”

Barcelona bliss-ravers Delorean are wrapping up another trek through North America this week—don’t worry, they’ll be back again in July—and we’ve been busy watching their every move. (Some might call it “stalking,” but that’s just semantics, right?) Anyways, a new video of the boys surfaced this week on Spanish site Playground and we wanted to share. It captures Delorean in the studio with friend and mystery man John Talabot, and together they cook up an excellent live rendition of Talabot’s epic house groover “Sunshine.” The song was recently reissued with remixes from Delorean and Blondes, and its glorious, sunshine-filled vibes still sound fresh a year later. Watch the video here.

El-P “East River Float”

From his string of self-released instrumental beat tapes, New York hip-hop producer El-P let loose this jam as a heads up for the forthcoming release of his third contribution to the series, Weareallgoingtoburninhellmegamixxx3, set to appear on August 3 via Gold Dust. “East River Float” comes from Volume Two, and actually features a quick vocal guest spot from P’s hypeman, The Mighty Quin, before getting straight down to business with funky basslines, piano and horn samples, along with an old-school, nod-worthy beat. Snag more tunes from El-P’s Weareall series here and here.

04 East River Float

Theo Parrish, King Midas Sound, Demdike Stare Make Mutek 2010 Memories

The first thing that gets your attention at MUTEK, even before you experience the music, is its clockwork efficiency. Drivers, merchandisers, sound and lighting technicians, curators, paid staff and volunteers are all wonderfully in sync. And all incredibly nice. The venues, nearly all central and walkable, are perfectly matched to human-scale Montreal urbanism. The only stage that takes an effort to get to is also the prettiest: the picnic grounds at Parc Jean-Drapeau on Isle Ste-Helene on the St. Lawrence River, accessible by boat, subway, and motorized or pedestrian bridges.

It was there that hundreds danced beneath a huge Alexander Calder sculpture, just down the path from the even more massive Biosphere designed by Buckminster Fuller for the 1967 World Expo. Sweden’s Minilogue was on stage, live-jamming exquisite techno from the word go, as fans arrived from all directions, ducking raindrops in between trees and lovely architecture.

Minilogue

Minilogue is a versatile group on record, moving from acid trance to minimal to ambient with ease. But seeing them perform in this location, with the city’s skyline at their backs, was sublime. They seemed to love it, too, feeding off the energy of the bodies gathering up front. Big ups for playing a crazy version of “My Teenager Gang.”

This was Saturday, which began with a light mist, turned into a downpour, and opened up briefly with blue skies before the rains came again. The following day’s picnic was a washout: the party was moved to the midtown club Metropolis.

Launched in 2000, MUTEK is a five-day festival held in seven locations, which means you can’t see it all. Though it’s not for lack of trying. In one notable instance, I had to choose either Demdike Stare or Actress, both going off at exactly the same time. I picked Demdike Stare—Manchester’s Miles Whittaker and Sean Canty—making its North American debut. The group’s music might be best described as autumnal ambient with elements of post-industrial noise. Whiffs of Basic Channel and Detroit dub techno (think Deepchord/Echospace/Mike Huckaby) lurk just below the surface. The shambolic program started patiently, tumbling forward as it went deeper, swirling with effects, all made coherent by buzzing bassline vibrations. Nasty stuff; all good.

Demdike Stare

King Midas Sound (in another North American premiere) jumped on stage only minutes later. Kevin Martin, appropriately wearing a Sun Ra Research t-shirt, performed in front of a huge mixing board, surrounded by a laptop, controllers, and other gear. Stage right, vocalists Roger Robinson and Hitomi joined him on mics, guitar, and keyboard.

King Midas Sound’s Roger Robinson

The sound was immense, tracks from last year’s stellar Hyperdub full-length Waiting for You making up a large portion of the set. This is hardly a large complaint, but the set worked more like a stage production by The Bug, Martin’s ragga/dancehall project, rather than the more subtle soul-jazz vibe of the newer group. The voices had a tough time cutting through the thickening din, however tasty it was.

King Midas Sound’s Kevin “The Bug” Martin

Ikonika finished the night with a DJ set that started on a UK ravy tip and remained there until I left. She was good, but the job following a live-wire techno animal like Martin is thankless. It’s doubtful anyone can do it.

Other highlights included an improvisational set by the Moritz von Oswald Trio, which featured a dapper von Oswald decked out in a suit, flanked by Max Loderbauer (Sun Electric, nsi) and Sasu Ripatti (a.k.a. Vladislav Delay) on drums. The group borrowed phrases from its 2009 LP, Vertical Ascent, but altered them in a way that made them sound entirely new—more dub jazz than dub techno. It was a cool performance, maybe too cool for a hopped-up closing-night crowd prone to nervous chatter, bursting at the seams, ready to dance.

Theo Parrish

And dance they did from the first drop of Theo Parrish’s needle to the last. It was an amazing performance by a vital DJ-artist in his prime. He played vinyl exclusively, no computers or Serato digital-mapping gear in sight, including records from his own Sound Signature catalog and other Detroit, Chicago, and New Wave hits (never thought “Bed’s Too Big Without You” by The Police would ever sound so good again).

It was a stunning weekend of electronic music and electric people, the best combination there is for a winning series of parties, never mind the damn rain.

**Walter Wasacz’s Nospectacle project also performed at this year’s MUTEK.

Automaton UK Set to Drop EP on Hum + Haw, Alex Smoke Remixes

Glasgow bass/beat experimentalist Automaton UK just signed on his latest tune, “British Steel,” for release via the Hum + Haw label early this July. In addition to the chilly rhythms and barren soundscapes of his title track, Automaton’s new EP includes another original, the playful and distorted “Spilt Milk,” and two separate remixes of “Steel” from producer and H+H label head Alex Smoke, each with their own twisted-but-danceable take on the track. The British Steel EP will be available July 12.

Podcast 143: MJ Cole

Until recently, the name MJ Cole was more or less synonymous with late-’90s/early-’00s UK garage and 2-step, as the man born Matthew Coleman was one of the scene’s progenitors and biggest names. Yet as the bubbling beats and shuffling rhythms fell by the wayside and were eventually swallowed by dubstep’s wobbling swagger, it seemed as though MJ Cole might end up simply another footnote in the annals of electronic music history. But rather than stopping, Cole kept producing and operating his own label, Prolific Recordings, all the while continuing to push his music forward into the future. Nearly a decade later, thanks largely to the rise of UK funky, so-called future garage, and all the other not-quite-dubstep sounds populating UK dancefloors, MJ Cole is once again a cause célèbre and his latest release, the Riddim EP, is being caned alongside the hottest new things from the youngest of young bucks. We asked the veteran producer to put together an exclusive mix for the XLR8R podcast, and he delivered this hard-charging, percussion-heavy set that proves the legend hasn’t lost his touch.

01 Henali “Ave Moog”
02 MJ Cole “Thekla Riddim” (Prolific)
03 Brodinski “Arnold Classics (Egyptrixx mix)” (Grizzly)
04 Sam Tiba “Barbie Weed” (Top Billin)
05 Corneille “Liberation (MJ Cole Dub)” (Universal)
06 Clubzound “Afrika”
07 DJ Zinc “Gimme the Camera” (Bingo)
08 Frenk DJ & Karmin Shiff “Haka Maori”
09 Drop the Lime “Sex Sax (MJ Cole Remix)” (Trouble & Bass)
10 L-Vis 1990 “United Groove (MJ Cole Remix)” (Mad Decent)
11 Dama S “Salon”
12 Primary 1 “Princess (MJ Cole Dub)”
13 Wiley “Electric Boogaloo (Roller Express Mix)” (Back Yard)
14 Rude Kid “Screwdriver”
15 La Roux “Tiger Lily (Rusko DYWHAP Blend)”

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XLR8R_Podcast_MJ_Cole_2010_06_10

Teen Daze “Shine On, You Crazy White Cap”

Seeing as how Vancouver’s latest source of reverb-saturated dance tunes, Teen Daze, isn’t keen on sharing much info outside of his moniker and geographic location, it’s probably pointless to even rhetorically ask what exactly the song title “Shine On, You Crazy White Cap” means. But from what we can gather of the vocals that bubble up high enough over the track’s thick blanket of synth melodies to become somewhat decipherable, the song has something to do with driving to the coastline, maybe the sunrise, and something about shining. Thankfully, the lyrics aren’t so much integral to enjoying the music, which is overwhelming in its expansive sound and entrancing in its simple rhythms.

Teen Daze’s debut full-length, Four More Years, will be released July 23.

Shine On, You Crazy White Cap

Shine On You Crazy White Cap

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