The Field “The More That I Do (Foals XIII Remix)”

Though it’s been a little while since we heard anything from Foals, the Oxford, England-based outfit hasn’t been idle. The band is rumored to be working on a follow-up to 2008’s Antidotes, but they’ve ventured into remix land too, reworking this track off The Field‘s sophomore album, Yesterday and Today.

The Field – The More That I Do (Foals Remix)

Mexicans with Guns “Nuts and Bongos (Ninjasonik Remix)”

Mexicans with Guns is an avid remixer of other artists (Faunts, Animal Collective, and XRABIT & DMG$ among them), but for once, he’s getting the remix treatment of his own work. The Nuts and Bongos EP is a single track that appears in six different variations, including an instrumental version and four remixes. Here’s Ninjasonik‘s take on the track.

Nuts and Bongos is out now.

Mexicans with Guns – Nuts and Bongos (Ninjasonik Remix)

Maximo Park Quicken the Heart

When this U.K. neo-post-punk band burst onto the scene with 2005’s A Certain Trigger, the band’s workmanlike spirit—not to mention its Fall- and Wire-esque songwriting—was quickly embraced on both sides of the Atlantic. The band’s presence on Warp—certainly worth some cred points—was always unusual, but with the release of Maximo Park’s third album, Quicken the Heart, it has become downright confusing. The Newcastle lads have all but abandoned their post-punk inklings in favor of tepid, would-be stadium rock colored by synth flourishes and paint-by-numbers pop melodies. Perhaps this is a clever play to win the hearts of folks who find Franz Ferdinand a little too edgy, but this is a major creative step backwards.

Four Tet Does Something Brilliant

Kieran Hebden, a.k.a. Four Tet, talks inspiration, collaboration and evolution.

After making several splashes over the past seven years as Four Tet, Kieran Hebden was looking for something new. Enter respected jazz drummer Steve Reid. Hebden and Reid teamed up for a series of collaborations which revolutionized the way both musicians worked.

Juan MacLean: Past Perfect

A look at some of the defining influences of DFA future-pop whiz The Juan MacLean.

Taking his stage name ?from Juan Atkins, one of the founding fathers of Detroit techno, Juan (a.k.a. John) MacLean has never been shy about revealing his musical tastes and influences. A record geek at heart, the dance punker-turned-future-house purveyor is known to draw liberally from music’s past in the creation of his work as The Juan Maclean. And part of the appeal of his tracks—which, likely informed by his DJ sets, range from epic 12-minute dancefloor burners to shorter, pop-focused cuts—is their knowing admiration of dance music’s canon. He can cop from historic acts like Kraftwerk (see the Ralf und Florian-like ambient synth hums of “In the Afternoon” or the automated Parliament-style funk of “Give Me Every Little Thing” from 2005’s Less Than Human) and make the results sound contemporary and reverential rather than derivative.

For his latest effort, The Future Will Come, MacLean—a former member of Sub Pop synth punks Six Finger Satellite—employed a fresh set of inspirations, and a new recording methodology. Encouraged by his time touring Less Than Human with a live band, he wanted an inclusive-sounding record with more live instrumentation, leading him to bring in musician pals such as Holy Ghost’s Nick Milhiser and Alex Frankel and LCD Soundsystem vocalist Nancy Whang (with whom he does many back-and-forth duets). “I just always think that you make an infinitely better record when you have [other] people contributing,” he explains.

Aesthetically, the album draws heavily upon British synth pop of the late ’70s and early ’80s, an influence that MacLean will be the first to point out. “Nobody at DFA has cared about [revealing their influences] from the very beginning,” he says. “Which is surprising to people, because I think people perceive all of us as these elitist hipster douchebags. But we all just want to make songs that we secretly believe could be played on the radio. We want to make music that people like.”

We asked MacLean to take us through some of the core influences on The Future Will Come and break down the music that inspired some of its standout tracks.

The Human League
“Early on in the making of this record I knew that I really wanted Nancy involved, and not just as a guest vocalist. And at that time I revisited The Human League. In our world, I feel like you’re supposed to say The Human League were great until a certain point, which was when the two girls came along. And in a kneejerk way I went by that. I always listened to the earliest Human League stuff, ‘Being Boiled’ and tracks like that, which are great and have always been a big influence on me.

“But then, thinking about Nancy singing, I put on the Human League record Dare and was so blown away. I realized I hadn’t given it a chance at all; that the production values were really good and that there were still these really interesting sounds. And the hooks were amazing. I also realized for the first time that the girls couldn’t really sing very well, which I never thought of as a kid because I always thought of them as this very professional band. I didn’t realize that they operated in this punk way, with Phil Oakey just finding these two girls in a club and saying, ‘Do you wanna be in my band?’ In that new context, I listened to that record again—even songs like ‘Don’t You Want Me,’ which I had always liked but sort of wrote off as being, like, kitschy, jokey ’80s music—and really fell in love with it all over again. It made a lot of sense to me instantly. I have to admit that I very much referenced it and used it as a template for the album in many ways.”

Giorgio Moroder
“‘The Simple Life’ was sort of my attempt at ‘I Feel Love,’ the Donna Summer/Giorgio Moroder track, which I feel like is untouchable in many ways. But it was a huge influence on that track, mainly with the arpeggiated bass synth line and in the way it’s so stretched out. The idea of having these very melodic, poppy vocals buried in this really heavy dance track also comes from that.”

Grace Jones
“I feel like there’s a big Grace Jones influence on ‘Accusations.’ She was another big influence on this album. That might not come through so overtly, but around the time we were recording I had been listening to a lot of Grace Jones— again—and in this track, musically, I feel like it came through. I guess it’s sort of the most disco and has a little bit of a funk element to it as well.”

Alternative TV
“‘Human Disaster’ is a very odd song on the record, the ballad. It’s sort of an answer to Alternative TV’s ‘Facing Up to the Facts.’ That song is very empty and spare and just has those same piano strikes. And, oddly enough, the Swans record (the first one when Jarboe came along) that has lots of spare instrumentation and piano was also a big influence on this track.”

Dubtribe Sound System
“It’s no secret that I stole the piano part on ‘Happy House’ from Dubtribe Sound System’s ‘Do It Now’—because they stole it. Their song is a combination of three samples, and they had taken it from something else. And those chords are just clichéd house things; they could be a million house tracks. People, for a little while, really liked to send me links to blogs where guys—it’s always dudes—were arguing about it. You know, ‘This song isn’t as good as everyone thinks it is because he stole this from a Dubtribe Sound System song!’ Interestingly, Sunshine, who is one of the members of Dubtribe Sound System, got in touch with me and was so happy about it. We’re going to re-release ‘Happy House’ with some new remixes, and I think I’m going to have him do a remix of it. Kind of like as a ‘Fuck you’ to those people.”

Podcast: Future Perfect with The Juan MacLean
MP3: “One Day (James Curd Remix)”

Ape School Ape School

I thought I knew what I was doing/So I did what I did/Forgive my children,” Ape Schoolmaster Michael Johnson croons on the bleary-eyed number, “Did What I Did.” It’s quite entertaining to hear him not know what exactly he’s doing on his debut indie-pop album—the bass on “In Time You Are” is cranked down low enough to slug his vocals to death. But once our boy stops trying to be a marketable eccentric, he delivers some fine moments, namely the T. Rex-goes-Eno groove of “Deathstomp” and the grandiose orchestrations of “No Shame.” What robs the album of its grace is Johnson’s habit of reducing his Floridian drawl into a slackjawed mumble that gets lost in sloppy mixing. That’s unforgivable, my child.

Spring Loaded

For our April/May issue, editor Vivian Host goes worldwide. She gets down to business with breakbeat-punk statesmen The Prodigy on their new record and what it took to get them back in the studio together, and then shoots over to Oslo to check out Scandinavia’s hottest new bands at the By:Larm festival. Meanwhile, her XLR8R comrades check in with Omar S, Rye Rye, Tim Exile, Dam-Funk, and Terre Thaemlitz. It’s a music obsessive’s dream come true.

Free Live Recording from Vladislav Delay

Last month, a rare goodie appeared over at the newly revamped MUTEK site, in the form of a live mix by Vladislav Delay recorded in the year 2000. Back then he was a relatively up-and-coming producer whose first recordings were surfacing on labels like Chain Reaction and Mille Plateaux. Download this little sliver of dance music history here for free.

Photo by Ari-Pekka Auvinen.

Sally Shapiro “Miracle”

Sally Shapiro has finally unveiled the first single off her forthcoming follow-up to 2007’s Disco Romance. As with previous tracks, her longtime friend and collaborator Johan Agebjörn produced the cut, this time with help from producer Roger Gunnarsson, and Shapiro’s sound is as steeped in ’80s Italo-disco as ever.

“Miracle” will be out June 16.

Sally Shapiro -Miracle

Moderat Plots North American Tour

Moderat (that’s the combined talents of Modeselektor and Apparat) recently reformed after a seven-year hiatus, and with a long-promised self-titled album set for release tomorrow (May 12), the trio now looks to North America for a few tour dates.

These performances won’t simply be three dudes behind laptop screens either. Joining Moderat will be two members of Berlin-based audio/visual group Pfadfinderei, who will synch video with audio across three screens displayed onstage. Those who snag a deluxe copy of the new album will also receive a Pfadfinderei DVD, which should provide a glimpse into what to expect at the live shows.

In other Moderat news, a new single, “Rusty Nails,” will be released on May 25, with remixes by Booka Shade and TRG.

Moderat:
05/19 Seattle, WA – Neumos
05/20 San Francisco, CA – Harriet
05/22 Los Angeles, CA – Paladium
05/23 Denver, CO – Beta
05/24 Boston, MA – Paradise
05/27 Chicago, IL – Bottom Lounge
05/28 Montreal, QC – Metropolis
05/29 Toronto, ON – Circa
05/30 New York, NY – Webster Hall

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