Fever Ray “When I Grow Up (Lissvik Remix)”

Karin Dreijer Andersson’s Fever Ray single, “When I Grow Up,” gets the remix treatment from Studio member Dan Lissvik here. The original is an ominous affair, which he plays up by slowing the tempo to a crawl and letting the static creep in, but the entire thing is offset by the random appearance of some tropical-sounding guitars.

Fever Ray – When I Grow Up (Lissvik Remix)

Buraka Som Sistema “Yah! Feat. Petty (The Count & Sinden Remix)”

London-based producers The Count and Sinden remix Buraka Som Sistema‘s kuduro single into an electro-flavored, bass-heavy club banger. The remix originally surfaced last year. We’ve revived it here, in anticipation of the April 7 release date for Black Diamond, BSS’ debut album.

Buraka Som Sistema – Yah! (The Count & Sinden Remix)

Artist to Watch: Little Boots

Who:Little Boots
Location: London, U.K.

When Victoria Hesketh (a.k.a. Little Boots) began posting videos of herself performing tossed-off covers on You Tube, she wasn’t planning to be tabbed as the future of British pop music. With a loudly professed love for ’80s Italo, ’90s R&B, and current electro bangers, her electro-pop offerings like “Meddle” and “Stuck on Repeat” (both produced by Hot Chip’s Joe Goddard) have invaded indie dancefloors, with help from remixers like Fake Blood, Treasure Fingers, Joker, and Toddla T. Her debut album is expected later this year.

Watch: “Stuck on Repeat”

Watch: “Meddle (Bedroom Version)”

Harmonic 313 When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence

Harmonic 313 (a.k.a. U.K. production veteran Mark Pritchard) might not have a three-page Wikipedia entry just yet, but the guy has all the makings of an obsession-worthy producer. When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence is Pritchard’s best work thus far-the clearest summation of 15 years in the beardy breakz game, not to mention a creative leap forward that leaves much of his past behind. Album standout “Quadrant 3” speak ‘n’ spells the concept-Detroit-style hip-hop shuffled up with gamey nostalgia and bus-ride melancholy. Shadows of dubstep appear on “Dirtbox,” and acid flashbacks color the appropriately named “Flaash.” A gratifying dose of Bizarro World rears its head when former Dilla MCs Elzhi and Phat Kat show up on “Battlestar” and it actually works, leaving one hoping that more MCs will try to get on beats like these.

Horace Andy & Ashley Beedle Inspiration Information

Any doubts about venerable reggae legend Horace Andy’s continued relevance can be safely laid to rest by his recent solo album, On Tour, and this latest collaboration with U.K. studio wizard Ashley Beedle. Andy’s voice still sounds well criss—an amazing thing considering that he’s been recording for 40 years. Beedle’s minimal beats aim somewhere between electro and dancehall but fall just a bit short, lacking both roots reggae’s cultural authenticity and dubstep’s futuristic innovation. The set hits its zenith with “The Light,” which mixes Middle-Eastern riddims and Rasta-affirming consciousness, and “Angie,” a flamenco-inflected take on the Rolling Stones classic that suggests an all-covers Andy album could have been both irie and sublime.

Jamie Stewart Adds Dates

Music fans across the pond are obviously as excited about Jamie Stewart’s upcoming solo tour as we are here in North America, as the Xiu Xiu frontman has added an entire European leg, which will keep him occupied through the end of May.

The previously reported tour will feature Stewart on his own, accompanied by an electric guitars, whistles, a loop pedal, and a synth-like creation known as a stylophone. Additionally, Stewart and Xiu Xiu partner-in-crime have masterminded a photo project to go along with the tour, so arrive at performances expecting to have your photo taken.

Dates:
04/02 Greenville, NC – The Spazzatorium
04/03 Norfolk, VA – The Boot
04/04 Richmond, VA – The Triple
04/05 Philadelphia, PA – First Unitarian Church (Two Performances)
04/06 Brooklyn, NY – Monkey Town (Two Performances)
04/07 Durham, NH – The Stafford Room @ University of New Hampshire
04/10 Chicago, IL – Ronny’s Bar
04/11 Grinnell, IA – Gardner Lounge @ Grinnell College
04/14 Seattle, WA – The Vera Project
04/15 Portland, OR – Backspace
04/17 San Francisco, CA – Cafe Du Nord
04/18 Los Angeles, CA – Echo Curio
04/19 Tucson, AZ – Solar Culture
04/21 Austin, TX – Salvage Vanguard Theater
04/24 St. Augustine, FL – Cafe Eleven
04/25 Atlanta, GA – WonderRoot
05/09 Cologne, Germany – King George
05/10 Paris, France – Maroquinerie
05/11 Lyon, France – Grrnd Zero
05/13 Napoli, Italy – Galleria Toledo
05/14 Milano, Italy – La Casa 139
05/15 Ferrara, Italy – Zuni
05/16 – Carpi, Italy – Mattatoio
05/18 Istanbul, Turkey – Arkaoda
05/19 Prague, Czech Republic – A-Studio Rubin
05/20 Berlin, Germany – Privatclub
05/21 Poznan, Poland – Kisielice
05/22 Warsaw, Poland – Powiekszenie
05/24 Brighton, UK – Freebutt
05/25 London, UK – Cargo
05/26 Tilburg, The Netherlands – 013
05/27 Amsterdam, The Netherlands – Paradiso
05/28 Oslo, Norway – Revolver
05/29 Bergen, Norway – Straedet
05/30 Trondheim, Norway – Blaest

Video: Xiu Xiu – “F.T.W.”

Photo by Mathew Scott.

Atlas Sound “Solo, Or The Square”

Deerhunter head honcho Bradford Cox is back with a couple new tracks under his Atlas Sound guise, as part of the ongoing Atlas Sound Virtual 7″ series. We’ve put the reverb-heavy “Solo, or the Square” up here for download, but that, as well as an additional track and lyrics can also be downloaded over at Cox’s Deerhunter blog.

Atlas Sound – Solo Or The Square

Podcast 78: XLR8R Presents Circlesquare

Anyone not familiar with Berlin-based producer Klimek will be by the end of this mix. His track “True Enemies and False Friends,” which appears on Kompakt Records’ Pop Ambient 2009 compilation, is obviously a piece of music Jeremy Shaw (a.k.a. Circlesquare) has been caning recently. Shaw spliced the track into several excerpts, which he weaves through his exclusive, hour-long mix that, despite the aforementioned track, is not all mellowed-out drone-ambiance. There’s a substantial helping of danceable tracks here, from Konrad Black’s remix of Paul Ritch to Ben Klock’s minimal techno, and, of course, not to be forgotten are the David Bowie and Leonard Cohen cameos, which fit surprisingly well into the mix.

Shaw also includes a track from his Songs About Dancing and Drugs release here. Pick the full album up now from !K7.

Circlesquare:
01 Klimek – “True Enemies and False Friends (Excerpt)”
02 Tones on Tail – “Twist”
03 Klimek – “True Enemies and False Friends (Excerpt)”
04 October – “Invitation”
05 Paul Ritch – “Evil Laff (Konrad Black Remix)”
06 Leonard Cohen – “Who By Fire”
07 Klimek – “True Enemies and False Friends (Excerpt)”
08 Rational Youth – “City of Night”
09 Klimek – “True Enemies and False Friends (Excerpt)”
10 Virtual Boy – “X & Y”
11 Ben Klock – “Subzero”
12 Audio Soul Project – “Reality Check (Vincenzo Remix)”
13 Repeat Repeat – “Homestop Welcome”
14 Folk Implosion – “Raise The Bells”
15 David Bowie – “A New Career In A New Town”
16 Klimek – “True Enemies and False Friends (Excerpt)”
17 Circlesquare – “Stop Taking (So Many)”
18 Klimek – “True Enemies and False Friends (Excerpt)”

Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes or mp3 format. For help, click here.

Download MP3
Download M4A (iTunes enhanced)
Subscribe to Podcast (RSS)

Podcast_Mix_2009_03_19

Red Bull Music Academy Goes to London

The Red Bull Music Academy just wrapped its 10-year anniversary event in Barcelona, Spain, but the organizers of the globetrotting music event/workshop are already gearing up for the next edition, and have announced London as the destination for RBMA 2010.

The multi-day event will take place from February 7 to March 12 of that year, but those dates aren’t as far away as you may think. The application process kicks off on May 11, 2009, so anyone wanting to learn more about music gear and DJing, talk shop about tunes, and guzzle large quantities of the famous energy drink should get those demo CDs—which can be original productions, songs or DJ sets—in the works. Successful applicants will be flown to London at the time of the next RBMA to participate.

More details to follow soon. Here’s a little inspiration to get those demos started.

Pictured: Studio engineer Russ Elevado giving a talk on analog recording at RBMA Barcelona.

Gui Boratto Take My Breath Away

While Germany remains the center of the techno universe, Gui Boratto certainly continues to raise the question about exactly where our attention should be focused. Sure, artists like Villalobos and Luciano have previously planted the techno flag for South America, but it’s the Brazilian Boratto who is doing something truly different from Europe’s entrenched minimal milieu. Take My Breath Away is Boratto’s second album, and it continues to explore the same colorful, joyous sounds that littered his widely acclaimed 2007 debut, Chromophobia.

Opening with the title track, Boratto quickly establishes that he hasn’t grown gun-shy when it comes to making big, sonorous tunes; “Take My Breath Away” features an ebb and flow of pulsing keys over his meticulously crafted beats. That’s followed by “Atomic Soda,” which jacks up the intensity even further with its commanding use of fuzzy, distorted synth sounds during the song’s crescendos. Audion-soundalike “Ballroom” is another stormer, working the low end of the spectrum before giving way to a warped apex that sounds like a fax machine gone haywire. In a time where artists routinely overload their tracks with similarly blown-out tones, it’s incredible to hear how Boratto’s music remains silky-smooth, even when the distortion knob is cranked.

Yet Take My Breath Away is much more than a collection of club bangers. “Colors” switches things up with a skittery breakbeat and a relaxed feel, not to mention wave after wave of shining melody. “Les Enfants” is a playful slice of leftfield electronic pop that eschews steady percussion to focus on the interplay of a dizzying number of precisely edited synth sounds. Album closer “Godet” is a sparse, virtually beatless affair that colors a dabbling piano with the soothing hum of radio fuzz, while “Besides” is a downtempo groover that combines bubbling keys with guitar chords that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on one of New Order’s sunnier efforts.

The album is almost entirely instrumental, save for the stellar “No Turning Back.” With vocals provided by Boratto’s wife, Luciana Villanovia (who previously stepped up to the mic on Chromophobia’s “A Beautiful Life”), the track practically screams “future club anthem.” Boratto employs her vocals in a unique fashion, compartmentalizing them into small, pastoral passages, bookended by some of the album’s heaviest beats and swarming keys that almost act like some sort of guitar solo. This inversion is a refreshing change of pace, as Boratto has managed to flip the usual quiet-build-into-vocal-climax formula on its head.

Take My Breath Away is a vibrant, kaleidoscopic album, one that sounds and feels jubilant, despite its complex production and incredible attention to detail. Nevertheless, critics may note that it’s more of an evolution than a revolution for Boratto, who rarely strays from the blueprint of his past work. Yet in the face of a continuing onslaught of drab, minimal offerings from his colleagues on the other side of the Atlantic, perhaps only minor tinkering was in order. Boratto has staked out his own tract of land within the techno commonwealth—he should be encouraged to keep developing it, especially if the fruit it bears continues to be this sweet.

Page 2746 of 3781
1 2,744 2,745 2,746 2,747 2,748 3,781