Raime Launch Label with New EP, ‘We Can’t Be That Far From The Beginning’

Joe Andrews and Tom Halstead (a.k.a Raime) have launched their RR label with a new EP, titled We Can’t Be That Far From The Beginning. 



This latest offering follows Am I Using Content Or Is Content Using Me?, which landed earlier this year, and sees the duo “exploring ever further around non-linear sound into something more challenging than they have given us before.” It’s filled with snippets of conversation and shifting narratives that are “at once satisfying and confusing, perhaps a reflection of our bombardment based online culture,” the duo explains. 

Tracklisting

01. In Medias Res 

02. Do I Stutter 

03. See Through Me, I Dare You 

We Can’t Be That Far From The Beginning is available now, with “In Medias Res” streaming below.

Roman Flügel ‘Themes’

Score: 7/10

Roman Flügel is not just a producer with immense pedigree, but one in good form. As well as his hat-trick of stellar LPs on Dial (a partnership that made sense on paper and even more on decent headphones), his EPs from recent years—like 2015’s Sliced Africa and last year’s Black Acid— and remix work—his 10-minute interpretation of Wolfgang Tillmans’ “Source,” for example—have kept him at the very forefront of contemporary house and techno, where he has been for the last 25 years. 

But among his recent EPs, one stands out: the reissued 1995, a collection of three tracks from Flügel’s formative years, which he largely spent dishing out floor-filling acid, techno, and minimal. Whether 1995 amounts to the best Roman Flügel music ever released under his given name (as I would argue) is a different conversation, but coming so shortly before Themes, the producer’s first album on ESP Institute, the EP serves as a reminder of just how much his music has changed since the ‘90s. 

While the club was always a central concern, Flügel’s early music took in endless adventurous styles. Amid the heavenly burbles of Acid Jesus (his band with long-time collaborator Jörn Elling Wuttke) and the racy breakbeatification of Eight Miles High were explorations into jazz, dub, trip-hop, and plenty of stretchy ambient. On Themes, only the latter remains. The club, meanwhile, feels like little more than a distant memory. 

A gradual slowing down is to be expected of a man who will be 50 in less than two years. But with a record sleeve seemingly inspired by an autumn walk, tracks identified by Roman numerals, and a bpm that only twice exceeds 100, Themes suggests an artist who has strayed off the beat(en) track into left field, moving into a cottage and cosying down next to the fire. If his work with Dial was armchair techno, this is rocking-chair techno. If indeed it’s techno at all. 

To say simply that recent Flügel music is a bit soft is not a criticism—far from it. Some of the finest moments on 2016’s All The Right Noises were beatless, Thursday Afternoon-indebted piano compositions, like sleepy opener “Fantasy” and soporific closer “Life Tends To Come And Go.” While the ambient tracks on that LP seemed to reach for the final woozy moments before sleep, Themes’ best moments step over the soft border of consciousness into a dream state. Beguiling time signatures in Themes II” and “VIII” create the effect of a musical spirograph: a rotation of looped patterns overlapping, synchronising and gently falling away from each other with engrossing results. “VIII” is easily the album’s highlight, a mesmeric ambient piece redolent of Toshifumi Hinata and one that would still be enjoyable if it was twice as long. 

A touch of Japan lingers over the whole of Themes’ dreamy second half, during which Flügel all but ditches the percussion. The eerie, spacey tones of “IX” and “X” feel like sleepwalking renditions of Kenji Kawai’s Ghost in the Shell soundtrack. The sombre guitar strings that float in and out of the album’s closing moments echo tracks like “honj” from Ryuichi Sakamoto’s recent album async. From “VIII” onwards, the stretch of ambient that concludes Themes is about as good as anything you’re likely to hear all year. 

All of which makes it hard not to wish Flügel had committed to ambient for the whole thing. A little too often he wanders towards the stodgier, humdrum side of IDM, and even on one occasion into EDM territory, with the unseemly instrumental chorus of “III.” A few other tracks meander curiously without really going anywhere; “I,” “V” and “VI” are slightly too yawny, slightly too much like lift music, or a rejected soundtrack from The Sims

Then there are two moments of murky, beat-driven dance music to remind us why we fell in love with Flügel in the first place. “IV” is ominous, forever threatening something dark and beautiful. At 110bpm it’s unlikely to impact a dancefloor like last year’s “Black Acid,” or better yet “Bibo” (from 1995), but with a remix it could have club potential. Then there’s “VII,” in truth the only club-ready cut on the album. It’s not exactly out of place—rotating key loops are once again paramount—but it’s at least a diversion. On one hand it’s welcome, one of the album’s standouts and up there with Flügel’s devastating best. On the other it betrays an artist not quite able to commit to the kind of conceptually focused album Themes might have been. 

And so the question remains as to what exactly the loveable Frankfurter is trying to do with his latest effort. Themes may become known as his most conceptually experimental album, a return trip into unfamiliar territory, Flügel’s Drukqs. Or it might signal one more step away from ‘90s club hedonism toward stranger, more exploratory realms. Either way, Themes is more interesting than it is enjoyable. Nonetheless, it’s impossible not to be excited for what an artist as interesting as this might do next. 

Tracklisting

01. Theme I 

02. Theme II 

03. Theme III 

04. Theme IV 

05. Theme V 

06. Theme VI 

07. Theme VII 

08. Theme VIII 

09. Theme IX 

10. Theme X 

11. Theme XI 

12. Theme XII 

13. Theme XIII

Themes LP will land on October 26.

Premiere: Hear a Jazzy House Cut From Bristol’s Gallegos

Banoffee Pies Records will release the debut EP from Bristol producer Gallegos on November 9.

Titled Mad As Hell, the EP, which is the eighth release on Banoffee Pies’ main label, delivers four groove-ridden cuts inspired by the current political climate in Britain and the “ever gloomy move out of the EU.” Via a set of breakbeat-influenced house cuts, Gallegos drops shots at the UK’s stormy political climate with swinging drums, searing lyrical samples, and jazz instrumentation that sits comfortably within the genre’s modern UK revival. Once again, Banoffe Pies lands back on our radar with a standout EP, one that signals a new artist to watch in Bristol’s fertile scene.

You can pre-order the EP here, with “England Is A Bitch” streaming in full below.

TANTSUI “Beautiful Day” (Remake)

Early this month, Russian producer TANTSUI released his debut album, Unbound, on NOPASSPORT.

Unbound follows previous releases on Kindisch, Get Physical, and Crosstown Rebels, and a range of lauded live sets around the globe at venues such as Berlin’s Kater Blau and Beirut’s Off & On. On his debut album, TANTSUI delivers 10 superb electronic trips full of alluring moods and immersive sound design. Kicking off with a new version of previous hit “Beautiful Day”—which has received millions of streams since release—the album flows through range of stylistic touchstones, from pensive beat outings (“The Wasted Sun”) to quirky, playful pop-like house (“Chance”) and ethereal deep house (“Say It All”).

In support of the release, which is now on the shelves and can be grabbed here, TANTSUI has offered up the album’s dreamy and nostalgic opening cut, “Beautiful Day” (Remake), as today’s XLR8R download, available via WeTransfer below.

Due to temporary issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the track here.

XL Recordings Announces Debut EP From Powell and Wolfgang Tillmans, Shares Video

XL Recordings will release Spoken By The Other, the debut EP by Powell Tillmans—the collaborative project from Wolfgang Tillmans and Powell—on November 16.

The pair met at the Tate Modern in 2017, where Tillmans was programming a series of performances, and the recording of the six-track EP followed soon after and was recorded in Berlin, London, and Turin, melding Tillman’s vocals with Powell’s production.

Composed with modular synthesizers and digital signal processing, the EP provided a liberating experience for Powell, lifting his own expectations, as he explains: “Recording the EP was almost the process of losing the expectations that might be placed upon myself. People have described it as a vulnerable record, and that transparency and honesty is how I felt making it. It made me feel very out of my comfort zone, but I think working with Wolfgang has pushed me to trust myself more. To feel more.”

Ahead of the release, XL Recordings has shared a taste of the EP in “Feel The Night,” available to stream below.

You can pre-order the EP here.

Soundwalk Collective Returns with ‘Death Must Die’ LP

There’s a new Soundwalk Collective album on the way, titled Death Must Die. 

Soundwalk Collective is a multi-disciplinary audio-visual collective formed of Stephan Crasneanscki, Simone Merli, and Kamran Sadeghi. The collective’s approach to composition combines anthropology, ethnography, non-linear narrative, psycho-geography, the observation of nature, and explorations in recording and synthesis. The source material of their works is always linked to specific locations, natural or artificial, and requires long periods of investigative travel and fieldwork. Their recent projects include a collaboration with Patti Smith and earlier this year reworking the archive of recordings on Jean-Luc Godard’s film set.

Death Must Die is a sound piece that began in 2004 and ended up as a composition for the PS1 radio in NY. The collective will now revise the piece in a “more musical way,” the label, Marionette, explains. 

The piece is based on Crasneanscki’s multiple visits to the sacred Indian city of Varanasi. Determined to capture the city’s elusive reality, Crasneanscki has day by day recorded and re-imagined his understanding of how to perceive the continuously moving stream of the holy Ganga. The composition attempts to emulate the vibration of Kashi that encourages the kind of interiority that enables a person to get a better perspective on reality than one might have, while constantly being in the current of human life.

A photograph shot by Crasneanscki from the great smashan—the great burning ghat of Manikarnika—of a man playing the flute, is printed with a Risograph and included as an insert. Also featured in it are words extracted from the Nasadiya Sukta—also known as the Hymn of Creation, the 129th hymn of the 10th mandala of the Rigveda—that is the ancient Indian collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns concerned with cosmology and the origin of the universe.

Tracklisting

A1. Kingdom of Kashi

A2. Object of Human Pursuit

A3. Garden of Deeds

B1. Tandav

B2. Agni

B3. Hymn of Creation

B4. Shiva Mother Ganges

X1. Hymn of Creation (Alternate Mix)

X2. The Dues of Death

Death Must Die LP will land mid-November. 

XLR8R’s Top 10 Downloads of August

Every day, barring weekends, XLR8R releases at least one track—sometimes two—as a free download via our downloads section. The tracks, which arrive courtesy of esteemed pioneers and rising artists alike, span genres as diverse as the artists that release them—you can regularly find garage, house, beats, ambient, jazz, rap, and everything in between. We then tabulate the stats from previous months and announce the top 10 downloads from that period. Now, the time has come to announce the most popular downloads from the month of August.

Taking the top spot this time around was a rich and melodic remix by Will Oirson of Tunnelvisions’ “Nyiri,” followed by Papilio’s “Balbeck” in a close second. Murder He Wrote, Fa Mao, and Billy Turner rounded out the top five, with further tracks coming from Philip Grass, Rework, and more.

August’s 10 most popular XLR8R downloads have been assembled into a list below and can be grabbed for free by following their respective links. In addition, all 10 tracks have been compiled into one convenient file, which can be downloaded via WeTransfer below.

01. Tunnelvisions “Nyiri” (Will Oirson Remix)

02. Papilio “Balbeck”

03. Murder He Wrote “Air” (Dub)

04. Fa Mao “Injabulo”

05. Arnaud Rebotini “Flowers For Algernon” (Billy Turner’s Purple Iris Mix)

06. AVION “Angel Ruts”

07. Italoboyz “Digger Bick”

08. Marley Carroll “Starlings”

09. Philip Grass “The Warm Up” (ft. Emilie Weibel)

10. Rework “And It’s Fun”

Due to temporary issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the top 10 here.

Anthony Linell (a.k.a Abdulla Rashim) Reveals New Northern Electronics EP

Anthony Linell (a.k.a Abdulla Rashim) will release a new Northern Electronics EP next month, titled Sculpting Energy

The four-track release will be the Swedish producer’s second EP this year, following Alienation from Self; he also released the A Sense of Order album in February. 

We’re told that this latest set of tracks “cruise and drift with their head up,” the label explains. “With a dizzy palette of terse and winding melodies, Sculpting Energy feels like another new avenue for Linell on his unbreakable run of EPs.” 

Tracklisting

A1 / 1. Therme

A2 / 2. Sculpting Energy

B1 / 3. Scattered Across

B2 / 4. Vision of the Imminence

Sculpting Energy EP will land on November 2, with “Therme” streaming below. 

Hyperdub Welcomes Nazar for Debut EP, ‘Enclave’

Nazar will release a debut EP Hyperdub, titled Enclave

The Angolan producer recently had his “Konvoy” track featured in Burial and Kode9’s Fabriclive 100 mix, and completes the EP with five other unreleased works. 

We’re told that the EP sees Nazar explore themes of his country’s “hope, resilience, and pride” in the wake of the 27-year-long Angolan Civil War. After moving back to his motherland from Belgium, where he lived for 14 years, he set about getting to know his origins and aimed to “express [his] frustrations with what [he] seeing on a daily basis” through music. 

Sonically, the EP blends his personal style with the country’s kuduro sounds—”rough kuduro,” as he calls it. 

Tracklisting

01. South Border

02. Warning Shots

03. Airstrike [feat. Shannen SP]

04. Enclave

05. Konvoy

06. Ceasefire

Enclave will land on November 16, with previews below. 

Sidi “Bears Sun Paws”

Deep Heads have shared a new track from Sidi’s upcoming debut EP, Music from the Vaults

Born in Finland in 1996, but raised in Germany, Sidi (a.k.a Andreas Kühn), has been producing music for quite some time now. As a teenager, he studied drums and saxophone and played in several bands. At the age of 16, he became “more serious” about producing electronic music, and it has been his “main artistic outlet ever since.” 

The track is an elegant journey with beautiful sound structures, influenced by electronic musicians such as Burial and Boards of Canada. 

Ahead of the EP’s November 2 release, you can download “Bears Sun Paws” — or here for EU readers due to temporary GDPR restrictions.

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