BLD Shares a Rave-Infused Techno Weapon From New EP

Next week, BLD will return to BLD Tape Recordings with For Rave Use Only.

The new EP will be the first BLD solo release on the label since 2016’s Sour Cream EP, presenting four rave-infused club weapons full of early ’90s references and mind-bending acid lines. From the frenetic rhythms of the opening cut to the closing track’s deep atmospheres, each of the outings on For Rave Use Only beg to be played a huge soundsystem, preferably one nestled within a gritty warehouse.

Ahead of next week’s release, you can stream “No End” via the player below, with a pre-order available here.

Ask The Experts: Nightmares on Wax

Iconic Warp mainstay George “DJ E.A.S.E.” Evelyn (a.k.a Nightmares on Wax) has answered your questions this month.

Evelyn, who originates from Leeds, England, formed the N.O.W project in 1988 alongside John Halnon and Kevin “Boywonder” Harper. Having seen Halnon remove himself from the project, Harper and Evelyn went on to release their first album, 1991’s A Word of Science: The First and Final Chapter, via Warp Records. The 11-track release followed “Aftermath,” an iconic British chart hit, and was lauded for its blend of hip-hop, soul, and funk. Harper then left the collaboration.

Under Evelyn’s guidance, Nightmares on Wax has gone on to become one of the most iconic names on Warp’s roster—releasing some of the finest downtempo, trip-hop material of the last few decades. Smokers Delight landed in 1995, thrusting him into the limelight and establishing N.O.W’s work on the other side of the Atlantic. It was followed by 1999’s Carboot Soul, which saw Evelyn incorporate more live musicians, and there have since been various EPs and four more LPs—the last of which had landed in 2013 in the shape of Feelin’ Good. As one person comments on Discogs: “He’s delivering one masterpiece after another.”

His most recent release,Shape the Future, NOW’s long-anticipated return—an eighth full-length—landed last week, and is said to capture the marriage of soul, hip-hop, dub, and timeless club sounds that N.O.W. has been perfecting for years. The LP includes the shamanistic vocals of recent single “Back To Nature,” and in particular the arresting voices of Mozez alongside Kanye West collaborator Allan Kingdom, as featured on the brand new cut “Citizen Kane.”

In support of the album, Evelyn has read all the questions you submitted and answered his favourite ones. You can read his responses below.

I want to know about your approach with Quincy Jones for the fantastic “Nights Interlude” and how it worked out. Did you talk to him first or did you produce the song before talking to him?

That’s a funny one because with A Word of Science we didn’t clear any samples. So with Smokers Delight, and “Nights Introlude,”we had to clear the sample and I remember Steve or Rob from Warp actually saying, “So look, the publisher is saying that they need to know why you wanted to sample “Summer in the City,” Quincy wants to find out why you want to sample it.” So I literally had to write a two-page letter to Quincy Jones to get the sample cleared. I wish I still had a copy of the letter. Quincy Jones is a massive mentor and big part of my life. It is an important track in my life. But yeah, I always sample first and clear after.

What gear did you produce Carboot Soul with?

I used an Akai S1000 sampler, a bunch of samples, a bunch of records. And a lot of the sample sounds that we used on that record were created by me and Robin Taylor-Firth, my keyboard player at the time, which were actual real samples of string sections, etc. which is why it has such a unique sound. And there were live musicians including bass, guitar, percussion, keyboards, all recorded on a reel to reel tape machine. So not a ton of equipment, really.

“I was listening to the KLF Chill Out album while tripping on acid (which I’m still blown away by, not just because I was tripping) and it just gave me the idea to make a hip-hop chill-out album that would be a trip and journey.”

How did you make Smokers Delight? Absolute classic

I was listening to the KLF Chill Out album while tripping on acid (which I’m still blown away by, not just because I was tripping!) and it just gave me the idea to make a hip-hop chill-out album that would be a trip and journey. I’d already been sampling a lot anyway. I used to just put lots of loops together on cassette and we used to listen to these cassettes after we DJed at raves when my friends and I were hanging out at the after-hours. And that was all part of the early rave days so chill out had only really just started to surface. It wasn’t really a thing because raving culture was just in its infancy. So was really just born out of the routine of hanging out after raves and listening to these loops. It’s created out of that and my getting lost in the excitement of sampling.

Do you read reviews of your work—and how does criticism affect you?

Probably when I was younger it affected me. Reviews are interesting to me because it is nice to get them but then you can actually read too many of them and sometimes I think it’s good to have a distance otherwise you shift the onus of what you are doing, which is music, to what other people think, and that’s a dangerous territory because you got to stay true to yourself. So I do read them but I don’t get lost in them.

What’s the story behind the Nightmares on Wax alias? Where did it come from?

When I was a bedroom mix DJ back in the 1984 or ’85, my friend told me about this guy John Halnon who had two turntables and he was the first person I knew with two turntables. He had two turntables, a three-cassette deck and a reel to reel. We became friends and we started to do these megamixes together where we’d mix our record collections together and edit these tapes, and his record collection was made up of hip-hop, electro, gothic music, indie, film scores and mine was funk, soul, hip-hop, reggae and electro. This one particular mix we did, John was like, “Ah shit man, this sounds like a nightmare, and I said yeah, “On wax!” So I said we should call ourselves that and he said that sounded a bit negative and I said, “but it could mean to turn out your wildest dreams on vinyl.” And that’s how the name was born.

Looking at the current musical landscape, which artists are you impressed by right now? 

I want to big up a couple of producers I know. Acid Mondays, they’ve been producing music for a while but are starting to get some heat up now and their productions are amazing. They just released a 12” on R&S Records called Universal Rhythm. Also, some guys called Bon Voyage which do some kinda hip-house production that’s really great. And Special Request, my homeboy from Leeds. I think his production is really dope. And stateside I’m gonna go with Illa J because he’s just taking his vocals and production to another level.

Why has house music never reached the great heights of the late ’80s early ’90s?

It depends on what we are calling house. I think the difference with house music in the late ’80s and early ’90s is that we were on a wave of musical revolutions not just with the music but within the scene. The combination of those two things happening, we were in an experience of something that never really happened before which gives it a unique starting point in itself.

When you DJ what do you prefer to use? Vinyl, CDJ, Controller w/ computer or hybrid (a mix of the three)?If you use software what do you use?

I used to DJ on Serato but I prefer to play now on CDJs, Mac 2000s. I didn’t play on CDJs until the Mac 2s came out. And playing on turntables with vinyl. So between those two.

What is your favourite club to play/perform?

That is such a hard question. I’m gonna say Cervantes Ballroom because the actual venue is an old jazz venue from the 1940s and it was the first venue I ever played in Colorado. The energy of the place is incredible and the promoter is amazing and I’ve just had so much love and so many amazing sold out shows there. I wouldn’t say it is my favourite though because that is too hard to choose.

What has been your most surprising gig (venue, city &/or country)?

I went and DJed in the Shetland Islands back in the mid-’90s. It was a last minute request for little to no money but I just thought when else am I gonna go to the Shetland Islands, so I agreed to go. I must have DJed to 75 people at this gig in a village in a church hall that also doubled as a social club. Literally, because the population was about 500 people I’m pretty sure the entire crowd were related to each other. I was there for two or three days because there weren’t many flights in and out of there and it was dark all the time. I didn’t see daylight and there were no trees, but there were loads of ponies. The people were really nice but it kinda felt like being in Twin Peaks. Big up to the Shetland Islands!

“That’s the transition I’ve been making over the years: digging in deeper with these musicians but still using the same mindset I had when sampling records.”

My question is simple: you started by sampling old-school loops from soul and hip-hop, and you’re now searching more and more for live and “organic” music. How did you manage the transition from a little guy with his machines making loops, to a band coordinator? And did you have the idea of making a live show with the band when producing Shape the Future or was it just a logical step to make it live after finishing the project? 

Well, it actually happened with Smokers Delight. I was working with the keyboard player Robin Taylor-Firth. I remember when I delivered the album to Warp, Steve Beckett asked me if I was gonna do it live and I said, “Yes,” and he said, “Well, alright cool and then after I was like, “Oh shit, I better put a band together.” So I put a band together that consisted of a bass player, guitar player, keyboard player, and MC. And we went and toured Smokers Delight. And during that tour, I remember being on stage and thinking, “Shit, I can sample my own musicians,” and that then inspired Carboot Soul which has got more of a live element to it. So I think the live involvement in my music has been evolving over the years and now it has just come to a place of maturity. And through playing with all of these amazing musicians I’ve learned a lot and I’ve become more confident working with musicians. I’ve made it my personal mission to create a perfect marriage between analogue and digital and the analogue part of it to me means the importance of having musicians on your records to get across a different emotion than the digital emotion. That’s the transition I’ve been making over the years: digging in deeper with these musicians but still using the same mindset I had when sampling records.

How do you create that sense of warmth in your production and DJ sets?

Well, first of all, I wouldn’t take full responsibility for the warmth; that comes from the people that made the records. I would say it is because I’m attracted to deep grooves. It’s all about the deep grooves for me when it comes to DJing. It is the same when I go to listen to other DJs, I listen to their groove. It’s not about how many big tunes they play, it is about the journey. So Djing to me should be about the journey.

What is your favorite song of yours?

“Nights Introlude.” I was leaving the studio with Kevin Harper, and I had just worked with Robin Taylor Firth on the first string arrangement for it, and I remember coming home from the studio thinking we just made a baby. And it’s always been a baby and every time it comes on it is still a baby. It’s been a big part of my life.

Blair Sound Design Draws Inspiration from Old Bargain Bin Finds on Lobster Theremin Debut

Blair Sound Design (a.k.a Kyle Lyon) will soon debut on Lobster Theremin.

The four-track release lands after Lyon’s 2017’s Interior Vista LP, and takes inspiration from late ’80s and early ’90s bargain bin finds, as well as “a lifetime spent strapped to Game Boy classic Kirby’s Dream Land.” We’re told that it finds Lyon on “classically chipper yet introspective form, carving a path well trodden but that is unmistakably his own.”

In his own words, the EP follows a loose narrative reflecting the ebb and flow of one’s mental state throughout any given day: where it lies as you wake, go about your day, meditate, stress, and rush about a busy unrecognisable city.

Tracklisting

A1. Startup Tool
A2. RNG Therapy
B1. Silph Scope
B2. Overheated

Console Humidity EP will land on February 16, with clips streaming below.

Cottam ‘Dreaming Of Another Place’

Following Cottam’s acclaimed I Can’t Carry On EP, which marked the inaugural release on FatCat Records’ new electronic sub-label FCR, the highly rated DJ-producer’s new 12” drops on March 16, also via FCR.

“Locked in The Groove” is a groovy, boogie chugger, which powerfully ebbs and flows over nearly 11 minutes, and “Dreaming Of Another Place” is all dark ‘n’ heady eastern atmospherics, whilst “Sample Heavy Dub” is a journey into majestic dub-house.

An avid participant in Preston’s early rave scene, Paul Cottam inevitably pursued DJing, progressing to warm up slots for his techno heroes Surgeon and Regis. Tentative steps into production using Ableton were met with such encouragement that Cottam’s debut releases began to appear.

A set of four untitled, unmarketed, and unpromoted vinyl self-releases created an organic stir with record collectors, attentive journalists, and DJs including Moodyman, Gerd Janson, and Soul Clap. This buzz was helped in part by speculation on his identity but was primarily due to his simple yet effective, flavour-filled, and groovy tracks that blurred the boundaries between re-edits, reworks, and originals, moving between slow-mo chug and more straight-up house, whilst encompassing elements of disco, hip-hop, nu-soul, and afrobeat.

Since then Cottam’s reputation has steadily grown, with vinyl releases for Story, Wolf, Aus, Use Of Weapons, Sound Of Speed, Ruff Draft and Versatile, plus remixes for Pattern Select on Delusions of Grandeur and Last Waltz on Endless Flight.

Tracklisting

01. Locked In The Groove
02. Sample Heavy Dub
03. Dreaming Of Another Place

Ahead of the EP’s March release, you can download “Dreaming Of Another Place” via the WeTransfer button below.

Dreaming Of Another Place

Headless Horseman Returns to 47

Headless Horseman will soon return to 47 for the label’s first 2018 release, 47014. The new solo EP will drop as 12” vinyl and digital download via Tommy Four Seven’s imprint on February 23.

Headless Horseman, a Berlin-based artist, debuted for 47 with various artists on 47006 and was the label’s first full solo-artist EP 47009. 

We’re told that this new four-tracker features “dense techno with individual moods.” “Revelation” is a downbeat lurching machine-giant with repeat climaxes; while “Concussion” is broken and feverish, “with sculpted layers of pressure.” The momentum of “Locust” “drives on the edge of an untravelled path and cannot rest,” and “Gravity” is “subtle and snarling, with a slowly ascending melody.

Tracklisting

A1. Revelation
A2. Concussion.
B1. Locust
B2. Gravity

47014 will land on February 23, with clips streaming below.

Present Perfect Festival Locks in 2018 Plans

Present Perfect Festival has locked in plans for its upcoming 2018 edition, this time taking place from July 27 to 29.

The three-day event, in Russia’s Saint Petersburg, is now running into its fourth edition, having had three years of positive feedback from guests as well as foreign press reviews. The event now returns with a 2018 lineup featuring Nina Kraviz, Blawan, Lena Willikens, and Ron Morelli, to name a few—and with more to be announced.

First artists announcement:

Nina Kraviz (RU)
Ellen Allien (DE)
Hessle Audio (UK): Ben UFO + Pearson Sound + Pangaea
Blawan (UK)
Lena Willikens (DE)
Ron Morelli (US)
Broken English Club – live (UK)

This year’s edition takes place from July 27 to 29 in St Petersberg, Russia, with more information here.

Premiere: Hear a Stunning Cut Made Entirely on a Korg DS-8 by In Bloom

Grand River‘s One Instrument label will launch later this month with One Instrument Volume 01.

The label looks to explore the deep possibilities of musicians instruments, limiting each artist to producing a composition by using only one instrument of their choice. One Instrument Volume01 is the first embodiment of this idea, featuring eight stunning sonic outings by In Bloom, Fabian Kempe’s Korridor project, Serena Butler, Yhdessa (the Dutch-Italian duo formed by Grand River and Enrica Falqui), Yair Elazar Glotman, Fjäder (a.k.a. Ida Matsdotter), Claudio PRC, and Dutch duo Wanderwelle.

In support of the LP release, One Instrument has offered up a full stream of In Bloom’s beautiful and poignant cut “Korg DS-8,” available via the player below.

You can pre-order the release here.

Ty Looks to Upgrade the View of Hip-Hop on New Album

Ty will return in March with his fifth long-player, A Work Of Heart.

Produced predominantly and written by Ty, the release sees the London-based rapper tackle subject matter ranging from Brixton, depression, poverty, racism, family, hip-hop, and the creative process, to philosophical musings on life and even imagined film soundtracks. It features OG Rootz (formerly Durrty Goodz), Tall Black Guy, Wayne Francis from United Vibrations, and the legendary Umar Bin Hassan from The Last Poets.

We’re told that Ty set out to create an album where each beat, sound, and idea was thought-out, then thematically and coherently fused to create what he considers a perfect whole. “I wanted to move away from the hip-hop album approach where a bunch of disparate beats by different producers and different rappers with stock rhymes are strung together,” he explains. “With every guest, every sample, lyric and instrument I thought about whether they suit the themes and mood of the song, then decided what to include accordingly.”

“I want to upgrade the view of hip-hop; rappers need to view their artform as important, which is why I have lyrics like “every rhyme written should be in a museum.” This music should be treated with importance and a lasting high value,” he concludes.

Ty has released four critically acclaimed albums: Awkward, Upwards (Mercury nominated) and Closer on Ninja Tune’s Big Dada imprint, plus Special Kind Of Fool on BBE.He has collaborated with De La Soul, Tony Allen, Roots Manuva, Bahamadia, and Speech from Arrested Development.

The Jazz re:freshed record label has been doing big things since its official inception in 2016 and this is its biggest thing to date.

Tracklisting

01. WorKINGTro
02. Eyes Open
03. Somehow Somewhere Someway
04. Brixton Baby
05. Work Of Heart
06. Marathon
07. No Place To Run
08. You Gave Me
09. Harpers Revenge
10. Folks Say People Say
11. World Of Flaws
12. Raindrops
13. The Raspberry
14. As The Smoke Clears

A Work Of Heart LP will land on March 2 via Jazz re:freshed.

She’s Drunk ‘Heart Burns’

Back in January, She’s Drunk dropped his new EP, Subclubsciously, on Berlin-based label Through My Speakers.

She’s Drunk first emerged on the scene in 2014 with his unique take on club music, melding jersey club, jungle, grime, hip-hop, and dancehall into a future-facing concoction of bass-heavy beats. The new EP follows releases on Liminal Sounds and Through My Speakers, as well as remixes on Infinite Machine and The Astral Plane.

On Subclubsciously, which also features a collaboration with the South African artist Sho Madjozi, She’s Drunk presents his most fully-formed vision with four mind-bending dancefloor cuts.

In support of the release, She’s Drunk has offered up the EP’s closing track, “Heart Burns,” as today’s XLR8R download, available via WeTransfer below.

You can pick up the full EP here.

Heart Burns

Grant Teams Up with Dan Piu on New LP

Grant and Dan Piu will release a new self-titled collaborative album as Theory Of Movement.

Grant, an unidentified producer, has featured a lot on XLR8R over the past 24 months, turning in a podcast and also an extensive Get Familiar interview—all without disclosing his identity. His rise to acclaim has been quite extraordinary, starting in 2014 with several precise, swinging deep house numbers via his own label, The Lauren Bacall. Up next was The Acrobat, a debut LP but one that hinted at someone who had already been deep in the game for years, before Cranks landed in 2016, this time on Mörk, the sub-label of Lobster Theremin.

Releases have continued to land thick and fast, with three more EPs last year and then another solo album, Perception. Up next is another album, this time in collaboration with Dan Piu, the veteran Swiss producer.

A release date remains undisclosed but it will be the second release of Grant’s own Duke’s Distribution. Meanwhile, you can stream clips via the player below.

Tracklisting

A1. She came and went
A2. Away
B1. Beneath Contempt
B2. Gawdess
C1. Out West
C2. Life without fear
D1. Nu Rhythm
D2. The Understanding
E1. From There
E2. Acceptance
F1. Principles
F2. Far Reach

Page 440 of 3781
1 438 439 440 441 442 3,781