Grant Drops New EP

Grant has dropped a new EP, Grant 002.

Grant 002, a four-tracker, lands on the producer’s label of the same name, on which he debuted in January of this year with Grant 001.

Grant’s identity remains unknown, though we do now that it’s the new alias of a popular musician of a different guise. His new project has brought him much acclaim over recent years, through two LPs and numerous EPs. Most recently he debuted on Lobster Theremin with No Lights, having dropped his sophomore LP with sub-label Mörk in 2016.

Now he returns to his Grant imprint with Grant 002 which features four tracks of “airy, classic, deep-tinged house music.” It mixes up unofficial remixes with classic samples and original material, this time featuring Chris Gray on vocals on the track “Calibrate.”

Tracklisting

A1. Mind Body
A2. Realis
B1. Deceptive Appearance
B2. Calibrate Feat Chris Gray

Grant 002 EP is out now.

Weekly Selections: BPM Festival Portugal, OSCURO 3rd Birthday, Dave Clarke & Francesco Del Garda at Fuse, Ian Pooley & Maayan Nidam at Incognito

This weekend marks the inaugural edition of BPM Festival: Portugal. With over 170 artists confirmed over and more than 20 showcases across four days and nights, attendees will see heavyweight artists from the likes of Art DepartmentJackmasterNastiaPan-Pot, and Seth Troxler play alongside dance music pioneers like Carl Craig and Richie Hawtin, The inaugural European event will also see familiar names like DetlefHectorLauren LaneNathan BaratoNitinRichy Ahmed, and many more who have climbed through the ranks alongside the festival brand over the past decade. Along with several in-house produced events, BPM will see the return of Akbal MusicAll Day I DreamDeeperfectDetroit Love, and Do Not Sit On The Furniture, while XLR8R will host Don’t Be Leftout with Visionquest. Further, the event will see elrowFORM MusicKaluki, Nick Curly presents TRUST, Social Experiment, Numero 00, Paradise, Stereo ProductionsVatos Locos, and Warung hosted by Ibiza Voice. For the full lineup and showcase listings, click here.

Saturday night is a massive one for house and techno lovers across the globe, and with so many great parties to choose from, it can be daunting just to narrow down the options. For those in London, we recommend stopping by OSCURO’s 3rd anniversary party, which is set to take place at the open air venue Studio 338 in Greenwich. Organizers have locked in a stellar cast of minimal house and techno experts to play their birthday extravaganza, with the main attraction being an extended set from SIT–the collaborative project from [a :rpia:r] contributors Vlad Caia and Cristi Cons. With French duo Zendid and Romanian up-and-comer caLLy are also on Saturday’s lineup, this one’s not to be missed. More info and last minute tickets can be found here.

Across the channel in Brussels, renowned nightclub Fuse will host two exclusive showcases across its two rooms, with room one locked in for Dave Clarke’s birthday festivities. The Skint mainstay is set to play an extended set, alongside Fuse resident Pierre and local talent Deg. In room two, Futurepast will host a showcase featuring a headlining slot from the always reliable Francesco Del Garda. Davy from the Futurepast crew and Kontrast Music’s Pjay will also play the showcase. Click here for more info and tickets.

And back here in Los Angeles, veteran LA underground series Incognito will celebrate a decade of warehouse parties on Saturday night. For this very special (and impressive) occasion, Incognito has recruited some top-notch international talent, with house and techno icon Ian Pooley at the top of the bill. Perlon’s Maayan Nidam will also play the event, with support set to be provided by Joz and Incognito resident Gerard Not Gerald. Tickets are moving quickly for the party; get yours here.

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 15

POLAAR #45 w/ SIMBAD & FLORE

L’alimentation Générale – Paris , France

September 15 @ 11:30 am – September 16 @ 5:00 pm

S I R E N S – Sha Sha Kimbo, Dehousy, Promesses & more à L’international

l’International – Select a Country:

September 15 @ 7:00 pm – September 16 @ 5:30 am

Bête Noire – The Black Beast w/ Katie Rex and Dischetto

Lot45 Bushwick – Brooklyn, NY, US

September 15 @ 9:00 pm – September 16 @ 4:00 am

Birgit’s Masquerade

Birgit – Berlin, Germany

September 15 @ 9:00 pm – September 16 @ 10:00 am

Modular Journey w/ Regal at Garden of §

Drugstore – Belgrade, Serbia

September 15 @ 10:00 pm – September 16 @ 6:00 am

1-800 Dinosaur, Joy Orbison + More TBA

Brooklyn Warehouse Party – Brooklyn, NY, US

September 15 @ 10:00 pm – September 16 @ 4:00 am

10 Jahre Renate – Nonstop von Freitag bis Montag

Wilden Renate – Berlin, Germany, Germany

September 15 @ 11:00 pm – September 18 @ 9:00 am

RADION B-side | edit 002 w/ Lauer

RADION Amsterdam – Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands

September 15 @ 11:00 pm – September 16 @ 7:00 am

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 16

Jax Jones on The Roof

Output – Brookyln, NY, US

September 16 @ 2:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Souq Festival Produced by SBCLTR – Nico Stojan, Viken Arman, Sabo, Goldcap and Patrik Khach

Join the community for directions. – Los Angeles, Select a Country:

September 16 @ 4:00 pm – September 17 @ 2:00 am

Sullivan Room 16 Year Anniversary | Circle Line Cruises NYC

Circle Line Sightseeing Cruises at Pier 83 – New York, US

September 16 @ 6:00 pm – 11:00 pm

Aymard * El Hey * FaCIL * Stan Smooth * Cathy à l’International

l’International – Paris, IDF, France

September 16 @ 7:00 pm – September 17 @ 6:00 am

RADION open to close – Dimitri

RADION Amsterdam – Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands

September 16 @ 11:00 pm – September 17 @ 5:00 am

Cyclone & XLR8R: Half Hawaii, Priku, Sammy Dee

Gazgolder Club – Moscow, Russian Federation

September 16 @ 11:55 pm

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 17

718 Sessions Sunday Sept. 17, 2017 Music by Danny Krivit!

Output – Brooklyn, NY, US

September 17 @ 6:00 pm – September 18 @ 4:00 am

Maddjazz Recordings Share a Cut From New EP

This week, Maddjazz Recordings released their second offering, a 10-track album from DJ, producer, and synth enthusiast Henry Keen.

Maddjazz label head Mike Bloom found chanced upon Henry’s music after a long night of online digging, and after several exchanges, the pair agreed a release on Maddjazz was a perfect fit. Outside of the music released under his given name, Henry also makes music as The Room Below, alongside his brother Olly as Soundspecies, and in London-based experimental Gnawa band, Electric Jalaba.

His album for Maddjazz, titled 70’s Baby, is a raw and vibe-filled record that, like the first release on Maddjazz, defies genre boundaries and classifications. Recorded in various locations around inner London, the album continues the spirit and free-form musical policy of the now defunct club Plastic People, fusing a range of up-tempo styles into a feel-good melting pot of swinging grooves.

In support of the release, which can be ordered via the Maddjazz Bandcamp page, you can stream “Connectin'” in full via the player below.

Jordan Rakei Wallflower

When it sprang into being in 1990, Ninja Tune was firmly rooted in eccentric funk, ranging from the jazzy breaks of DJ Food to the zoned-out trip-hop of Funki Porcini—but it’s cast its net ever wider as the years have passed, to the point where it’s now pointless to even try to describe a “Ninja Tune sound.” In just the past few months, the label has released albums that nod towards drifting, textural pop (Bonobo’s Migration), brightly hued synth-house (Bicep’s self-titled LP), parallel-universe techno (Actress’s AZD) and wintry ambience (James Heather’s Stories From Far Away On Piano), just to scratch the surface. Into that sonic stew comes the latest from musical polymath Jordan Rakai, an album that touches so many bases that it’s a bit dizzying.

Wallflower could roughly be described as a left-field soul album, but it’s woven from so many threads that such a broad portrayal hardly does it justice. The New Zealand–born, Australia-bred artist, 25, crams a kaleidoscopic array of influences—jazz, funk, hip-hop, Troubadour material, pop, R&Bm and much more—into the mix, with an elegant, eloquent melodic sense that provides the bed for introspective lyrics, often expressing feelings of yearning and uncertainty. Despite that, there’s an assuredness that runs throughout—the instrumentation, performed with skillful subtlety by Rakai and a coterie of players, is embedded with enough electronic touches give the work an added dimension without overwhelming the songs. Not bad for a guy who just a few years back was sitting in his bedroom, banging away on his MPC.

“Sorceress,” the record’s lead single, provides a good illustration of Wallflower’s sound. Opening with windswept guitar strums, Rakai’s layered, enigmatic vocals tell of a possibly internal battle against dark forces as lilting synths hover above, anchored by loose-limbed drumming that nearly unmoors from the groove at times. Some of the cuts hew close to established tradition: “Nerve” is a shimmering neo-soul cut with a loping rhythm, organ tremolo, soaring strings and harmonizing coos that gives the number a retro feel, while “Clues Blues” spices its slow-burn funk with a tight horn arrangement and spiraling, vibrating accents. Others are a bit more adventurous, a little more audacious. “Eye to Eye,” for instance, alternates between dreamy, wistful sections and lushly angular, almost prog-jazz passages; the backwards-recorded warbles (guitars, perhaps, or synths) that kick off “Chemical Coincidence” lend the track an added dimension, one that’s enhanced by Rakei’s exhortation to “separate from your soul…separate from your mind.”

It’s dense, emotive stuff—and the heaviest emotional weight, on pretty much every tune, is carried by Rakei, both through his lyrics and through his tonality. That’s certainly not a bad thing, as Rakei voice generally steers well clear of clichéd singer-songwriter–preciousness, despite the intimacy of those lyrics; his harmonies and jazz-tinged inflections mesh well with his music, which is sensuous and hugely evocative on its own. Wallflower is a confident, accomplished work, from a preternaturally talented artist who’s not afraid to take risks.

Tracklisting

01. Eye To Eye
02. May
03. Sorceress
04. Nerve
05. Goodbyes
06. Clues Blues
07. Chemical Coincidence
08. Carnation
09. Lucid
10. Hiding Place
11. Wallflower (feat. Kaya Thomas-Dyke)

Wallflower LP is scheduled for September 22 release.

Ableton’s New Microsite Will Teach You the Basics of Making Music

Ableton‘s new interactive website will teach you the basics of making music.

The site dropped a few months ago, featuring lessons in your browser that cover the theory and practice of crafting beats, melodies, basslines, chords, and song structure. Once you’ve completed the lessons, you can export what you’ve made as an Ableton Live Set. The microsite also supports any internet-connected device and is available in English, German, Spanish, French, Japanese, and Italian.

You can check out the site here.

Premiere: Hear a Trippy Techno Cut From Tapefeed

Later this month, Tapefeed—a duo made up of Alessandro Boni and Rick Vayo—will release their new EP, Dawn On The Eclipse, via Metempsychosis Records.

On the EP, Tapefeed deliver three original cuts that touch on Japanese mythology and the tale of storm god Susanoo, retracing “the steps taken by the gods from the darkness, disorder, and dismay created by Susanoo to the lucidity, light, and ultimate return of order as the gleaming Amaterasu (Susanoo’s sister) re-emerges from her cave.” The tracks are deep and twisting, retelling the tale via haunting atmospheres and ritualistic percussion. Alongside the originals is a remix from shadowy techno master Vril—XLR8R recently profiled him in an In The Studio feature—who turns his hand to “Susanoo.”

You can pre-order the release here, with “Amaterasu” streaming in full via the player below.

Watch a Video on Creating Vintage Synth Sounds

For their latest edition of Friday Forum Live, Point Blank‘s Course Developer Dan Herbert demonstrates how to create a range of classic synth sounds in Massive and Reaktor.

In the video, Herbert looks at sounds such as the reece bassline from Ray Keith’s “Renegade Terrorist,” the pads from 808 State’s “Pacific State,” the arp sound from Frankie Knuckles “Your Love,” and the bassline from Mr Fingers’ seminal “Can you Feel It.”

You can watch the video in full via the player above, with more on Point Blank and their courses here.

Peter Fonda ‘RF Acid’

On September 29, Parka Records will return with its third release, Peter Fonda‘s Witches Booty EP.

The EP follows on from outings by Abu Ashley and Milo McBride with four originals and a remix from Phil Moffa. Keeping in line with his Drum Machine Circle and Keep Away From Children parties, Fonda delivers three gritty, acid-tinged cuts full of chunky rhythms and winding synth lines. For his remix, Moffa pairs frenetic percussion and smooth chords for a deep seven-minute ride.

In support of the EP, Fonda has offered up digital exclusive “RF Acid” as today’s XLR8R download, available via WeTransfer below.

You can pre-order the EP here.

RF Acid (Original Mix)

Chams Shares Mind-Bending Cut From New EP

Later this month, Chams will release Lettre d’Amort via Abîme.

The EP will be the debut release for the Paris-based label and is deeply personal release inspired by a solo journey Chams took across the French Alps a few years ago. The journey instilled in Chams a view that the Alps is a place of beauty and fear, and that nature should be admired from a wary distance. Since then, Chams has attempted to capture and translate this into his work, and Lettre d’Amort is the first released piece.

Musically, the EP is a tense-yet-beautiful collection of deconstructed beats that reference all manner of bass styles, grime, and more experimental pastures. Across the six tracks, bright, translucent melodies compete with dark undertones, creating a haunting bed of sonics.

Ahead of the release on September 28, you pre-order the EP here, with “Abimaibeau” streaming in full below.

Review: Touché

Easily one of the more unique MIDI controllers released in recent memory, the Touché brings to the table a host of new ideas for creating and interacting with electronic sounds. The product is the first from French studio Expressive E, and the device can be used to control or extend any number of instruments and their parameters, fitting equally well in the studio as it does on the stage. Because it’s been built for computers and all manner of production hardware, it’s a handy multi-tool for sound creation and modulation.

How it Looks

A tad shy of a foot in length, the Touché is built from wood and high-quality, rubberized plastics. The round, playable wooden surface moves around above the base on a complex hinge system, which lets you move it around using four dimensions of pressure: it tilts and bends both vertically and horizontally, creating an interaction that sits somewhere between a touchscreen, a theremin, and a pedal (but not exactly like any of those things, really).

Below the playable surface is a selection wheel and two buttons, used to configure the device and switch between interaction settings on-the-fly. On the back are a number of ports: USB for connecting to your computer, MIDI I/O for controlling outboard devices, and four CV outputs to connect to a modular setup. It’s worth noting that Touché is Mac-only for the moment; PC compatibility is coming soon. Under the wooden cover are more granular controls, which let you dial in varying levels of force feedback and its degree of lateral movement.

Touché also benefits from having a very small footprint, which lets you throw it in a bag along with whatever gear you’re looking to use it with. In addition to some commonalities in terms of functionality (multi-dimensional touch interfaces), the sophisticated look and feel of rubberized, matte black materials bring to mind Roli’s growing product line.

How it Plays

Touché is extremely well-constructed and feels great to play, harnessing much of the depth of an acoustic instrument for application in the electronic domain. The top panel is extremely sensitive, accommodating everything from a gentle graze to a firm, sustained press. Checking out some of the company’s demo videos is a good way to see exactly what this thing can do; playable with one or two hands, Touché is adept at everything from striking notes to manually modulating time-based changes like filter cutoffs and delay times (or any other parameters you can think of), often simultaneously. It feels very much like an instrument, either as the main focus of the performer or as a modifier for the instrument(s) by its side.

With its four discreet CV controls, Touché feels especially at home next to a modular synth. Rather than being limited to knobs or sliders for manual interaction, Touché provides an interface for “playing” modular parameters that’s unlike anything I’ve tried. You’re able to set up the device ahead of time with custom response curves and sensitivity settings, making it feel deeply integrated with a given patch. And, because it saves these settings to internal memory, you’re able to use it with modular or other outboard gear without a computer anywhere in sight.

Expressive E’s Lié software is used to manage these configurations, and Lié can also function as a host for VST or AU instruments; it comes with a UVI Workstation library with loads of sound patches, and easily integrates with your existing plug-ins. Lié can also be used to easily configure the Touché for hardware synthesizers; pretty much anything with MIDI input will work, and Expressive E has included preset controls for an extensive number of existing synthesizers that continues to grow.

While the options are vast, common uses for Touché include pitch bend, control of filter cutoff and FX mixes, and just about any kind of “sweep” effect. You can also map more than one parameter to a given dimension, letting you perform extreme, dynamic changes with single gestures.


The Bottom Line

Touché is the rare “alternative controller” that’s actually quite easy to integrate into an existing workflow. For piano players, it comfortably sits next to a synthesizer or MIDI keyboard for expressive control of the sound, and for modular users, it’s as easy as patching the outputs to whichever parameters are desired. It’s not cheap, but feels like it earns its cost of entry; for the price of a (nice) synth module, Touché is a forward-thinking device that enables new ways of interacting with your music hardware and software.

Price: $399

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