Luke Vibert, Ancient Methods, Søs Gunver Ryberg, and More Play Krake Festival

Krake Festival has announced its plans for this year’s edition.

Krake is an annual Berlin-based festival for challenging electronic music. Though on an international scale, the event does not have big sponsoring deals or different color area passes; rather, it’s a festival that puts the focus on artists “who dare to step off the beaten tracks and stay true to themselves.”

This summer the festival will take place for the eighth time and will bring a diverse mix of artists from all over the world. The event will start on Monday, July 14 at Silent Green, a beautiful former crematorium in the north of Berlin, which has operated as an art and cultural center for the last two years. Its remarkable octagonal room with a dome on top offers the perfect space to present performances outside of the usual club context and give the audience a unique experience of sounds and visuals.

On Wednesday, those from Lunchmeat Festival in Prague will take over Griessmuehle and present their own night. Besides bringing a well-curated lineup, they will show what they’re best known for: an extraordinary light design concept of precisely crafted levels and degrees of darkness.

Thursday will be a day of rest before Friday at Urban Spree. The organizers will host the legendary Krake Label Boutique there again where Berlin labels and crews can represent themselves in the outside area of Urban Spree, while inside fans can enjoy DIY-synth building and other workshops. For the night, organizers will turn the whole venue into a big showcase of the Berlin scene with showcase slots for some of the labels and their most interesting artists.

The full schedule and lineup and details are as follows:

Monday, July 24: Krake Day 1: Opening
Silent Green. Start: 19:00.

These Hidden Hands (Live A/V)
Anika (Live)
Phurpa (Live)

Wednesday, July 26: Krake Day 2: Krak x Lunchmeat Festival
Griessmuehle. Start: 22:00

SHXCXCHCXSH + PEDRO MAIA (Live A/V)
SØS GUNVER RYBERG + CYCLES (Live A/V)
HRTL + OXOO (live A/V)
CITTY + AELDRYN (Live A/V)
LOFN + GABRIELA PROCHAZKA (Live A/V)
KREDENC
NINA PIXEL
DASH

Friday, July 28: Krake Day 3: Undertown & Label Boutique
Urban Spree. Start: 14.00 Label Boutique; 22.00 Night Event

ADULT (Live)
GROUP A (Live)
BETA EVERS (Live)
KAMIKAZE SPACE PROGRAMME + GESO (Live A/V)
ALIENATA
NEWCLEAR WAVES
MAX DURANTE
IAN MAX MAUCH (Live)
CHRISTIAN GUNTERMANN
EKSERD
MANUEL MÜNSTER
EZURI
MARC ASH
SAMUEL GIEBEN
LUNA VIOLENTA
MISANTROP

LABEL BOUTIQUE feat. the following labels:

47 | And Vinyly | Arboretum | Aufnahme + Wiedergabe | Avian | Beste Modus | Black Sun Records | Blacksilk | Bodyvolt Records | Boidae | Candela Rising | Charmin | Chronicle | CiciTiara | Corresponding Positions | Counterchange | Crimecitydisco | Crossing | DSNT | Death by Rainbow | Discos Atónicos | Enfant Terrible | Escapism | Exterminador Records | Figure | Fine | Fleisch | Flexiwave | Fruit Company | Grafti Tapes | Hands | I/Y | Infrastructure NY | Instruments of Discipline | Jealous God | JTseries | Killekill | Killekill House Trax | Killekill Vanta Series | Kuzurura | Klasse Wrecks | Kynant | Laubenpiepers Finest | Love On The Rocks | Mäander | Magic Power | Mannequin | Mecanica Records | Mechatronica | Midgar | Midnight Shift | Monolith Records | Monosoul | Overdraw | PicNic34 |PoleGroup | Rand Muzik Recordings | Ravage | Readymade Distribution | Ressort Imprint | Schenkelspreizer | Schneiders Laden | Secret Crunch | Shite Music Distribution | Stroboscopic Artefacts | Sonic Groove | Staub | Syncretism | Tanstaaf | Teenage Menopause / Elzo Durt | Terminal Operations | the29nov | Thema | Tie requent | Topic Drift | Tresor | Tropical Goth | UFO Station Recordings | Unknot | User Experience | Varvet | Voitax | WarmUp | Zodiac 44

Saturday, July 19 to Monday, July 31: The Kraken
Griessmuehle. Start: 22:00, end Monday morning.

LUKE VIBERT
ANCIENT METHODS
RADIOACTIVE MAN (Live)
DOT PRODUCT + RENATE KNAUP (Live)
TREPANERINGSRITUALEN (Live)
SUNIL SHARPE
CLOUDS
EMMANUEL
CHARLTON
RHYW
SUBHEAD (Live)
KONDAKTOR
ROMANCE DISASTER (Live)
HOW (Live)
CEM
MCMLXXXV
KATE MILLER
MANNELLA
KIRSTI
RIFTS
TOWLIE
VICTOR
TIGERHEAD
TALLA
CRISTIAN MARRAS
SIGNAL DELUXE (Live)
CINDY LOOPER
URI

ARTS, TALKS & WORKSHOPS

• Bam Bam – Mechanical Sequencer
• Workshops:
– DIY build your own synth with Leaf Audio – DJing
– Digital Production
– Label Management
• Talks:
– Improvisation in electronic music w/ Dot Product & Renate Knaup of Amon Düül II – „What is a DJ?“ w/ Max Durante & Alienata & others
• Artwork exhibition w/ Elzo Durt

More information on and tickets for this year’s edition can be found here.

FAT FAT FAT Festival Reveals Full 2017 Lineup

The Italian electronic music organization Harmonized has announced details surrounding the next edition of FAT FAT FAT Festival, an annual weekend-long event taking place at the Grancia di Sarrocciano site near Corridonia. This year’s edition, which will be FAT FAT FAT’s second, is set to take place between August 4-6.

FAT FAT FAT, which debuted in 2016, aims to combine local electronic music, art, and historic architecture with cutting-edge international acts, all in an effort to combat underrepresentation in electronic music.

The event’s 2017 lineup is shaping up to be the festival’s best yet: headliners include Moodymann, Detroit legend Omar S, and a special DJ set from Nightmares on Wax. Other highlights include sets from Awesome Tapes from Africa, FunkinEven, and a back-to-back set from Berghain / Panorama Bar regular Tama Sumo and Volcov, as well as a live performance from Heist Recordings contributor Mark de Clive-Lowe. FAT FAT FAT’s musical programming will kick off on Friday, August 4 with a special event at Vittorio Emanuele II Square in Morrovalle, featuring a live set from Yussef Kamaal and performances by Fatima & The Eglo Live Band and Raffaele Constantino.

For more information and tickets to FAT FAT FAT Festival’s sequel, click here. You can view the lineup in full above. 

Studio Essentials: Polar Inertia

Polar Inertia is a hazy entity formed in 2010, appearing at first as an electronic music act. Almost nothing is known about the project; even the members and quantity thereof, remain undisclosed. “We are no one because we want to be no one, and to be no one we have to be everywhere and nowhere,” says a recent press release. Beyond the music and the records, the members are also the authors of texts, photographic works, printed artworks, videos and specific live performances for different contexts. All of their releases to date have arrived via Dement3d Records, and in this rare piece of media coverage, those behind the project talk us through their key pieces of studio gear behind their techno sound.

Polar Inertia will be performing alongside Mark Ernestus’ Ndagga Rhythm Force, Kettenkarussel, The Mole and many more key names at Freqs of Nature Festival. This year’s edition takes place from July 5-11 in Niedergörsdorf, Germany, with more information available here.

Cwejman Synthesis Modules VCO2RM / MMF1

We have a nice variety of modular units, from the most classic to the wildest ones—and here we’ll focus on two pretty classic ones: the dual oscillator VCO 2RM and the MMF1 Filter, both made by Cwejman.

The VCO2RM is one of our principal sonic sources, along with two other oscillators that feature quite different characters. VC0-2RM is equipped with seven waveforms, an LFO mode, and sync and waveform outputs are routed to a DC coupled ring modulator. It really fits perfectly in our mixes, and it’s a pleasure to fiddle with it—the perfect VCO, both stable and precise.

Coupled with the MMF1, the most flexible single filter, it’s the pinnacle of synth pleasure. The Multi-Mode Filter offers seven types of functions—it almost feels like a Swiss army knife. It’s always very musical and has elegant and tasty resonances.

JOMOX 888

The grumpy German drum machine, built—and actually sounding—like a tank with the most devastating bass drum on earth. It has got two LFO (Low-Frequency Oscillator) that you can add to your kick, or wherever you like.You also can load your own 8bit drum sounds to the five-sample based bank.

It sounds so powerful and solid that we had to spend a great amount of time trying to control and restrain it, while other drum machines—on the contrary—would have required some enhancements and fattening. Sounds sculptors always prefer come rich and dense raw material to work with.

Jupiter 4—Roland

Another timeless classic.

The first time that the arpeggiator began to run, the synthesizer would not stop playing for many hours. It was a revelation.

Although very basic, it is the most groovy and unique arpeggiator in the history of synthesizers. The VCO single is extremely well-rounded. It has its own soul in the Jupiter family. We use it mostly for pads.

Shermann Filterbank II

The Shermann Filterbank is a strong and flexible analog filter, with lots of character and aggressiveness. Independent low pass, band pass, and high pass filters with resonance, frequency, and ADSR, which can be switched between parallel and serial.

You have to put your knowledge and discipline aside, to concentrate fully on the results. It’s a very peculiar and unpredictable instrument. It’s always standing on the high-end of our modular system, especially for bass treatments and a little dose on the pads, to weave in a bit of warmth and distortion. It’s a real beast.

Ableton Live & Push II

Our production method is a bit atypical in our scene—the computer has a central role in composition, even though all of our sources are analog and we design and compose most of our drum sets ourselves.

We record a lot of long audio tracks—and one of the specificities of our music is that it reveals itself with the edits. The projects end up very heavy, and require a lot of listening time, to sort and select the recorded material. Ableton offers all we need in terms of edit, and the Push affords us complete control over our sequences. Then, at the very end of the process for each of our EPs and episodes, we head towards the studio to make the final analog summing on a Euphonix mixer.

Pact Infernal ‘Circle VI [Heresy] (Pact Infernal Reincarnate)’

After two successful, reputation forming EP’s enigmatic musical entity Pact Infernal have released a debut LP, titled Infernality, for Horo.

Equal parts horror and simmering mysticism, the Pact Infernal sound has collected a base of devoted listeners including musical contemporaries like Lucy,Samuel Kerridge, Trepaneringsritualen, and Oake.

Infernality is an accomplished coming of age for Pact Infernal, a conceptual LP that “brings together the elements that worked so well on both their EP’s into a robust, coherent statement.” It “marks the beginning of another chapter” in the Pact Infernal tale as they undertake their very first live and DJ performances.

To mark the release, you can grab a retouched version of an unreleased track for download via the WeTransfer button below.

Circle VI [Heresy] (Pact Infernal Reincarnate)

The Mole Preps New EP

The Mole will release a new EP on Sound Of Vast, titled Potatoes and Beans.

Colin de la Plante, better known to most as The Mole, has long been one of Canada’s finest purveyors of raw, intricate and often playful electronic music both as a solo artist, and a member of the Modern Deep Left Quartet and Cobblestone Jazz.

His impressive back catalog of material can be found on imprints such as Internasjonal, Berghain/Panorama Bar’s Ostgut Ton, Slices Of Life, and Wagon Repair, among many more.

Tracklisting

01. Potatoes and Beans
02. Lonely Security Man
03. Help
04. 2nd Dominant Lesson

Potatoes and Beans EP is scheduled for September 11 release via Sound Of Vast, with clips available below.

Photo Gallery: FACT Off-Week 2017

June 14: Second State

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June 15: Drumcode

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June 16: Watergate / Warung

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June 17: Figure Nacht

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June 17: Hotflush 

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June 17: All Day I Dream

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Photo Gallery and Review: Terraforma 2017

No more than an hour outside of central Milan sits the weekend adventure of Terraforma. An experiment in sustainability and culturral landscaping, with a delicately balanced attention to programming and sound, set in the 17th century palatial gardens of Villa Arconati.

The festival is a stunning visual treat, and a blessing for the ears, mind, and soul. Now in its third year, this year’s edition featured a wide variety of styles, from the rolling of bass of Mala to the experimental Suzanne Ciani to the leftfield beats of Aurora Halal. In comparison to previous years, this year’s iteration was less techno-orientated, with more leanings to the avant-garde, and softer pallets. It was a space that encouraged you to think while maintaining a steady pace of eclecticism, energy, and love.

CLICK ANY IMAGE TO ENLARGE AND ENTER GALLERY BROWSING

Set in the village of Bollate, 10 kilometers outside of Milan, amid sprawling fields and Tuscan-like countryside, Terraforma is not your traditional festival. It plays on the magnificent settings, building the musical architecture into the physical, allowing the music and culture to precipitate through its surroundings. With three stages, each custom built to match the immediate environment (more on that below), and acts programmed to respect and propagate the different setup, Terraforma tailors to its surroundings and customizes each experience. It’s all part of the greater plan. Not only is the whole event sustainable, but the team worked to leave the premises in a better state than when they found it, leaving something behind to improve the Villa for all those who visit after.

With only three stages, no one act plays at the same time as the other, allowing you the opportunity to witness everything, having to make no compromises. Between each set is a small pause, providing ample time to grab food, or mingle with the small capacity crowd of around 3,000, who more-or-less become family after one day. Everything that has been built can be disassembled and re-used, as part of the sustainable focus. Acts are encouraged to play outside their normal field range; while there are daily workshops, meditation sessions, and yoga classes, of which included an outdoor laughter session with Laraaji, whose warm intimacy brought those who attended closer together.

Spread out in the serene, pristine landscapes, the festival’s three stages are all within walking distance of each other. The main stage—a small, wooden erected dome amongst the trees—hosted the pivotal acts of the weekend, and acted as the vessel for each night’s closing DJ extravaganzas. Aurora Halal and Objekt each respectively played angular, high-energy techno on the Friday; while on Saturday night, Ron Morelli bypassed any obscure tendencies he might have had, with a noisy cacophony, of straight-up, warm-techno.

The sound system, a home-made, self-built array of cabs and woofers had a unique and more rounded sonic aesthetic, perfect for the likes of Wolfgang Voigt’s GAS performance, whose attuned sonics merged with the surrounding foliage. Mala’s music was perfectly designed for the stage also, with a set that included a more off-kilter and broader selection before finishing off with thirty minutes of classics (see “Skeng” and the inevitable “Topper Top”). Next to these, tucked further away into gardens, was the Labyrinth, a performance area set in the middle of a garden, within an omnidirectional sound system, providing a different experience and viewpoint from wherever you were set. The enigmatic Berlin-based performance duo N.M.O. made ample use of the space given, with theatrics and flares, alongside a dynamic live set of electro-space-music. It was synth pioneer Suzanne Ciani who stole the weekend with an evening performance on the Buchla. With an array of microphones littered around the Labyrinth’s many bushes, Ciani plugged the atmosphere in through her set of pulses and rhythms with an added distortion, throwing back the surrounding noise, with added reverb, into the crowd. The feedback then whistled sporadically around the stage like a gust of wind. The overall setting was magical, and when the fuse went 45 minutes into the set, cutting off all the power and ultimately shortening her set, it was as if the moment was one of intention, adding to the dramatic hubris.

The sign of a really great festival is when you discover new talented acts that you want to look up on Soundcloud upon your return home. And Terraforma had its fair share of these. Proceeding Donato Dozzy’s soothing three-hour Saturday morning ambient DJ set was Rome’s finely-styled Rawmance, who provided an extensive selection that journeyed from ambient through to Japanese wave and proto-jungle. The protagonist behind La Beauté Du Négatif—a label the plays home to obscurely selected techno and esoteric sounds—had an adventurous style of mixing, throwing in distortion, and organic background noises, while brazenly playing with the pitch to alter the ambience and style at will. The Saturday afternoon set provided was one psychedelic experience, as the mood shifted between styles, while being tightly held together through its cacophony of noise.

Sunday early afternoon saw Milan’s perpetually traveling artist Paquita Gordon go back-to-back with Turkish DJ, and Love Vinyl operative Ece Duzgit. Together, the two women played an expressively broad and distinctive set of Turkish disco, dub and ballroom swing.

On Saturday afternoon, the temperature peaked at 38 degrees (100 Fahrenheit). As some cooled off in the nearby stream, those inside the palatial grounds drenched themselves in sweat. Luckily the ambient music set the mood, exuberating chillness and still energy. On the mainstage, Italian DJ L.U.C.A. (a.k.a. Francesco de Bellis of Edizioni Mondo) played a set of slow, Italo, and soul. Following this, Laraaji delivered one of the highlights of the weekend. Playing beneath the cover of the Sound System stage, the spiritual pioneer toyed with ambient textures, reverb, and percussion. He soothed the crowd with gentle singing and prayers, and in the beat of the sun, the harmonics appeared to melt the surrounding fabrics, blending together colors and textures in a seemingly natural way. Finishing off with ‘This little light of mine’, the crowd showered the guru with due praise. Rashad Becker, who followed, offered a less gentle performance of abstract electronics, that seemed to unintentionally mimic the sound of the surrounding insects, as the electronics fizzled and chirped, much like the litany of bugs who lay among the grass.

Festival experiences are not meant to be this good, and such moments are a rarity and should be treasured. The festival’s aim was to open the potential to creating life through “the creation of an atmosphere”—which is exactly what happened. Life happened through the set ambience. Here’s to another year of terraforming.

Epizode Announces Sequel with Chris Liebing, Dixon, Loco Dice

Organizers of Epizode Festival have revealed the dates and initial headliners for their next edition, set to take place on the island of Phú Quôc in Vietnam from December 31 to January 10, 2018.

The festival debuted earlier this year, treating attendees to a two-week long creative gathering featuring performances from the likes of Ion Ludwig, Maayan Nidam, S.A.M., Anthea, and The Mole. Epizode is set to return again to the same location on Phú Quôc Island, which is well known for its white sandy beaches and temperate climate all year long.

Epizode Festival’s sequel edition is already shaping up to be much bigger than its debut, with several heavyweight headliners already locked in for DJ sets. Acts announced so far include German techno icon Chris Liebing, Innervisions boss Dixon, Ibiza mainstay Luciano, and Desolat co-founder Loco Dice. The rest of the lineup will be revealed in the coming weeks, but you can already find out more information and book tickets by going here.

View the aftermovie for Epizode’s debut edition in the player below.

Ekai ‘Roots’ (Tigerskin Instrumental Remix)

The latest release on Baumhaus will arrive from Ekai.

Titled Roots, the EP is homage to the beginnings of house music, a time and style which Ekai identifies most with. On the EP, Ekai presents two versions of the title track, one a stripped-back affair with 808 congas, piano chords, vocal chops and an enticing break, and a ’90s mix which features TR-909 drums, the infamous Korg M-1, and the Juno 106 synthesizers. On remix duties is Tigerskin, who takes “Roots” into deeper territory with the original vocals featuring heavily throughout.

You can download Tigerskin’s instrumental version via WeTransfer below and keep and eye on Baumhaus for the full EP.

Roots (Tigerskin Instrumental Remix)

Premiere: Hear a New Track From Few Nolder

Later this week, Needwant will drop the latest EP from Few Nolder.

Titled Porcelain, the EP lands a year after his debut on the label and follows a string of releases from Ashworth, Vimes, and Akasha System, presenting two originals and a remix from 100% Silk’s Octo Octa.

Musically, Few Nolder presents varied moods across the two originals, from the sun-soaked melodies and shimmering synths of the title track to the deeper slo-mo grooves of “Chant.” For her remix, Octo Octa crafts a 10-minute late-night epic filled with driving percussion and sweeping synth lines.

You can pre-order the EP here, with the title track streaming in full below.

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