Heinali ‘Anthracite’

In February, Ukranian composer and sound-designer Oleg Shpudeiko will present Anthem, a new ambient-driven project under the Heinali moniker. The new solo LP follows “a period of recovery from an emotionally dark place…a kind of personal therapy.”

Anthem was produced and recorded in Shpudeiko’s apartment using a range of hardware and computer processing, from Korg and Moog gear to his beloved and homemade SoundHack and AudioMulch software and “old Soviet digital effects, glitchy as hell.” The album is full of ethereal beauty and otherworldly sound design and points to Shpudeiko’s previous soundtrack work in its emotive delivery—Shpudeiko composed the soundtrack to PlayStation’s 2016 videogame Bound.

Injazero Records will release Anthem on 180g vinyl and digital formats on February 10, and in the meantime, you can grab the haunting “Anthracite” via WeTransfer below.

Anthracite

Architectural Details Future Releases

Architectural two new releases on the way.

Juan Rico (a.k.a. Reeko) debuted his Architectural alias in 2010, via his label of the same name. Since, the spaced-out sounds that he pushes via the project have ended up on Semantica and PoleGroup too.

His next release as Architectural will be Cubismo—a five-track EP of raw, minimalist techno, based around the ideology and production techniques of the artistic movement from which it borrows its name. It will be followed by a seven-track LP, Metropolitan Opera, which ” possesses heavy, cinematic soundscapes that utilize nuanced and highly intricate sound design devoid of driving techno-driven interludes.”

Cubismo will be released on December 9, 2016, followed by Metropolitan Opera on January 27, 2017. Stream snippets from Cubismo below.

Tracklisting:

Cubismo
A1 Cubismo 8.1
A2 Cubismo 8.2 (Lost in Buenos Aires)
B1 Cubismo 8.3
B2 Cubismo 8.4 (Lost in Buenos Aires II)

Metropolitan Opera
A1 1a#Opera (Intro)
A2 2a#Opera
A3 3a#Opera
A4 4a#Opera
B1 5a#Opera
B2 6a#Opera
B3 7a#Opera

Spacetravel Next Up on Cabaret

Spacetravel is next up on Cabaret Recordings.

Berlin-based DJ and producer Luca Cara (a.k.a. Spacetravel) is the latest artist to be recruited by DJ Masda and So Inagawa‘s Cabaret Recordings. Four-tracker Axiom will arrive after recent material from Binh and Masda (as Onigiri), TC80 and Ekbox (the collaborative effort of Evan Baggs and Katsuya Sano).

The EP will be Cara’s fourth outing, following his debut on Time Passages, an EP on Melliflow and a double pack with Perlon.

Axiom is expected to be released in early 2017.

Doms & Deykers Share New Video, ‘Transative’

Doms & Deykers (a.k.a. Martyn and Steffi) have shared a new video for “Transative.”

The pulsating electro track is taken from the Dutch duo’s recent album on 3024Evidence From A Good Source. Prior to the release of that LP back in October, the pair had only put out two collaborative EPs (both on 3024), plus one track on the Ostgut Ton Zehn compilation.

Evidence From A Good Source is available to purchase now at the 3024 store. Watch the video in full below.

Doms & Deykers Share New Video, ‘Transative’

Doms & Deykers (a.k.a. Martyn and Steffi) have shared a new video for “Transative.”

The pulsating electro track is taken from the Dutch duo’s recent album on 3024Evidence From A Good Source. Prior to the release of that LP back in October, the pair had only put out two collaborative EPs (both on 3024), plus one track on the Ostgut Ton Zehn compilation.

Evidence From A Good Source is available to purchase now at the 3024 store. Watch the video in full below.

DJ Bone Preps Album as Differ-Ent

DJ Bone is set to release a full-length as Differ-Ent on Don’t Be Afraid.

It’s Good To Be Differ-Ent is Detroit musician Eric Dulan’s first full-length under his Differ-Ent alias, a moniker that he first released under last year (with two EPs on Don’t Be Afraid). The forthcoming album will be available as a 3xLP package and on digital formats. Its 12 tracks are expected to include some techno, as well as touching on electro and less dancefloor-oriented styles.

It’s Good To Be Differ-Ent is scheduled to hit stores in February 2017. Stream closing track “I. M. Differ-Ent” below in full.

Tracklisting:

A1 Inhabit Tense
A2 Marvel Less
B1 Met Allergic Flew Antsy
B2 Compute Her
C1 Drum Addict
C2 We Have U Surrounded
D1 Motive Hate Shun
D2 Fasten 8 Shun
E1 Gem In Eyes (feat. DJ Bone)
E2 A Calm Bliss
F1 Laser Eyes
F2 I. M. Differ-Ent

Roland Launches First DJ Controller, DJ-808

Roland has developed its first ever DJ controller.

The 4-channel DJ-808 was co-developed with Serato, who contributed on the software side of things, leaving the hardware to Roland. The mixer runs with Serato DJ features: built-in DVS support (with the purchase of a Serato DVS license), dedicated loop control buttons, controls for Serato Flip, hot cue, FX and key sync.

The DJ-808 features a number of other unique built-in features: the infamous TR drum machine is included, complete with the bass drum, snare drum, hi-hats and clap from the TR-808, TR-909, TR-707, and TR-606 models, allowing for on the fly customisation of beats. A 16-step TR-S sequencer triggers the 8-slot Serato sampler. There is also a built-in microphone input, plus VT voice transformer—a dedicated vocal processor.

Finally, two USB ports are included in the controller, permitting connection to AIRA-family Roland synths. Users can add to the tracks running through their mixer and jam alongside them.

The DJ-808 is available to buy for $1499. Find your local retailer here. For a taste of what to expect from the DJ-808, check out the video below.

Download a New Mix from Peverelist

Tom Ford (a.k.a. Peverelist) has shared a recording from a recent set at DTKO in Bremen.

Ford has been and continues to be a lynchpin in the development of the Bristol sound, an area that should never be underestimated for its role in electronic music. Over the years, it has been pivotal to various movements, all sharing a common thread of dubby, drugged-out sounds running through them. The British city was massive for jungle, crucial for dubstep, but is now recognized mostly for a contemporary scene revolving around but a few artists.

Back in 2011 he founded Livity Sound, at which point he has already been manning Punch Drunk for several years. The former is now home to Kowton and Asusu, as well as the likes of Hodge and Randomer on the Dnuos Ytivil sub-label, and has fostered the development of the post-dubstep sound: a mixture of bass music, techno and dub. Aside from his efforts in putting out other’s music, Ford’s own productions have also been a driving force in the scene. 

Ford has kindly shared a three-hour recording of his recent DJ set at Bremen’s DTKO party—a mix that captures the broad spectrum of sounds that somehow add up to Peverelist. Stream it or download below.

Richard H. Kirk #7489 (Collected Works 1974–1989) and Sandoz #9294 (Collected Works 1992–1994)

Richard H. Kirk’s four-decade-plus career hasn’t exactly followed a steady, straightforward path. Beginning in the mid-’70s with solo releases under the U.K. artist’s own name, through his work as part of the groundbreaking combo Cabaret Voltaire, to his output under the Sandoz moniker—not to mention his dizzying array of alternate aliases and collaborations—he’s wandered through an aural landscape that ranges in vibe from abrasively postindustrial (befitting his roots in gritty Sheffield) to beguilingly sleek, and in emotion from hushed melancholy to spit-in-your-face anger. He can be brazenly experimental; he’s also capable of producing music that, at least on its surface, is a soothing listen. Social and political commentaries—occasionally direct, more often oblique—weave their way in and out if his music, often in the form of well-chosen vocal samples or through Kirk’s own close-miked voice.

In short, it’s going to take more than one retrospective to convey a sense of his wide-ranging palette. Mute Records has already provided an invaluable service by rereleasing a cornucopia of Cabaret Voltaire’s seminal machine funk; now, the label adds a few more Kirk snapshots with the duel release of Richard H. Kirk – #7489 (Collected Works 1974–1989) and Sandoz – #9294 (Collected Works 1992–1994), with the two collections showcasing two very different corners of his discography.

Richard H. Kirk – #7489 (Collected Works 1974–1989) is an embarrassment of riches for people already familiar with his work, and an eye-opener for those who might know him only through Cabaret Voltaire’s better-known cuts like “Yashar” and “Sensoria.” The set cycles through 1980’s Disposable Half Truths, the newly remastered Times High Fiction (a 1983 release compiling work from ’79 to ’82), Black Jesus Voice and Ugly Spirit (both released in ’86), the double-disc Earlier/Later (Anthology 74-89), and Super Duper Soul, featuring unreleased recordings from ’82 through ’88. It’s a labyrinthine anthology—but to simplify things considerably, it delineates a range that begins with piercing, often brittle intensity and leads to somewhere approaching the dancefloor.

His solo releases include some of the most tension-filled material of Kirk’s career, even taking into account the unhinged experimentation of Cabaret Voltaire’s mid-’70s output. Like that groundbreaking material, there’s a heavy industrial tinge to the music, but here, it’s often paired with a kinetic skronk that’s reminiscent of NYC’s no-wave movement. Frazzled blasts of sound blast through the chaotic miasma of “Martyrs of Palestine,” a distorted voice shrieking the song’s title while a hyperkinetic drum machine churns away; the tick-tocking “False Erotic Love” layers vocal loops over swooning feedback, creating an aura of bleak anxiety. But there are hushed moments as well, even in his earliest releases: “Insect Friends of Allah,” for instance, pairs droning Middle Eastern vibes and a gentle, modulated beatbox rhythm to meditative effect. On the other hand, “Do as I Do” sees Kirk stepping into the club, as he layers purposefully inane vocal samples (“the planet Earth is blue, blue, blue!”) over synth-horn blasts and a kinetic four-to-the-floor beat.

That’s a hint of what’s to come on Sandoz – #9294 (Collected Works 1992–1994), which collates material from the two-CD comp Digital Lifeforms (Redux), the sought-after Intensely Radioactive and Dark Continent LPs (both remastered) and an album of previously unreleased material, Sandoz Runs The Voodoo Down. Another embarrassment of riches, albeit one that’s more tightly focused than #7489, it’s a collection of what Mute describes as “the melding of African sounds with European electronic music.”

If that description sounds like a roundabout way of saying “house,” you’re not far off the mark, and many of these tracks wouldn’t sound out of place in a DJ mix from, say, Black Coffee or Henrik Schwarz. The hard-charging “Zombie Astral” layers chirping trumpet and flute lines over percolating percussion; a kalimba-esque melody provides counterpoint for the buoyant bassline of “Ocean Reflection”; songs like “Exoskeleton” are imbued with the ghostly remnants of Jamaican rhythms; and “Neon Soul” with its Latin-laced keyboards and “all right” vocal snippet, could almost pass for a classic Strictly Rhythm track. Some might miss the dystopian charms of Kirk’s (or Cabaret Voltaire’s) solo releases—but these cuts, ranging in feel from meditative to jacking and from otherworldly to carnal, will be a revelation for those unfamiliar with Sandoz’s oeuvre.

Even with the nine-hours worth of material on these two compilations, there’s still plenty of Kirk material to be mined—there’s his work with Richard Barratt in the pioneering bleep-techno duo Sweet Exorcist, for instance, or the beautiful ambience of his Orchestra Terrestrial side project. But just taking these two box sets into account, along with the previously released Cabaret Voltaire material, Mute’s provided a valuable service: we’ve become reacquainted with one of electronic music’s most essential artists, and have been reminded of the depth and breadth of his talents.

Victor Norman ‘Hymn’ (Birds Of Mind Remix)

Amselcom‘s next releases comes from Sweden’s Victor Norman in the shape of Hymn. For the duration of the title-track, he gently unites depth and gloom with fragile melancholy to form a moving and sensual cut.

On remix duties are Bernstein and Birds of Mind, both attending to the original and concentrating on a different characteristic. While the former adds drive to underline the verve of the tune, the French duo intensify the melodic and frisky side of the track. To round off the release, Norman teams up with Harro Triptrap for “Mimikry.”

Ahead of the EP’s December 23 release, downloadable below via the WeTransfer button is the (Birds Of Mind Remix).

Tracklisting:

01. Hymn
02. Hymn (Bernstein Remix)
03. Hymn (Birds Of Mind Remix)
04. Mimikry (feat. Harro Triptrap)

Hymn (Birds of Mind Remix)

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