Some groovy tunes, with no gaps!!!!
Aphex Twin, some Detroit House and a little bit of Dilla...
4zed
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
Thursday, 28 March 2013
5 house/techno
Dj Hell - My Definition of House Music
Hardcore classic complete with sweet strings and tasty piano hook. In actuality it’s pretty much a straight rip off and simplification of David Byrne – The Forest (Space Dance Mix), but there’s only a grooveshark link for that. I don’t really understand grooveshark… there's the link underneath..
Morgan Geist - Lullaby
Mr. Geist brings the loveliness, twisting his disco
influences into a surprisingly soothing piece of music. Oh and when the sax
comes in, really good things happen in your brain.
Azymuth – Partido Alto (LTJ Experience Remix)
All the attention is on Theo Parrish on the other side of
this record, and fair enough it is great, but LTJ brings a booty slamming experience
akin to the first Cottam 12s, flipping the laid back sounds of Azymuth into a
sweaty stomper of mammoth proportions.
MM/KM – Bust a Move
Ooh yeah, super violent! Lots and lots of energy coming out
of this collaboration, the whole EP is really great.
Underground Resistance – Transition
Uplifting vocal builds to militant looping euphoria. Party
time!!! Possibly the best UR track?
Thursday, 7 February 2013
Happy Birthday J Dilla
We all know he’s still the man and so apparently does the French town of Montpellier:
Those two really knew how to rock it!
Also here is Karriem Riggins doing some really awesome stuff to remember Dilla:
Anyway here’s some Dilla to remember Dilla:
This is his beat for Busta Rhymes - What Up. It's one to make your spine crack:
I’d love to show you what an amazing flip it is but
I’m sure you’d rather here it from Benji B:
This one's among a few Dilla and Proof things
that never saw a release. Luckily it's somehow on youtube!
Those two really knew how to rock it!
Sampled from the beginning of Blue in Green:
Also here is Karriem Riggins doing some really awesome stuff to remember Dilla:
Saturday, 2 February 2013
Recipe For Tasty Donuts
I have a new radio show starting tomorrow. 5-6 P.M each sunday. It will be loosely based around sampling culture so expect soul, jazz, funk and hip-hop etc.
Listen to it here : http://www.burstradio.org.uk/
Also check out The Grandfather Paradox from 9-10 P.M. each friday as a friend will be exploring minimalism.
Listen to it here : http://www.burstradio.org.uk/
Also check out The Grandfather Paradox from 9-10 P.M. each friday as a friend will be exploring minimalism.
Wednesday, 30 January 2013
Max Richter - The Blue Notebooks
Released in 2004, The Blue Notebooks, Richter's second
modern-classical album, could be forgiven for being construed as a weak
attempt at a concept album. Throughout the duration of the album,
accompanied by a typewriter, Tilda Swinton is heard reading passages
from Franz Kafka's The Blue Octavo Notebooks and some of Czeslaw
Milosz's works. Tilda Swinton has a lovely voice, placed here amongst
religious and nostalgic instrumentation, further than this quality though
I don't really think that her readings are supposed to grandly alter
the way in which you experience the album. Instead they simply add another texture to the album which features only a piano, strings, an organ, a harp and a voice.
What distinguishes this album is the manner in which it melds Richter's influences together. Minimalism, electronic production and cinematic sound-scapes are all used to great effect with the resulting compositions being filled with religious grandeur without ever resorting to grandiosity. Considering that Richter has collaborated with Roni Size, Future Sound Of London and Ridley Scott whilst also having studied at the Royal Academy under the Italian composer Luciano Berio and also spent the ten years before this album's release commissioning and playing the work of Steve Reich, Philip Glass and Briano Eno with his ensemble, Piano Circus, the ease with which he does so becomes understandable.
His restriction in his choice of instruments is evidently derived from his roots in Minimalism, as is the monodic nature of the album. In fact, a large portion of the album consists of short two to three minute pieces such as "Vladimir's Blues" and "Written On The Sky" that feature either a solitary organ or piano. In contrast to these short sketches more than half of the album's fourty minute run-time is dominated by only three pieces: "On The Nature of Daylight", "The Shadow Journal" and "The Trees". The first of these tracks is probably my favourite on the album. "On The Nature Of Daylight" grows from a base of a single cello, gradually each new layer of strings is added so that the track coalesces into a delicately gripping whole. On "The Shadow Journal" Richter makes most use of his production skills. From the outset of the track there is reverberation applied to the harps so that they become almost indistinguishable from a synthesizer, later Richter introduces a cavernous bassline that feels like a quantised heartbeat.
While the longer tracks dominate the album the shorter sketches are just as effective and melodically pleasant. Five of the album's tracks feature only a solitary piano or organ yet are still more than capable of great beauty and keeping with the contrastingly nostalgic and sanctified tone of the work. Through keeping each individual piece monodic and having each piece's narrative advance through simplistic harmonic progressions Richter unifies the album as a whole. The album is repetitive on a microcosmic level yet through small electronic flourishes Richter draws vast amounts out of his limited instruments and avoids the macroscopic stringency that afflicts some Minimalism.
This is music that feels like it was recorded in a cathedral and should be listened to in one.
If you like this:
Ryuichi Sakamoto - 1996 - http://www.discogs.com/Ryuichi-Sakamoto-1996/master/135235
Philip Glass - Koyaanisqatsi - http://www.discogs.com/Philip-Glass-Koyaanisqatsi/master/33014
What distinguishes this album is the manner in which it melds Richter's influences together. Minimalism, electronic production and cinematic sound-scapes are all used to great effect with the resulting compositions being filled with religious grandeur without ever resorting to grandiosity. Considering that Richter has collaborated with Roni Size, Future Sound Of London and Ridley Scott whilst also having studied at the Royal Academy under the Italian composer Luciano Berio and also spent the ten years before this album's release commissioning and playing the work of Steve Reich, Philip Glass and Briano Eno with his ensemble, Piano Circus, the ease with which he does so becomes understandable.
His restriction in his choice of instruments is evidently derived from his roots in Minimalism, as is the monodic nature of the album. In fact, a large portion of the album consists of short two to three minute pieces such as "Vladimir's Blues" and "Written On The Sky" that feature either a solitary organ or piano. In contrast to these short sketches more than half of the album's fourty minute run-time is dominated by only three pieces: "On The Nature of Daylight", "The Shadow Journal" and "The Trees". The first of these tracks is probably my favourite on the album. "On The Nature Of Daylight" grows from a base of a single cello, gradually each new layer of strings is added so that the track coalesces into a delicately gripping whole. On "The Shadow Journal" Richter makes most use of his production skills. From the outset of the track there is reverberation applied to the harps so that they become almost indistinguishable from a synthesizer, later Richter introduces a cavernous bassline that feels like a quantised heartbeat.
While the longer tracks dominate the album the shorter sketches are just as effective and melodically pleasant. Five of the album's tracks feature only a solitary piano or organ yet are still more than capable of great beauty and keeping with the contrastingly nostalgic and sanctified tone of the work. Through keeping each individual piece monodic and having each piece's narrative advance through simplistic harmonic progressions Richter unifies the album as a whole. The album is repetitive on a microcosmic level yet through small electronic flourishes Richter draws vast amounts out of his limited instruments and avoids the macroscopic stringency that afflicts some Minimalism.
This is music that feels like it was recorded in a cathedral and should be listened to in one.
If you like this:
Ryuichi Sakamoto - 1996 - http://www.discogs.com/Ryuichi-Sakamoto-1996/master/135235
Philip Glass - Koyaanisqatsi - http://www.discogs.com/Philip-Glass-Koyaanisqatsi/master/33014
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