
Thursday, 14 May 2009
Damn...

Monday, 4 May 2009
Mr Vega EP Exclusive

Mr Vega is a self styled ‘remix king’ from the US. Having attracted some hype over the past few months for (among many many others) remixes of Dance Area’s ‘AA247’, Little Boots’ ‘Stuck on Repeat’ and ‘Extraball’ by Yuksek, Vega thought it was high time to release new original material. Mr Vega follows in that great tradition that is the production, recording and distributing of ones own music; though it’s hard to imagine such a consistently good remixer being without a label for long.
His new EP, Live Dance Then Die is a mélange of dance stylings, and he released a teaser onto myspace about a week ago. The title track appealing to the listener with a Monsieur Oizo bass line and clever sampling, but soon makes way for the distinctly more distorted second track. Think proxy but with an angry dude shouting ‘what up’ over the top. It’s big. The mix moves along nicely, past ‘Get Up On The Dancefloor’ (read on for exclusive...), to ‘Its Vega Time’; a song where distortion is replaced by distinctive, catchy chords which just seem to make you smile. Yeah, OK the song title could be slightly less narcissistic, but it’s not like he called it ‘Vega Theme’ or anything. Crunchy synths return in the final track; which chews its way nicely through the side of your face, and as the mix fades out it is ‘Bad Breakfaast’ which really grabs your attention.
Live Dance The Die EP Minimix - Mr Vega
The third track – ‘Get up on the Dancefloor’ is a slice of purist electo; the distinctive layered drumbeats and looped samples build before being replaced by bouncy synths. This tune is fast-paced, it begs you to jump-up, and makes you wait until the second drop. Compared to the distortion based tunes in the mixtape ‘Get Up On The Dancefloor’ seems to leave you wanting something although the production is smooth and the track definitely fulfills its basic premise – to get you up and dancing (ah samba). Here it is; It’s Vega Time.
Get Up On The Dancefloor - Mr Vega

Bonus: Love You Madly -The Young Lovers aka Herve
Friday, 1 May 2009
Crossing Borders


Friday, 24 April 2009
Six Sounds of Early Summer
don't know whether its the musty smelling tomes or the sad people's faces lining walls of same such similar desks, but it really really aches in here. What's worse, its been sunny outside all week - not ideal when you have a stack of work to do and summer is beaming down outside. This post comprises of the tunes which have got me through the last week, it's a lot more brief than the last posts - purely because I can't justify spending hours writing a blog post when Ben Jonson's Volpone is staring me in the face. I understand the inherent irony centring around blogging when I should be writing on a heavily satirical play. It seems I have become, like the devicical (sp) characters of Jonson's verse, a fool. My wit declines. Tuesday, 21 April 2009
Round, Round, Round We Go
Wednesday, 8 April 2009
B goes Big for B-More
remixing prowess of a man who goes by the pseudonym of B has come to my attention. The driving force behind ten piece electro crew Dance Robots, Dance! pulls out big remixes for sure. First off I'm suggesting his remix of 'Oh What A Night', the original of which was recorded in 1975 by the Four Seasons. You WILL have heard that tune - and therefore you WILL know just how uplifting the vocals are. B takes those vocals, speeds them up, and adds an infectious Baltimore Beat underneath. He keeps many of the original elements of the song (vocals, fun-funky bass line and piano loops), which makes this track as much a testament to the original track, which appeared at the height of the original disco movement, as a cutting edge B-More track in it's own right. B-more as a genre is all about vocals mixed with early hip-hop style beats. It's music to make you feel good, and to have fun to. B achieves this easily. 

Monday, 6 April 2009
producer/DJ hailing from Vienna who goes by the name of Motorpitch. His myspace states that the 'pitch's style is 'rough and raw to keep your feet on the floor, and a sweet melody that makes you look up to the sky and smile'. As a concept, this really works. Dub influenced beats mixed with notorious vocal samples are what this man is all about - and he does more than enough to get you dancing. What's more, he hasn't just listened to a bunch of dubplates and decided this is what he likes: he has actually been to Jamaica, and worked for various Soundsystems recording dubplates. This seems like the perfect way to gain experience working with the peoples who have shaped the dub sound, and his well-produced remixes are of a consistently high calibre. His mate Beware is also accredited on the tracks, but frankly some of Beware's solo stuff is just grating. None of the smooth vocals littering the duo's remixes are there - and thats what I love about the tracks.
Sunday, 5 April 2009
Wall Drawing and Sinden
debate. Whilst the artists themselves cite their work as a form which provides freedom of expression across the drab urban landscape, council's and pensioners worldwide see (what to them must only be) uninterpretable mirages of colour as dirtying the city. Pesky kids.
Friday, 3 April 2009
First Post Matters.