News: Domino Records launch Domino Radio

In the spirit of the current pop-up shop movement the plagues the East End (where I spend my days) Domino Records, one of the UK's best independent labels, have come up with the (much better) idea of launching a pop-up radio station for one week.

From tomorrow Domino will be running Domino Radio on FM 87.7 in London, or online everywhere else. Thankfully unlike most radio stations they won't be bothering with anything as dull as playlisting so expect some interesting music and presenters.

Head on over to the site to listen and to get a preview of the artists - I'm particularly excited for Bobby Gillespie, James Ford, Junior Boys, Liquid Liquid, Twin Sister, Yuck and Zongamin (whatever happened to Zongamin?!). You may also want to follow the station on Twitter for news as it happens.

BP x

Comment: Dress In Stereo - Thrill Kill

Thrill Kill have been on my radar for six months or so and I'm a little bit staggered to realise this is the first time I have blogged about them. If you were being lazy you could say that they sound like something Ed Banger would put out but I really dig their sound - they don't seem to be afraid to have a bit of polish. Whilst Justice always seem set on proving just how in your face they can be this cut from Thrill Kill gives the tune a bit more room.

Enough about Ed Banger anyway - hit the Soundcloud link and check out their newest track, 'Dress In Stereo', which really captures their dark and slick production style. Thrill Kill are US vocalist John Webb and Polish Producer Pimo.

Hit Thrill Kill's Twitter or Facebook pages for more.

BP x

Thrill Kill - Dress in Stereo - (original mix) OFFICIAL !!! by Thrill Kill

 

Album Review: Late Night Tales - Trentemøller

I've been a bit of a fan of Trentemøller for a while now, and particularly love his Harbour Boat Trips mix album [affiliate link] since it really eschews expectations of what a mix album should be. Not made for dancing, or even chilling out to, Harbour Boat Trips was a textured mood-piece - a journey through late night Copenhagen - and that sense shot for and hit what all good mix albums should: transcendence, the creation of an artistic piece with as much merit as the standard artist album.

If you are familiar with my blog you will probably realise that my favourite music tends to be electronic, and as such I've always loved mix albums almost as much as normal albums. At their best they can take music you know and place it in an entirely new context in a way that totally changes your perception - just look at the popularity of Soulwax's 2ManyDJ's act.

Trentemøller's mixes are, however, nothing like 2ManyDJs. But they do shift your perception of the songs you know, and create feelings out of songs you don't. The Late Night Tales CD series has existed for years and on the whole they are good, but they often feel incomplete - perhaps as a result of the late night after party concept. maybe they are just supposed to feel a bit thrown together.

Whatever the case, this one doesn't feel thrown together in any way. This is very much another take on the Harbour Boat Trips formula. The mix is dense, dark and paranoid. You won't dance - you'll be too afraid to even move. There is a creeping dread that runs through a lot of this album but it creates a beautiful, tangibly thick atmosphere.

This is particularly true of the start of the album, which is consistently heavy. Trentemøller's remix of Chimes & Bells' 'The Mole' is one of the album's best moments - a perfect blend of digital and analogue, one moment soaring, the next bathed in looping bass and stabs of synth.

This dark opening third is rounded out by Mazzy Star's 'Mary of Silence', pondering and slow it gives way to the Velvet Underground's 'Venus and Furs'. This in itself marks the start of a more left field section which peaks with Jacqueline Taieb's French spoken and ad-libbed 'Sept Heures Du Matin'. In fact the entire album hits it's peak when the music drops away and Taieb drops in to English to say "Talking 'bout my generation". It's knowing and sassy and effortlessly cool, which basically encapsulated this album.

The final third of the album feels like a blend of the former two. Trentemøller's only track on here, 'Blue Hotel', is at turns dark and sassy followed by moments of bleak electronic instrumentation. It genuinely feels not of this time and sits alongside the rest of the music here perfectly. The album goes on to close in a typically epic fashion which it is not my place to spoil.

So in summary Trentemøller has done it again. His Harbour Boat Trips is one of the best mix albums ever made and this stands up to that album as its equal.

BP x

Late Night Tales is out on Monday, available from Amazon.co.uk on CD and MP3 [affiliate links].

Download: If It Isn't Digital Love - Gamble & Burke

This dropped into the inbox a little while back but I've only just grabbed a minute to post it. Gamble & Burke have previously released material on Kitsune Noir ('Let's Go Together' - check it out on their Soundcloud) and they recently put together this mashup of New Edition's 'If It Isn't Love' together with Daft Punk's 'Digital Love'.

I've not previously ever really checked out New Edition but did after hearing Gamble & Burke's mashup. This version is actually not particularly close to either of the records it draws from and that is actually a good thing - it takes the ideas from the two and goes to a whole new place. The result is an incredibly laid back, slick summer soul record. Apparently this week is due to be a heat wave in Britain so you just might need something like this to cool you down!

Download 'If It Isn't Digital Love' by Gamble & Burke here [right click, save as].

If you are on this site I'll trust you know Daft Punk's work already but check out the New Edition original below for some 80s boy band funk genius:

BP x

Album Review: Reekin'Structions - The Revenge

Reekin'Structions just might be one of the worst album titles I've ever heard. It's like reconstruction, because it's an album of remixes. And I guess it's reekin' because, erm, they smell?

Who knows. Some clever chap in marketing no doubt. Thankfully the album sounds better than the title smells. What you have here is funk and Italo-style disco re-edits of ten tracks I have to confess I've never heard of. That makes it difficult to gauge just how much work The Revenge (alter ego of Graeme Clarke) has put into the edits but let's give him the benefit of the doubt on that one.

Opener 'Ease Out' by Mid-Air sets the pace nicely - there is a lovely swirling sound that gives the whole thing a warm body, perfect for the squelchy bass and live drums sounds that bring it to life. It's precisely the kind of track that sounds like it has been crafted to open DJ sets - it may not carry you out the back to one of the private rooms for the experience of your life, but you'll certainly have a good time.

From there things become decidedly more funky. Johnny Adams' 'Feel The Beat' is more organic and closer to what I imagine the original sounded like - heavy bass is pushed to the fore but the song is very much still that: a proper song. As mixes go it's subtle and all the better for it.

The album certainly benefits from an eclectic approach - Velvet Hammer's 'Party Down' is stripped back and looped and filtered to within an inch of its life. Hot to the point of almost being able to see the sweat running down the walls it was born to be played it tiny basement bars and back rooms. It has the sound of a track playing when you walk into a small club or a bar and you realise instantly that everyone in there is cooler and having more fun than you.

Even more driving is Vance and Suzzanne's 'I Can't Get Along Without You', which rips the bleeding heart out of the love song it once was and forces it to dance through a tight, muted house number. It's as unsympathetic a remix as this album offers but the contrast just about makes it work with no small thanks to the pay-off of the break.

Whilst Reekin'Structions may ultimately be little more than a series of fairly straight forward disco re-edits there is just no denying the class of those edits. It takes in elements of soul, disco, acid, house and dub and gradually weaves them into each other to create something you can't help but want to move to.

BP x
Reekin'Structions is out now on Z Records, available on from Amazon.co.uk on CD [affiliate link].