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Commute - Contour

Commute - Contour

Video: Commute - SSWIII x Contour

April 25, 2015 in video

Love this highly dynamic video from visual artist and graphic designer Switzon Samuel Wigfall, III. Sometimes going by the name SSWIII, Wigfall says he is inspired by: ""things" I love since I was a child drawing on everything with a bunch of crayons: sci-fi movies, robots, machines, geometric shapes, and the power and play of colors".

The video itself has a fantastic grungy 90s DnB feel and the whole pink filter makes it feel like a crazy Wipeout experience from The Zone. The music comes from SSWIII friend and collaborator Contour, real name Khari Lucas, and it has a soulful garage / drum 'n' bass sound.

Wigfall is inspired by music and often works with abstract visuals in his VJ work. The music Wigfall works with includes the likes of Daft Punk, Flying Lotus, Bonobo, RJD2, Luke Vibert and Aphex Twin, and you can see that in his visual aesthetic.

For more from SSWIII check out his website and for VJ clips checkout his Vimeo page.

Watch the video - go fullscreen and turn the volume up:

"Commute"™ | [fullscreen / volume high please] | More short films: switzonwigfall.com Become a fan: facebook.com/sswll Free VJ source material: vimeo.com/channels/switzon Twitter: https://twitter.com/SSWIII Audio: Contour - "Commute" - http://bit.ly/1yc1efY Become a fan [Facebook]: http://on.fb.me/1DIdzeb Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/con_tour Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/itscontour More short films/info: switzonwigfall.com



Tags: sswiii, contour
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Hazel English

Stream: Never Going Home - Hazel English

April 24, 2015 in stream

Australian-born but Oakland, California based artist Hazel English has just put this new track out from her debut EP and it's positively bristling with excitable spring-energy AND autumnal introspection, making it perfect for both those in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.

English cites influences that include the Cure, Stevie Nicks and and The Smiths, all artists you can hear in Never Going Home's jangling instrumentation and softly delivered vocal melodies.

Never Going Home is for those that have moved and travelled away from home, says Hazel: "The song is about moving overseas, the feeling of being drawn to California, and really finding myself here."

Look out for the EP when it comes this summer. 

Tags: Hazel English
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Chelsea Lankes, image credit: Chuck David Willis

Stream: Love. Hate. Pain. Killer - Chelsea Lankes

April 24, 2015 in stream

Awesomely delicately naked R&B from Chelsea Lankes on new single Love. Hate. Pain. Killer.

I love everything about this - Chelsea's vocal delivery is spot on, like someone getting up from a ten-rounds of an emotional battering, hurt and battered but determined to go on. The track is taken from the Vice short, Mr. Happy, by Collin Tilley and featuring Chancelor Bennett, better known as Chance the Rapper.

From the short film Mr. Happy starring Chance the Rapper and directed by Colin Tilley. Produced by: Wondershow

Tags: chelsea lankes, collin tilley, chance the rapper
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Silent - EMBRZ

Stream: Silent - EMBRZ

April 24, 2015 in stream

Gorgeous debut track from EMBRZ featuring guest vocals from Amy Rose... Silent is full of lovely electronic touches and blissful piano chords, complemented beautifully with Rose's vocals. Producer / artist EMBRZ is remaining cagey about the song's subject:

"I finished writing Silent just before Christmas. The last step was getting an amazing vocal down, and Amy was perfect” explains Jack Casey continuing "There is a story behind the track, but I like the idea of leaving listeners to their own interpretation. Whatever it means to someone is what it means to someone."

Check out Silent below:

Tags: embrz, amy rose
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The Orange Collection

Album Review: The Orange Collection - Eskimo Recordings

April 22, 2015 in review, mix album, album review

What comes after pink, blue and green? Well according to Eskimo Recordings it is orange... And so they follow up The Green Collection with this new offering, The Orange Collection - the fourth entry in their colour and emotion inspired series.

As my previous coverage of these releases highlights my feelings on these albums have been mixed. Yet I still find it hard to resist giving each new entry a listen, if only out of some desire to recapture some of the glittering brilliance of Eskimo's earlier compilations. The Orange Collection does its best to return your effort in listening to it. Unlike the other entries, which usually felt no real connection to the colour in question, entitling this The Orange Collection makes sense. It's warm, sitting on the edge of sunset... Though whether this is a deliberate refinement of focus or a happy coincidence is up for debate. Perhaps Eskimo simply got around to picking one of the most Balearic of colours 

Eskimo has retained its latter-day fondness for soft electronics and indie vocals but in contrast to previous entries this album feels as Mediterranean influenced as it does Scandinavian, conjuring the feeling of beaches and beachside swimming pools.

It is therefore fitting then that opening track Odds Are Good by Anoraak feels exactly like a dip in a pool out in the sun. Renegades, by Majestique feat. Lakshmi, is similarly sunny... Warm pads and synth stabs creating an infectious and wistful sense, almost like missing the holiday before it has even ended. Like most things here it is almost shockingly polished, but that adds to the perfect summer holiday feeling.

Hold It Like You Own It by Horixon and Maya is a glittering moment of electronic pop - a powerful vocal hook riding a deep sine wave baseline. The album also features two tracks I've featured recently - Du Tonc's Animals and This Soft Machine's On & On - and both feel right at home here in this set.

Amongst all the shimmering pop are some more wonky moments. Moscoman's Fernandez is a hit of Italo-influenced dub that sounds like it soundtracks your weirdest cowboy dreams... Drums clatter as a stark lone guitar riff picks its way amidst a world of synth-kitsch. Elsewhere Marvin and Guy's Unfailling Fall is a deep psychedelic trip, a stark contrast to the lighter moments that make up most of this album.

Closing with the Mees Dierdorp remix of Hydrogen Sea's Wear Out, The Orange Collection comes grinding to a dramatic stop. Synthetic strings swirl and vocals cry out as the album draws to a emotional yet somewhat muted finish. It is by far the best entry in this series yet, and the best album from Eskimo in some time. It is hard not to think this may just be good luck - a number of artists here have featured on previous entries after all - but perhaps they just managed to do a much better job curating the collection this time. Either way, take this with you to the pool this summer and you are guaranteed just a little warmth, no matter the weather.

The Orange Collection is released through Eskimo Recordings on 4 May. Pre-order on iTunes here [affiliate link].

Tags: eskimo, anoraak, majestique, lakshmi, horixon, du tonc, this soft machine, moscoman, marvin and guy, mees dierdorp, hydrogen sea
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