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IVYES

Stream: Wilinout - IYVES

September 22, 2015 in stream

Wilinout is the new track from Brooklyn-based musician IYVES, who originally hails from Boulder, Colorado. Previously operating under the name Hanah, IVYES' new track has been created with production work from Tei Shi and Ryan Egan collaborator Luca Buccellati.

Wilinout is a laid back melodic soul track featuring soft keys, big swatches of sound and IYVES' hushed vocals. It borders on chill-wave, a little like an R&B take on Tears For Fears' Pharaohs. Can't say much better than that.

In her own words, IVYES describes Wilinout: "While writing 'Wilinout' I wanted to tap into an old school R&B/soul melody and bring a nostalgic sensibility to the song. I wrote this song during a pivotal time in a relationship. It’s that moment where you realize that a change needs to happen but something is holding you back. Sometimes the fear of change can paralyze you and this song is discovering that state of being in between."

Produced by: Gianluca Buccellati Co Produced by: IYVES www.facebook.com/sheisiyves www.twitter.com/sheisiyves www.instagram.com/sheisiyves Contact@sheisiyves.com

Tags: iyves
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Ministry Of Sound Underground 2015

Album Review: Ministry of Sound Underground 2015 - Various

September 15, 2015 in mix album, review, album review

There is a certain irony here... The life of the big super club brands has been in question for years, and yet when you go into your local supermarket you are guaranteed to see a slew of branded compilation CDs. Staring out at you en masse, filling the music compilation section, it is hard not to left wondering if Ministry of Sound's CDs have outlived not only the era of super clubs, but the era of CDs themselves. Plastic shiny discs. Perfect for the car. Ideal as a present. Totally benign and universally relatable. 

It is with this world that Ministry of Sound's Underground 2015 album enters, a cardboard package complete with two whole circles of plastic-coated metal full of music. As I contemplate what from the plethora of technology in my house will actually still take the data from these discs and convert it into sound waves, I consider for a moment how this package feels. And my conclusion is: empty. Underground 2015 feels physically empty. 

When I pored over every detail of Ministry of Sound's albums in my youth I remember all the details: the fluorescent jewel cases, the detailed liner notes and aspirational photography, the textures, the credit card sized guides to clubs and nightlife. Perhaps some of Ministry of Sound's albums still have all of this, and teenagers still revel in them sheer exuberance of the production... Perhaps Underground 2015 is simply too 'underground' for all that... Yet it feels considerably more likely that somewhere along the way the super club mix CD shed all that weight just to stay alive. Another example of simple pleasures the digital world has robbed us of. Your pocket now contains far more information about nightclubs than you could fit in a million wallet-sized pieces of folded paper, but there was something more fun about having something to look at in your hands as you listened to the music contained on those old albums. 

Whilst the packaging feels lacklustre against the backdrop of my memories, the music on Underground 2015 is both generous and far classier than most things that featured on the MoS label at its peak. They still release a whole range of populist albums - music to run to, music to chill out to - but this is something a little more authentic. The two-discs contain forty tracks of house, tech-house and techno, bubbling with bass and spitting with acerbic treble. 

The highlights are numerous - Denney's appropriately low-end Low Frequency throws bass and high-hats against an appropriately instructive vocal sample. Dusky's Skin Deep is a thick and heavy UK garage influenced cut with a swirling break that serves to give the album a far bigger highlight than you expect just four tracks in.

A series of tracks on disc one create a momentary soul movement, spanning Claptone's remix of Gregory Porter's Liquid Spirit, Enzo Siffredi's Sometimes (which borrows from the same material as Moby's Honey) and Larry's Garage by Juliet Sikora. It is a highlight, off-setting the taught and restrained electronic production with loose and soulful elements. 

George Fitzgerald's Full Circle featuring Boxed In opens the second disc with an introspective piece of electronic soul. A few better known tracks feature in its wake - a recent remix of Jon Hopkins' excellent Open Eye Signal also by George Fitzgerald and the Tale Of Us & Mano Le Tough remix of Caribou's starry-eyed Can't Do Without You both stand out. Caribou's inclusion actually somewhat breaks the flow - it is just so recognisable and big in comparison to its surroundings here. 

Recondite's Levo creates a stark and dramatic atmosphere, Dense & Pika's TEX is darkly alien and Kölsch does his thing and brings the album to a suitably climatic conclusion. 

In comparison to some of Underground 2015's highlights there are chunks that feel insipid in comparison. Seth Troxler and Sasha both feel irrelevant in comparison to some of the younger hands on show. A fair portion of the album feels unnecessary and Underground 2015 could have been a great single disc album... Instead we settle for a good two-disc release. There is lots here to enjoy given it comes from such a label with such a mainstream reputation. 

Ministry of Sound Underground 2015 is out now and available from iTunes. Check out the Ministry of Sound website for an overview of their compilations.

Tags: ministry of sound, denney, dusky, gregory porter, enzo siffredi, juliet sikora, george fitzgerald, boxed in, jon hopkins, caribou, tale of us, mano le tough, recondite, dense & pika, kolsch, seth troxler, sasha
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Nils Frahm

Album Review: Late Night Tales - Nils Frahm

September 09, 2015 in mix album, review, album review

On the most recent Late Night Tales, Nils Frahm doesn't so much mix together an album of songs as gently weave them.

Taking in a wide variety of styles spanning sources including vinyl (yawn), cassette (hipster!), minidisc (???!) and phonograph (even more hipster!), Frahm constructs a sort of musique concrète concept compilation album. Much of what is here has been edited, distorted and re-made.

If you want to know what to expect, you need only know that the album opens with a cover version of John Cage's infamous 4'33", a piece of 'music' famous for the very fact it isn't music at all, but simply vacuous silence. Rather than record his own silence, Frahms' cover is actually a piano piece (in his own words "I sat at the piano in silence and worked from there. I listened and took in the atmosphere and this is what came out of it"). 

Late Night Tales - Nils Frahm

The album all of this creates feels predictably separate from every other entry in the Late Night Tales series I've heard. At times it is twisted in a way that is hard to put your finger on - listening to Gene Autry's Your The Only Star In My Blue Heaven sounds eerily like something from Bioshock Infinite's vision of the future, light on the surface but simmering with darkness beneath. Hearing it feels like hearing the crackling snatches of humanity filtering through the vacuum of space as you drift off never to see the earth again... It is what I imagine Sandra Bullock's character to be hearing when she comes close to drifting out of orbit in Gravity.

When he isn't creeping you out, Nils Frahm spends his time creating moments that are either staggering complex or surreal. Colin Stetson's The Righteous Wrath of an Honorable Man manages to utilise what must surely be every note a clarinet can play, all at once, and still make it sound fantastic. Nina Simone's Who Knows Where The Times Goes is beautiful and poignant, eventually dissolving into a muffled meow and the purrs of Frahm's girlfriend's cat Cleo before we dart off somewhere new. 

The album closes with the hauntingly beautiful Honey Bunch by The Gentleman Losers followed by a solo piano edit of Frahms' own Them from his recent score to film Victoria. This is an album of depth but it unfurls its charms slowly... And for that it deserves your time. 

Nils Frahm's Late Night Tales is released on 11 September. Check out the video for Nils Frahms' cover of 4'33" below. You can buy the album directly from Late Night Tales and the album is available to stream in full until 14 September here.

Tags: nils frahm, late night tales, gentleman losers, nina simone, colin stetson, gene autry, john cage
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MUNA

Stream: Loudspeaker - MUNA

September 09, 2015 in stream

MUNA are LA three-piece Katie, Josette and Naomi and Loudspeaker follows their previous release Promise.

Loudspeaker is an entirely female produced intimate electronic pop record. Here more than ever MUNA call to mind Haim, only reared purely on 80s soft rock. The track is an irresistibly forthright reclamation of one's voice having spent a period in silence - the kind of track anyone who has ever felt like they have lost a part of their identity at the end of a relationship will recognise.

Describing the track, MUNA said: “It can be really difficult to choose your own comfort over the comfort of others, specifically if you are taught by society to do the opposite. We hope people will hear it and gain a little bit of courage to articulate their own battles and grievances, all the while knowing that they don't have to take the blame for everything they've been through. Oh, and also it's cool when girls are loud.”

Love the track and the message behind it. Check it out below:

throw us yr heart on hypem: bit.ly/loudspeakerhypem © MUNA 2015. all rights reserved.

Tags: muna
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Delaire

Stream / Download: Belief - Delaire

September 08, 2015 in stream

Delaire's new track Belief is the kind is sparkling synth-driven R&B you can expect from Jessy Ware combined with Roísín Murphy, full of the singer's vocals and ice-like shifting melodies.

The track moves through three distinct phases - the whispered opening through to a dramatic middle section that slowly builds until the instrumentation drops back to reveal Delaire's exposed and confessional vocals as she gently asks "Don't you know that your love is enough for me?"

Listen to the track below and if you like it grab the download in exchange for signing up to Delaire's mailing list here.

Official Debut Single from Delaire. Release date: November 20th 2015 Free download for a limited period if you sign up to my mailing list here: http://smarturl.it/dMailerSignup

Tags: delaire
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