Showing posts with label Deep House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deep House. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2011

Cris @ The Gallery










Superb mix from Cris, Italy. Check it out here
Patricia Rushen - Music of the earth (Danny Krivit edit)
Harvey presents Locussolus - Next to You
BlackLodge - Clap
The Groovers - Thinking about You (re-groove)
S.Davidson & Enthousiasten G. - That song (Huxley rmx)
Beatfanatic - Dansfeber
Marvin Gaye - Funky Space Reincarnation (OOFT! edit)
Michael J.Collins - Nothing wrong to holding on (M.Aymard rmx)
Super Value 8 Riccio - Track 3
Massimiliano Pagliara - Beach Birds
Pop & Eye - Spinach Spaceship
Cheek - Venus (Pepe Bradock's Saucy Precog rmx)
Isaac Hayes - What does it take (Denis Urban Groove re-work)
Supermax - Push, push (Sexy Chocolate Girl)
    Image courtesy of http://ffffound.com

    Thursday, February 3, 2011

    Koime Session

    Mucho.Sugoi@Koime
    Download here (320kbps MP3)
    Image courtesy of http://ffffound.com

    Tracklist:
    One With The Matrix - Paul Nolan
    Love Me (Good Guy Mikesh & Filburt Remix) - Marbert Rocel
    Love Cry - Four Tet
    Twirl & The Beanstalk - Tornado Wallace
    In-Haus Musik (Original Mix) - Chris B
    As One - Tony Lionni
    Serenity - Tony Lionni
    Drown Alone (Original Mix) - Croatia Squad
    Hlyeg - Sanasol
    Nasty Disposition - AFMB
    Masturjakor (Kink And Neville Watson Remix) - Terre Thaemlitz
    Orange Alert - Metro Area
    Diyisi - Scope
    Cocoon (Sunset Mix) - Moonbeam
    Freeki Mutha F cker - Moodymann (Loop)
    Sueno Latino (DJ Hell's All U Need is Love Remix) - Christian Prommer
    Fly Bee Fly (Ooft Dub Mix) - Ariane Blank

    Thursday, October 28, 2010

    Mai dire Mai


    A decent and somehow nostalgic House Music session.
    Enjoy.

    Mai dire Mai (Imai):
    Domina - Carl Craig
    Deeper Shades Of Black (After Dark Mix) - Psycatron
    U Can Dance (Carl Craig Remix V.1) - DJ Hell
    Bipolar (Dop Morning Remix) - Djuma Soundsystem
    Equinox (Henrik Schwarz Remix) (Dixon Edit) - Code 718
    Centrism - Passive Remote
    Transform - Luke Hess
    Can't Hide It (Matthias Vogt Amnudubstrumental) - Alton Miller
    The Way (Secret Ingredients mix) - Global Communication
    Orange Alert - Metro Area
    Joe Si Ha (Spirit Catcher Remix) - Tosca

    Download here (320kbps MP3)
    Image courtesy of http://ffffound.com

    Sunday, January 24, 2010

    The Seoul Session
















    Mucho.Sugoi The Seoul Session January 2010
    Sub Universive - Ron Trent 
    Late Night Jam (Original Mix) - Levon Vincent 
    Lost Soul (Original Mix) - Alex V  
    Rainy Season (Edmund Remix) - Alex Douche 
    Omlette (Original Mix) - Moodymanc 
    No Applause (John Daly Mix) - Fish Go Deep 
    Backwards Never (Xdb remake) - Beat Pharmacy 
    Awefully - Above Smoke 
    Night Smell You (Original Mix) - Aleksey Beloozerov 
    Solarized (Extended Mix Dub) - Agoria 
    Blueprint - Kink and Neville Watson 
    Alma (Francois Dubois Remix) - Jay Leblone 
    Mifune - Ame 
    Long Way To Go - Alex Flitsch meets Audiofly 
    Beautiful - Stryke 
    You Make Me Feel - Steve Bug 
    Mariposa - DJ Koze
    Listen/Download Here

    Monday, November 23, 2009

    The Lysergic Acid Diethylamide experience


    First of all, a warm welcome to Oliva and Anita, thanks for joining the show. The Lysergic Acid Diethylamide mix it's supposed to be an out of body, time distortion, cognitive shift experience. I did it with my friend Lowestein in mind, but it is a technological music trip aimed to anyone willing to listen to it. I suggest you increase the lower and the high frequencies on your equalizer for a better result. The tracks selection ranges from IDM of the early 90's to present day electronic dance music, with acid elements, lot's of looping and a great deal of harmonic mixing. It is by no means perfect, and kind of dark at times, but it is enjoyable. The mix is 142 minutes long (hence it's a heavy file, 200MB), you can download it, or just flash-play it on the host site. PLEASE leave comments if you download it. Enjoy



    Mucho.Sugoi - The Lysergic Acid Diethylamide mix
    recorded live@The Albert Hofmann Lounge Nov. 2009


    Tracklist:
    The Trip: The Tune In - Dr. Timothy Leary (1967)
    A - Reagenz (1994)
    Once I fell... - Josh Wink (1996)
    Train By The Autobahn (Part 1) - The Black Dog (2008)
    Floatilla - Spacetime Continuum (1994)
    Static emotion - B12 (1993)
    Basic Emotion - B12 (1993)
    Home Enterambient (Caya Dub) - Carl Craig (2005)
    Eggshell - Autechre 1(993)
    For My Love - Barnabun (2008)
    Goo - Plastikman (1994)
    Bio Dimension - B12 (1993)
    Amalia - As One (1996)
    Do Bassdrums Have Feelings - Pete Namlook & Richie Hawtin (1995)
    Eastman - Move D(Kunststoff) (1995)
    Grounation (Berghain drum jack) - Deadbeat (2008)
    Presence Edit - Basic Channel (1994)
    Tracing Lines - Remote (2008)
    Colors Of Rain - Anders Ilar (2008)
    Disconnect - Plastikman (2003)
    Mas Fuerte Que El Sol - Vogado Projects (2002)
    The King Mob File - Two Lone Swordsmen (1996)
    Made your point - Andy Stott (2008)
    Harsh Reality - Claro Intelecto (2008)

    Kairo - Spacetime Continuum (1996)

    Sunday, November 8, 2009

    Modern CLassics # 02

    Label:Maurizio
    Catalog#:M-3
    Format:Vinyl, 12", 33 ⅓ RPM
    Country:Germany
    Released:1993
    Genre:Electronic
    Style:Deep
    Notes:Mastered at National Sound Corporation, Detroit.
    Tracklisting:
    A Domina (Maurizio Mix) (13:14)
    B Domina (C. Craig's Mind Mix) (10:48)

    Thursday, November 5, 2009

    Fred P. aka Black Jazz Consortium

    Mix by Fred P. aka Black Jazz Consortium

    01. Dan Jordan – Slam Dunk
    02. Dj Qu – The Zone
    03. Move D – Galicia Olive
    04. DJ Bone – The Vibe
    05. Unknown
    06. Trench – Arrival
    07. DJ Jus-Ed – Flyaway
    08. Unknown
    09. Aaron Carl – Tears
    10. Rocco – Someday
    11. Craig Alexander – Soul Revival
    12. DJ Bone – Change
    13. Move D and Ben Brunn – Song from Beehive
    14. Fred P. – Traveling Star

    Right click Here and save link as ...

    Francois Dubois Mix

    Francois Dubois - Urban Torque Transmissions - 22-10-2009

    01. Holger Zilske - To Them To Me (Vincenzo Remix) - Unknown
    02. Lovebirds - Do It - Unknown
    03. Helly Larson - Visions - Unknown
    04. Jagged - New York - Quintessentials
    05. Unknown Artist - Move Me - Unknown
    06. Ross Couch - Changing Seasons - Body Rhythm
    07. KneeDeep - All About Love (Lovebirds Suite) - Knee Deep
    08. Taxi Cab - Chunk-A-Nova - Static Records
    09. Pezzner - Avoiding The Subject - Viva!
    10. Patrice Scott - Do You Feel Me - Sistrum Recordings
    11. Blakkat - Deeper (Acappella) - Shaboom

    Right click Here and save link as ....

    Tuesday, October 20, 2009

    DJ Cris @ Dakota Mix

    Another great mixed session from Italian deep house master DJ Cris. Deeeeeep is the word. Great tracks selection, smooth mixing, superb sounds. A must download!
    Download it here
    or directly from DJ Cris' blog
    SUONO BUONO.



    DJ Cris @ Dakota Mix

    1. Red Rack'em - Picnic (The Revenge rmx)
    2. Sacha Dive - The get out of the Ghetto Blues
    3. Destination Danger - Du Rififi au Katanga
    4. Markos - Actuality (Unus Emre rmx)
    5. Ark - Hey Glizz
    6. No Regular Play - Owe me (Denis Kurtel rmx)
    7. Le K - Rahan
    8. Linkwood - System
    9. The lost men - More of that
    10. Willie Graff & Tuccillo - Do it
    11. Ian Pooley - Around here
    12. Justus Kohncke - (It's gonna be) Alright (Dirk Leyers rmx)
    13. I:Cube - Oblivion (Dixon's edit)
    14. Herb LF - Never stop
    15. Jay Tripwire feat Bobbhi Savta - Dema (Instrumental rmx)
    16. Mr.Fingers - Can you feel it (acapella)
    17. Linkwood - Nectarine
    18. Matt Damon - House Musik

    Friday, June 5, 2009

    This is a Madonna-free zone


    I am 41 years young, which may seems strange considering the name of my blog. Wakage no itari - the limits of youthful vitality, or in other words, those silly things you do when you're young. Nevertheless, today while writing this post I feel very young. Maybe because I have fallen in love! Yes in love with a record called Midtown 120 Blues and I want to tell the world about it and about the person behind this amazing piece of work.

    The name is DJ Sprinkles, better know as Terre Thaemlitz.
    Terre is an award winning multi-media producer, writer, public speaker, educator, audio remixer, DJ and owner of the Comatonse Recordings record label. Her work critically combines themes of identity politics - including gender, sexuality, class, linguistics, ethnicity and race - with an ongoing critique of the socio-economics of commercial media production.
    His audio projects have found release on a variety of record labels ranging from Mille Plateaux, to YMO founder Haruomi Hosono's Daisyworld Discs, to Bill Laswell's Subharmonic Records, to Universal Music Germany's Classical Division, to the UK dance label Disorient, and so on. Graphic design, photography, illustration, text and video also play a part in Thaemlitz' projects. His writings on music and culture have been published internationally in a number of books, academic journals and magazines.
    He has released 15 solo albums, as well as numerous 12-inch singles and video works. Her writings on music and culture have been published internationally in a number of books, academic journals and magazines. As a speaker and educator on issues of non-essentialist Transgenderism and Queerness, Thaemlitz has participated in panel discussions throughout Europe and Japan. He currently resides in Kawasaki, Japan

    In May 2008 in Japan and January 2009 in Europe, the gender-queer artist (who prefers either “he” or “she,” while not really subscribing to either) released Midtown 120 Blues, the first full-length album under the DJ Sprinkles moniker. A moniker he took on when he started DJing about 20 years ago. “DJ Sprinkles has always been a signifier of the unheard DJs, un-played records, and undocumented outcasts. The unimportant,” Thaemlitz explains. “Because, ultimately, I think house culture revolves around disenfranchised people attempting to construct a space in which we feel important.”

    And what an amazing album.
    Midtown 120 Blues
    it’s about changing perspectives and rethinking preconceived notions. It is over an hour of exquisite deep house music where things are kept instrumental, with no wailing divas but richly textured productions that are warm and enveloping, full of gently tapped pianos and flute notes floating by. For Thaemlitz, deep house is not the music of celebration, but the music of sadness. Perhaps this is sadness for the original context that has been erased, buried and gentrified. Perhaps it's the sadness of the original context itself. Possibly it's a mix of both.
    Midtown 120 Blues is an incredibly deep album—not just in terms of the "deepness" of the house on offer, but emotionally and intellectually so, as Thaemlitz maps out the sound in a deeply personal way. A meditation on the "meaning" of house, a critique of the recent deep house revival, an exploration of one man's personal relationship with the sound.
    Midtown 120 Blues
    is all of these things, not to mention being some of the best deep house you'll hear in a very long time. As soon as you here the opening bars of the serene intro, disturbed by the voiceover stating very matter-of-factly, "House music isn't so much a sound, as a situation," you'll realize you're in for a true - and tense - listening experience. Prepare for lilting teardrops of piano, defiant kicks, a Madonna smackdown, apocalyptic yet paradisal Larry Heard landscapes, Moodymann lo-fi productions, beatless movements fashioned from a classic funk break - it's a preternatural "obituary" of house.
    In the opener “Midtown 120 Blues Intro” a pair of piano chords diffuses like smoke into diaphanous drones, muted arpeggios mumble, and robot fingers snap as an echo-extended snare keeps crackling time. Thaemlitz faintly lays out his case: Instead of the “greeting card” bullshit notion of house that’s most commonly trafficked – “life, love, happiness” – he insists “suffering is in here, with us.” The facile universalism of mass marketing broadens the terms of house music so vastly its inscription of gay disenfranchisement fades away. Enumerating the crises that lead to house’s emergence, multiple overlapping Thaemlitzes recite, "It's the rhythm of the empty midtown dancefloors resonating with the difficulties of transgendered sex work, black market hormones, drug and alcohol addiction, racism, gender and sexual crises, unemployment and censorship."
    The combination of pain and ambivalent nostalgia is expressed not only by vocals which mutter of violence, of Madonna's 'theft' of Vogueing, of being "deep in the bowel of House", but in Thaemlitz's piano chords. Unlike much Deep House, which merely replaces House's disco origins with a vague and soporific jazziness, Thaemlitz's playing works like Nina Simone's, opening up between jazz and modern classical a huge harmonic space in which to articulate complex emotions. Even though these linear tracks seem superficially like conventional Deep and Ambient House pieces, the combination of gently but relentlessly provocative voices and unexpected harmonic left-turns bring what is traditionally high class background music into sharp focus and demand close and sustained attention.
    The melancholy is clearest on "Grand Central, Pt. II (72 hrs. by Rail from Missouri)," almost nine minutes of gently drifting ambience, as a piano softly dances over warm gentle tones, the sound of a record crackling and popping, and a woman's voice reflecting on seeing somebody "getting knocked around." The final minute is silent except for the sound of vinyl crackling. More than anywhere else on the album, this track underlines what deep house means to Thaemlitz—sadness, pain, the threat of sudden violence and the fleeting promise of escape in a club.

    I transcribe the words of the end monologue of the track Ball'r (Madonna-Free Zone) which narrates the theft of Vogueing by Madonna, as they are a further expression of the emotional statements made in this album.
    "When Madonna came out with her hit "Vogue" you knew it was over. She had taken a very specifically queer, transgendered, Latino and African-American phenomenon and totally erased that context with her lyrics, "It makes no difference if you're black or white, if you're a boy or a girl." Madonna was taking in tons of money, while the Queen who actually taught her how to vogue sat before me in the club, strung out, depressed and broke. So if anybody requested "Vogue" or any other Madonna track, I told them, "No, this is a Madonna-free zone! And as long as I'm DJ-ing, you will not be allowed to vogue to the decontextualized, reified, corporatized, liberalized, neutralized, asexualized, re-genderized pop reflection of this dance floor's reality!"

    On his Comatonse Records website she writes "Please note that nobody has legal permission from me to sell MP3 downloads of my music - not iTunes, not e-music, not anyone. They are selling my music illegally. They and the distributors they deal with have no contracts with me, and do not pay me a single penny of your purchase cost. They continually ignore my written requests to have my works removed from their profit-engines, knowing that the money at issue is less than the cost of my hiring a lawyer to resolve this ongoing mess. Please do not pay those mainstream corporate assholes for downloads of my music! They complain about MP3 copy protection issues while deliberately and systematically stealing from independent producers like myself - and consumers like you! Make no mistake, they are the music pirates to worry about!

    The album has in spades what many a contemporary dance effort lacks: amazingly deep music, a greater purpose and its ensuing range of emotions.

    If you want to buy this album (and if you like house music you definitely should) please follow this link
    If you want to know more about DJ Sprinkles/Terre Theamlitz (and there is a lot to know and a lot to learn) please visit his label Comatonse Recordings website

    Thanks to Terre Theamlitz for this amazing piece of work
    Thanks to my Scottish brother Muz for making me aware of it

    Most words in this post are bluntly taken from the following sources:
    Bernardo Rondeau on www.dustedmagazine.com
    Joe Muggs on The Wire (UK) Issue 300, February 2009 www.thewire.co.uk
    Amar Patel on Straight No Chaser (UK), January 2009 www.straightnochaser.co.uk