Friday, October 05, 2018

Laurence Fisher Q's & A's


Laurence Fisher is the maverick behind Cambridge's only electro night, 'Motherchip Connexion'. We recently became acquainted, so I thought it only polite to ask him a few questions, and get him to do a mix. Read on and fill your boots (as well as your eyes and ears).


What motivated you to start Motherchip Connexion and what are the realities of trying to run a club night like it in Cambridge?

Motherchip started out of complete boredom and frustration at the lack of any electro music in Cambridge. I was staying in for years on end, mixing and listening on my own and one night went out to see an old mate’s event where people were playing eclectic mixes of music on vinyl. I started talking to people there and quickly made some new friends. I explained my passion for electro music and got introduced to a couple of other like-minded people. Seeing others putting on small events in pubs inspired me to get together with the few folks I met who had electro to play and it went from there. The reality is that in this town electro is a bit of an unknown quantity to a lot of people, but the beauty is that people come up to me saying “I don’t know what this type of music is but I love it, it’s amazing!” Crowd sizes can vary, we have had full rooms and single digit figures. A late license at a venue really helps but it is hard to persuade venues to give you one if you can’t guarantee numbers. We take what we can get.  


Who are the resident DJs and what are their styles? How do they compliment each other?

There are three residents including myself. 

Eddie aka Bovaflux/Nullptr plays a great range of high quality production electro, plenty of solid classics and new releases. His style leans towards tracks with deep moods, melody and emotions, but also knows exactly how to bring the heat when he wants to rock the crowd.

The Subdermic aka Lilly Phoenix is a force to be reckoned with. She plays some of the hardest techno I’ve heard in this town and slides electro bangers in between. It’s always exciting to hear her new unreleased material live and the reaction it gets. Furiously beat matching and fader flipping her way though intense sets, she takes no prisoners.

Purplehands  aka myself. I like to play all sorts of electro styles, depending on the time of the night. At the beginning I’ll be slower and playing gentle vibes; middle period I’m playing the classics and trying out new tracks. End of the night I’m ramping up with fast Detroit electro, and squeaky, bleepy and raw sounds from across the planet.

I think we all work well because we are versatile and rotate different time slots. We know each other’s styles well enough to transition our sets together while all bringing our own take on the music and surprise each other. It’s a lot of fun.     

What about lighting and visuals? Would you say that coming to Motherchip is an immersive experience?

Coming from a previous job working as a lighting technician the venue space is very important to me. I have a clear idea of what I like for our music, as dark as possible with a few lasers for dance floor motion and immersion backed up by smoke machine. The strobe comes out towards the end of the night usually controlled by myself. The one thing that people seem to like and comment on are the visuals I make, which is nice. I spend hours looking for old science documentaries, sci-fi and technology videos to splice together into 3 to 4 hour long playing videos. No 2001 though, that shit is great but completely played out! I only have basic software to make them with but I enjoy spending nights listening late to records and picking out scenes that compliment each other. It also really helps tie in the subject matter of electro music. It’s also great at the start of the nights when people don’t necessarily want to dance they can just sit back in the dark, listen and zone out to the visuals. There’s nothing I love more than watching missile tests while Fastgraph is being played.   

What are your own feelings about electro, and electronic music in general? How long have you been into it, and what got you started?

I came from playing bass in a punk band and mixing and scratching hip hop before I heard real electro. It’s a typical evolution in listening I guess. An old mate put me on to some records he had started buying around roughly 2001 and it just went from there. I just started exploring the underground world, mainly through the Internet. I remember hearing Radioactiveman’s first album being played at a market stall in town, a complete surprise to me at the time that someone else knew it. I said I knew it and the guy at the stall gave me a CDR of DJ Stingray’s - DJ cafĂ© Mix Rotterdam, back in 2003. When I heard that it changed everything; it was on repeat in the car for ages. I spent many solitary years trying to hunt down the tracks on it and discovering lots of different types of electro in the process. 


The genre is incredibly personal to me, it’s the time and energy spent digging to find such amazing music, which solidifies the bond I have for it. The sounds are like nothing else to my mind. It’s full of different emotions and concepts. It can send me into deep thoughts, reflecting on the world and the future. It can also make me want to dance because it is incredibly rhythmic, funky, heavy and sexy.

What I find very interesting is that within a relatively small genre there are a number of artists that have their own original musical styles while still sticking to the essence of electro, it’s very similar to hip hop really, when MCs and beat makers have their own styles and it also feels like there is a bit of friendly competition going on. What’s great is the community of artists within it, I used to message The Advent and Stingray on Myspace asking about tracks and pointers for records. Today it’s great to be able to contact and share information with these artists directly on Facebook or by just chatting to them in person at club nights, there are no egos just hard working, genuine people keeping this scene alive for the love of it.
  

 Could you say what the most popular tunes are at Motherchip? Give us an all time top 5.


The Consumer – Datacare



 Shokh – The Man



 Randomer – Smokin’


ERP – Vox Automaton


Detroit In Effect – Let Yo Body Rock

When we spoke at the ‘Drexciyan Legacy’ night, you came across as someone who is passionate about what they do, but also realistic. Do you think you’ll ever be able to give up your day job to concentrate more on music, and what is the day job?

Well never say never, it would be great to do, I think that time is more important than money as long as you have enough to get by on. I often get ideas for making tracks while at work and wish I could just go home and turn on the music gear, and then when you get home you’re tired and only have a few hours to get creative. I don’t know if I’m just lazy or my heart isn’t in it enough but I do feel I waste too much time not making music. A valuable lesson I have learned over the years is that stress from jobs kills my creativity. Today I work in hazardous waste management and media production for a biomedical research campus as a lab technician. I have also worked in human anatomy, embalming donors for teaching purposes. 

If you could emulate any club night, which would it be, and why?

Scand is an electro night in and around London run by Sync 24 that always inspires me. Its just pure electro all night, they have their residents who are lovely people and they get in the famous names in the scene from around the world. It’s great to hear upcoming releases played by them and you know the crowd is there because they’re really into the music, I have made a lot of friends by attending those nights and it’s good to chat with like minded people about the music. Their last event was at Corsica Studios and was a split night with Neighborhood. It was so great to see electro in charge and in the main room instead of “room 2” which is so often the case; that’s what I’m aiming for too.    

What have been your greatest influences outside music?

Space exploration, human civilization, science and, broadly speaking, anything that involves a glimpse into the future. I’m looking forward to the Moon space station, the Moon base and humans landing on Mars, and also a solution to global warming.


 What are the top 5 labels and artists that are buy on sight for you?

Stilleben Records in Sweden run by Luke Eargoggle and his brother always put out interesting and crazy banging tracks and have done for years. They’re a must buy for me.

Cultivated Electronics run by Phil (Sync 24) in the UK has consistently strong releases and they fly off the shelves so keep your eyes peeled!


Fundamental Records run by Alek Stark out of Madrid is incredible. He has released artist’s albums and put together the biggest compilations of electro in the world from artists across the globe. These are a buy on sight for me as they contain tracks you cannot get on any other format than vinyl and I treat them like heavy ammo for doing a set. 

Jensen Interceptor (Australia) has recently started a label called International Chrome which is taking off right now. He and Assembler Code are putting out some furious banging electro which is a regular listen for me, I’m excited to see where they go musically.

Frustrated Funk is just a classic label and I always have to keep my eyes peeled for new stuff on there, so many great releases over the years.

What is coming up in the future for Motherchip? Is there anything happening between now and Christmas?

Yes we have our CPU Records release party celebrating Eddie’s (Nullptr) EP   ‘Aftrmth’, on 19th October at 2648 Bar on Trinity Street in Cambridge. Also 96 Back from CPU will be joining us. Really looking forward to that and in a new venue too. We’ll have to wait and see what the future holds. I have a baby boy on the way so I will be very busy early next year, it’s all really exciting and I hope we can get more people around town to tune into our sounds and grow the crowd. We would like to get some bigger names to play for us and make more connexions! I think perseverance is key and as long as we are enjoying it we can make an impact. To the future!

Cacophonous Bling Podcast 10: Purplehands




DJ Dijital - Abduction Beats (feat DJ Lenn Swann)
Professor X - Static
Alden Tyrell - Obsession
Luke Eargoggle - Nancy is Data
Kan3da - Scandinavium
Kraftwerk - Computer World
Assembler Code - HAL's Machine Tool
Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five - Survival
Darren J. Horgan - TB or not TB
Freddy Fresh - Flava
Biochip C - Non-violent
The Advent - Heights
The Other Side Of Space - Techno Drivers
The Consumer - Datacare
T/error - Transuranium
Klorex 55 - Your car is my car
Shokh - The Man
D.A.F. - El que
Fastgraph - ../../
Ultradyne - Suicide Relay
AFX - .942937
Autechre - Second Scepe 
Cacophonous Bling Podcast 10: Purplehands



Wednesday, October 03, 2018

Awakening the Past 2 - The Evader (Steve Bicknell) (6dimensions)



Title: Awakening The Past 2
Artist: The Evader (Steve Bicknell)
Label: 6dimensions
Cat Number: 126d-10
Genre: Techno

1: No Hats Required – Track 1
2: No Hats Required – Track 6
3: No Hats Required – Track 2
4: No Hats Required – Track 3
5: Power Of Balance
6: Shifting Illusion

The four ‘’No Hats Required’ tracks are all locked grooves. So let’s move on to ‘Power of Balance’, which feels like a longer locked groove, and ‘Shifting Illusion’ which does so as well. Sorry to be negative about this, but when two tracks are placed on the same release as what amounts to four even more condensed compositions, it doesn’t do them any favours. 

BROR07 - Jor-El aka Joel Alter (BROR Records)




Title: BROR07
Artist: Jor- El aka Joel Alter
Label: Bror Records
Cat Number: BROR07
Genre: Techno

1: In Ur Face
2: In Ur Mind
3: Spectrum

‘In Ur Face’, while being pleasant enough, relies on a dirty, squelchy sub bass to deliver its eponymous clarion call. It’s a contrast between light and dark which conjures up visions of Theresa May running barefoot through fields of wheat, while being pursued by a limp, sausage waving Boris Johnson. The dreamier ‘In Your Mind’ is grander in scope, and thankfully not at all evocative of the previous track’s tomfoolery. It’s rather good though. ‘Spectrum’ is a twitch from start to finish, and does nothing for me bar the background swirls. Head straight for ‘In Ur Mind’ on this release. It’s covering multitudes. 

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Synergy EP - Tripeo (incl. Cadans, Doka collabs) (Rekids Special Projects)



Title: Synergy EP
Artist: Tripeo
Label: Rekids Special Projects
Cat Number: PSPX10
Genre: Techno

1: Rave Tune – Tripeo & Cadans
2: Idiocracy – The Leap
3: Need for Nuance – Tripeo
4: Zeitgeist – Tripeo

I’m a bit conflicted about stuff like this. Sure it works well but I’m not really a big room person, even though I can appreciate it from afar. This is the type of techno that permeates Joey Anderson’s recent Dekmantel Festival set, and he plays it very well, but there’s something missing, for me at least. Maybe it’s a little bit of soul? The truth is that there are a lot of nice noises here, but a lack of foundation. ‘Need for Nuance’ is eponymously my favourite here, but ‘Idiocracy’ and ‘Rave Tune’ both contain lots of positives as well. ‘Zeitgeist’ throbs when it needs to so if I sound indecisive about this it’s because I am.

Retroactive (Part Three) - Sir Lord Commix (R-Time Records)



Title: Retroactive Part 3
Artist: Sir Lord Commix
Label: R-Time Records
Cat Number: RTM006
Genre: Deep House

1: Evidence
2: Soul House
3: B Boy Disco
4: Flash ‘N’ Folks

‘Retroactive Part 2’ was reviewed on this blog a few months back, and what you get here is more of the same. The tunes here are rereleases which were scattered on various labels twenty or so years ago, and it’s a testament to Ammon Andrews’ skill as a producer that their time is coming around once more. Either that or we really haven’t made much progress and everything still sounds the same. In any case, with the exception of ‘B Boy Disco’ which is sparse, percussive and a tool, this is a lush, soulful spacey release with obvious nods to Detroit and has stood the test of time well. Lovely stuff.

Monday, September 24, 2018

STE 00003 - Ste Roberts (STE)




Title: STE 00003 
Artist: Ste Roberts 
Label: STE 
Cat Number: STE 00003
Genre: Techno

1: White Cold
2: Pumpkin Seed 
3: Elevate

Any track that contains a monologue about psychedelic drugs always hits the spot, particularly when it’s delivered in a soporific tone. ‘White Cold’ is that track. ‘Pumpkin Seed’ also makes use of a sampled voice, but this one eponymously describes what happened when a pumpkin seed was planted. One for when the drugs take hold and you’re struggling to grasp the inner meaning of nothing. ‘Elevate’, meanwhile, makes use of a flanged Mood ll Swing shuffle and is the most forceful of this functional trio.

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Selections from We Will Live Again - John Daly (All City Records)


Title: Selections from We Will Live Again
Artist: John Daly
Label: All City Records
Cat Number: ACJD12x1
Genre: Deep House

1: Into The Northern
2: Touch The Sun
3: Dawn
4: Milestones
5: Don’t Ever Stop Loving Me
6: Wild And Free

A sincere and poignant statement accompanies this release. Daly lost his father to cancer, and this music was composed during the time he slipped away. The aftermath of this event was an epiphanic time for him insofar as the importance of his father’s musical influence was concerned. Half of the forthcoming ‘We Will Live Again’ album is present on this release, and it’s a turbulent selection. Listening to bits I’m reminded of ‘Inner City Life’, especially when the vocals kick in. However, this is just a general impression. Having said that, breakbeats are the dominant motif across these compositions, as well as an occasional bass-heavy undertow. The pieces are well-realised and full of character, a reflection, no doubt, of Daly’s emotional state at the time.

Monday, September 10, 2018

Mantras for the Travelling Souls - Fred P & SMBD (Modern Dialect)


Title: Mantras For The Travelling Souls Vol. 1
Artist: Fred P & SMBD
Label: Modern Dialect
Cat Number: MD001
Genre: Deep House

1: Angel Dust
2: Pulling Strings
3: Matralude 1 (Vinyl Only)
4: Hybrid 
5: Mantralude 2 (Vinyl Only)
6: Angel Dust (SMBD Dub) (Digital Only)

You may recoil at the mass of deep house that comes out on a weekly basis. You may also wonder what constitutes the genre, seeing a lack of depth in most releases, and then recoiling at the additional adjective “soulful” thinking it’s one too many and completely unjustified. The music under scrutiny here is of a type that links The Loft to Berghain; in which there’s sincerity, aligned with a contrasting refinement and rawness, which is dynamic, distinct and diverse. I doubt that a more vivid shade of the genre is being released at the moment. I’m reasonably well-versed regarding Fred P, not so with Simbad, who has released under the SMBD alias since sometime last year. so it would be interesting to know exactly who did what here. The ends have justified the means though, whoever is behind what.


A recent Fred P mix I'm enjoying.

Berga Magic EP - Frak (Hypercolour)


Title: Berga Magic EP
Artist: Frak
Label: Hypercolour
Cat Number: HYPE074
Genre: Techno

A1: Tarpaulin
A2: Berga Magic
B1: Monogram
B2: Making Control

An interesting press release accompanies this four tracker, in which Frak get compared to Devo, amongst others, as an example of performance art. I imagine this will be lost on most, but will feel comprehensive in print. Not to worry as the music is interesting enough to compensate, being a dense collage of analogue bleeps, beats and fuzz of slightly varying tempos. Both ‘Monogram’ and ‘Making Control’ fall into the concise bracket, with barely room to maneuver between the beats the space is sought through compact syncopation. ‘Tarpaulin’ and ‘Berga Magic’ on the other hand, contain more space and, ergo, more elongation. It’s six of one and half a dozen of the other here, but it’s very well realised and original.

Monday, September 03, 2018

Alternative Hypothesis EP - Ben Buitendijk (Oblique Music)



Title: Alternative Hypothesis EP
Artist: Ben Buitendijk
Label: Oblique Music
Cat Number: OBQ008
Genre: Techno

1: Contamination Zone
2: Stardust
3: Alternative Hypothesis

I had no idea who Ben Buitendijk is until I heard a track he did for Steve O’Sullivan a while back called ‘Promised Land’, which showed his dubbier side. He also did a splendid mix in the same vein for the Mosaic boss’s excellent mix series. (And I reviewed a past collaboration here). Well, in contrast to the Mosaic stuff, this release has a harder edge, but only really comes out all guns blazing on ‘Contamination Zone’. Both ‘Stardust’ and ‘Alternative Hypothesis’ are sparser, more minimally cosmic cuts, and owe a debt to Jeff Mills. All three tracks float on their own momentum and the production is top notch. Subtle and effective stuff.

Sunday, September 02, 2018

A Drexciyan Legacy: CB2 Norfolk Street 1/9/18 Cambridge



Last night Emmanuelle and me popped out and found our way to CB2 on Norfolk Street. I work in Cambridge so I parked the car where I do on a normal day; a walk of around 15 minutes between us and the bar. Mill Rd was bustling, with its many restaurants seemingly doing brisk business. Once we got towards Norfolk Street though, I was struck by how relatively quiet the area was. Not to worry. We reached the bar, got drinks and went upstairs. The room was small, cozy but, at the time we arrived, empty except for a small group on a table ahead of us, and the gentlemen controlling the proceedings. No matter. The music was great, the visuals suitably impressive and the ambience relaxing. 


I chatted to Laurence Fisher, the brains behind “Motherchip Connexion” an electro night in Cambridge which puts on occasional soirees, mainly at The Man in the Moon, and he spoke as only an enthusiast can regarding the current state of play concerning his taste in music and trying to put it across to the good people of Cambridge. Under no illusions as to the size of the task regarding staging an electro night in the city, he was very friendly and good humoured, but also realistic. I’ve never attended one of the Motherchip nights, and was told that they do ok, but only really fill up for the last hour or so. When this happens they go off, but venue restrictions cut them off in their prime. 

Back to last night; Laurence was joined by Eddie Symons, aka Nullptr aka Bovaflux, and while we were there the music was being played  on some sort of Traktor device. We were content to sit, sip and enjoy the infallibly good sonic treats which flooded through the speakers. The place did start getting busier and happy to say, but there was a very obvious absence of more X chromosomes. Two girls did come to the top of the stairs at one point, but then disappeared. Anyway, we only stayed for an hour and a half, and it might have got busier later on. The conversation on the next table was getting very deep at one point, with one lad earnestly asking the others if they’d red Kodwo Eshun’s ‘More Brilliant Than The Sun’, possibly as a result of me trying to explain to Emmanualle the afrofuturist references within the Drexciyan legacy. 








Nifty little handout from last night.

Saturday, September 01, 2018

Dust And Haze - Valya Kan (Work Them Records)



Title: Dust & Haze
Artist: Valya Kan
Label: Work Them Records
Cat Number: WorkThemRecLP001
Genre: Techno

1: Leave
2: Machine Soul
3: Promises
4: Sick
5: A Perfect Emotion
6: Smoke In The Cockpit
7: Time Capsule
8: Acid Hotel
9: Berlin Mornin’ Summer
10: Promises Dub
11: Saturday 1542

So often the concept of the album is debunked by a lack of understanding as to what it actually is. ‘Dust and Haze’ strays well clear of this and treads a careful, eponymous path through the potential conflicts between different auditory turfs in order to effortlessly rise to the occasion and demonstrate that patience is not only a virtue, but is an essential prerequisite both on the part of the artist and listener. This is a piece of work in more than one sense of the expression; it’s not a collection of highs and lows, rather a sonic smorgasbord of understatement. It clearly goes for the jugular on tracks like “Acid Hotel’ and ‘Sick’, but its power is no less potent on ‘Leave’, ‘’Machine Soul and ‘Promises’, in addition to those other compositions in which a singular sense of nuance and subtlety prevails.


Friday, August 24, 2018

Hyper Orbit - The Burrell Connection (Craigie Knowes)


Title: Hyper Orbit
Artist: The Burrell Connection 
Label: Craigie Knowes
Cat Number: CKNOWEP11
Genre: Techno

1: Hyoer 14.255
2: Hyoer 480
3: Orbit 458
4: Orbit 512

This feels like a release spanning four facets of hardcore, with both ‘Orbit 458’ and ‘Orbit 512’ going down a chasm in search of solitude. As for the other two, they each have their own story to tell. Damned if I know what it is though. Much more frenetic they are; ‘Hyper 480’ is a little too busy for my ears, but the omnipresent cosmic lull that underpins it manages to maintain some semblance of control; it’s proto drum and bass coupled with chaos. ‘Hyper 14.255’ is a more dynamic reflection of ‘Orbit 512’, with breaks cascading over acid welts and deep, synthesized, resonant cataracts. This is a very versatile and interesting release that I can’t quite make my mind up about, but look forward to having many more meetings with.

Thursday, August 23, 2018

Skudge 012 - Skudge (Skudge)


Title: Skudge 12
Artist: Skudge
Label: Skudge
Cat Number: SKUDGE012
Genre: Techno

A: Quasi
B: Parallel

Skudge keep it simple and understated on this double header, and in doing so send out mind bombs to those who believe that the minimal groove should be anything else but simple and understated. There’s not a lot going on here, but what does is quintessential dubbed out minimalism which mines a rich vein of linear, BC influenced techno. The louder this pair is played, the closer to nirvana you’ll get. Made for the mix, there will be times when they’ll stand on their own two feet, but for now all I can hear is the sound of level upon level of weaker shit being overlaid on either of these tracks in order to achieve transition.

Chi Chi Pensa, Rimane Senza - Patagonia (PanickPanick!)


Title: Chi Chi Pensa/Rimane Senza
Artist: Patagonia
Label: PanickPanick!
Cat Number: PP04
Genre: Minimal House/Techno

1: Chi Chi Pensa
2: Rimane Senza

Ostensibly composed of nothing, except wind and air, ‘Chi Chi Pensa’ is just the type of thing I used to love throwing shapes to down at Wiggle at the end of the last century. A throbbing, cardiac base underpins a driving groove which is interrupted by some high end synth stabs and breathy female vocals; (I doubt they would have been too much of a feature under London Bridge’s arches, and possibly reflect something a bit more sinister). ‘Rimane Senza’, on the other hand, feels undercooked and over reliant on a grandiose, posturing vocal sample. It bowls along gamely enough though, which is nice.