Around twenty-twenty five years ago (said in the voice of the harry Enfield character), Swag, aka Chris Duckenfield and Richard Brown, were a veritable underground hit factory, their sound founded on funk, breaks, tribal beats and hedonism. And this is a great example of their sound. Incredibly clean, bottom heavy and with a sound the ricochet’s throughout that sounds like an octopus juggling and sharpening knives. It’s definitely them, even though they don’t say it is. Primitive was their label for tools and a distillation of the style that had seen them become remixers du jour, as well as extremely accomplished headline artists. I still have almost all of their stuff and it has dated very well indeed. There’s still a place for them at the head of the table.
Cacophonous Bling
Random Ruminations On Dance Music Culture
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Track Of The Day: The Pop Group - Rob A Bank (Rough Trade)
One from the recesses of the mind. I played this for the first time in maybe 35 years the other day and immediately everything came rushing back. The various bedrooms of my youth and their smoke-filled ambience. Having said that, there was always a constant debate in progress within those autodidactic confines. One of those tunes made for squats. We were all anarchists back then.
Track Of Yesterday: Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Mosaic (Blue Note)
This track is everything that I’m not at the moment. Energetic, effervescent, full of vim and vigour. In contrast to its vitality I am a proper wet lettuce, having laboured under the misapprehension of being alive for the past week or so. Nothing lasts forever, so that’s nice. In the meantime get this tune. It’s bursting at the seams. Typical Blakey and The Jazz Messengers. Constantly in full flow. Love the tribal interlude that starts between 4-5 minutes.
Monday, February 23, 2026
Track Of The Day: Convextion- Kuiper (a.r.t.less)
This is one I didn’t have when it was originally released, so a.r.t.less did the business and released a double pack on coloured vinyl a couple of years ago that compiles the first two two Convextion releases on Matrix, the other being ‘Miranda Remixes’. (There is also ‘E.P.’ by E.R.P. currently going for a king’s ransom over on Discogs). As Gerard Hanson adopts a more tecchy approach for Convextion, that’s what you get here. Eight or so minutes of sublime, interstellar machine funk which takes its cues from everywhere that matters and ends up being completely original. It feels very much influenced by European techno, particularly that from the UK and The Nehtherlands at the time, rather than Detroit. However, the sci-fi vibe that creeps through from time to time definitely echoes some of Jeff Mills contemporary productions.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Track Of The day: Scientist -Drum Song Dub (Clocktower Records)
Elemental dub from Scientist. The first track from ‘Scientific Dub’, one which I didn’t have. The reggae racks in Reaction Records New Brighton used to heave under the weight of Scientis albums, with their comic book covers. ‘Scientst Rids The World Of The Evil Curse Of The Vampires’ was my favourite, but I also had a lot of time for ‘Scientist Meets The Space Invaders’. ‘Scientific Dub’ drafted Augustus Pablo in on piano, as well as Aston ‘Family Man’ Barrett on guitar, and Robbie Shakespeare on bass, so has maybe a more star studded line up than some of the other dub albums. Not that I ever used to pay that much attention to detail back then.
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Track Of The Day: The coastal Commission - Bring Down the Walls (Pacific Coast House Recordings)
Superior minimal/dubby west coast house from the turn of the century. So much good music came from that region around that time. All of the trailblazing tribal house on the likes of Siesta and Tango, and then the more purist house on this short-lived label, and others like Tweekin’. The coastal Commission was a chap called Sam Robson, whose career seems to run in parallel with the longevity of Pacific Coast House, and other splinter labels. Apparently about to get a new leash of life sometime soon. And nI guess by more purist house what I’m doing is separating the likes of this from those other labels which relied on a highly percussive, intense sound. This is almost the opposite. However, it’s not Kerri Chandler.
Friday, February 20, 2026
Track Of The Day: Starlight [Intrusion's Unreleased Tape Session]
This is free on Bandcamp at the moment, so there’s absolutely no excuse not to own it. Wonderful, sinister ambient dub that is fit for any occasion. Weddings, bar mitzvahs, you name it, there’s a place for it. Could this be the backdrop for a new interpretation of ‘West Side Story’ in which the aJets and The Sharks fight in slow-motion to this Beatles morass? Sort of like ‘The Matrix’ meets ‘Bugsy Malone’? What waffle.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Lewski - Rotational Drift (United Identities)
Title: Rotational Drift
Artist: Lewski
Label: United Identities
Cat Number: UI017
Genre: Electro
1: Rotational Drift
2: NaddD
If I’m correct, and I often am, ‘Rotational Drift’ marks something of a return to action for Lewski, not having put anything out for a few years now. Anyway, this is a double header of redoubtable quality. It’s quite fast, uptempo electro, but not straying into the excessively rapid and so preserving its funkiness. Both tracks showcase a multilayered, imaginative approach to beat pharmacy which reveals itself on continual listenings. The title track has a very appealing, soaring synth that feels raw on top of the angular beats and below the vocal stabs. ‘NaddD’ is a little bit more in control of itself, but no less powerful going for the jugular with the concave, synthetic steel bass drum balanced with a sense of the infinite relayed through a sonic sleight of hand that makes it feel like your floating in space. These tracks are way too short though. They’re an endless source of fascination.
Luxus Varta - Noise Figure (Shipwrec)
Title: Noise Figure
Artist: Luxus Varta
Label: Shipwrec
Cat Number: #Ship076
Genre: Electro
A1: Building Peaks
A2: Lizardous
B1: Silver Girl
B2: The Resetter
The latest release from Annecy’s finest Luxus Varta, finds him on Dutch label Shipwrec for the first time since 2017’s ‘Aquamarine Puzzle’. The world was a very different place then and, I think it’s fair to say, this release is also a little bit different from Mr Varta’s previous efforts. There’s still an underlying sense of darkness and a feeling that listening to this stuff at any other time except the winter might not be appreciating its true worth. However, the beats certainly feel tougher and the funk less frozen. This is evident from start to finish. ‘Building Peaks’ deploys urgent, asymmetric beats that feel like fully charged whip cracks. ‘Lizardous’ is a slow and sure contrast between a cascading sonic glimmer and an enveloping low-end, with of which coalesce in order to reach a state of controlled euphoria. The pull of ‘Silver Girl’ is in its dissonance. Everything initially feels chaotic and it doesn’t really settle down, but if you’re already buckled in there’s a sense of destiny. And then there’s ‘The Resetter’ which puts a final, slightly more industrial flourish on a release, the direction of which feels like a goth/b-boy sound clash.
Track Of The Day: Herbert - Thinking Of You (Phono)
I remember when the Herbert series, 1-4, came out. I was living in Paris and dividing a lot of my free time between commuting to various record shops. There was Rough Trade (where I spent by far the largest amount of money), and BPM in Bastille, and Salinas in Montmartre. And for whatever reason I think I bought this release in the shadow of The Sacre Couer. These releases were revolutionary for the time, anticipating minimal house/techno by a good few years, while adding a depth that, with so few tools on show, has yet to be equalled. What is most notable about these releases though is their effortless swing and natural funk. The kicks, in particular, take you to another dimension.
Track Of Yesterday: Captain Beefheart - Tropical Hot Dog Night (Virgin)
‘Tropical Hot Dog Night’ features on ‘Shiny Beast Bat Chain Puller’ which is the album that turned me on to Beefheart. It would be a lot cooler to say it was ‘Trout Mask Replica’, but I’m not that old. So I got into everything else in retrospect. This particular track, along with ‘When I See Mommy I Feel Like A Mummy’, where probably the two most played tracks on this album in the hip bedrooms of Wallasey in the late 70s and early 80s. What I love most about this track is it’s organised chaos. It’s a psychedelic mambo the likes of which will never be equalled. It does go a bit weird towards the end though.


