Thursday, April 02, 2026

Kerrie - Waves Of Reverie (Cultivated Electronics)

 

Title: Waves Of Reverie PT 1

Artist: Kerrie

Label: Cultivated Electronics

Cat Number: CE 049

Genre: Electro


A1: Enter The Vortex

A2: Beware Of Monotony

B1: Waves Of Reverie

B2: Funk Fidelity


I get the “waves” element instantly. ‘Enter The Vortex’ is made up of just that. It’s a heavy, slightly fidgety piece of electro that eternally unfurls over the electronic matrix that supports it. ‘Beware Of Monotony’ is sparser but no less imposing. A vocoder intones something that I don’t quite understand, but has me craning towards my speaker in hope. The melody sounds like a flock of seagulls on acid (the birds, not the group). This one is all about the bass. The title track leans in a similar sonic direction to what has gone before, and maybe falls in between the opening two as far as weight is concerned. There’s a feeling of tempered relentlessness, something which is further emphasised on ‘Funk Fidelity’, whose abrasive beats and rawness round off this release in style. It’s no holds barred stuff this, the type of electro that reimagines the genre squeezing into that techno nether region and not escaping.

V/A - Minacore Vol. 1 (Mina)

 


Title: Minacore Vol. 1

Artist: Various

Label: MIna

Cat Number: MINA001

Genre: Beats


1: Phoebe - Swamp Head

2: Violet - Early Shift

3: BLEID - 8AM PM

4: marum - Nothing Gold Can Stay


It’s a mixed bag this; ranging from the acid-tinged stomp of ‘Swamp Head’ to the beatless 1970s-tinged electronica of ‘Nothing Gold Can Stay’. In between ‘Early Shift’ gives us drum and bass with some interesting tempo switches and ‘8AM PM’ invokes tribal abandon through layers of percussion. If we’re picking faves, as would be the case on such a release where difference is such a calling card, ‘Swamp Head’ takes the plaudits, with its 303 infused chug. However, each tune is an exercise in shape throwing tenderisation, from the most pummelling (‘8AM PM’), to the lightest of palpitations (‘Nothing Gold Can Stay’). And ‘Early Shift’ being the most dynamic.

Intergalactic Gary at MITHA

 

Track Of The Day: Joy Division - Disorder (Factory)

 


The opening track from one of the best albums ever released, and one I remember buying very clearly., I was with my dad and brother on the way down to, or back from a holiday. He had recently left my mum and was showing some sort of paternal duty by taking us on a holiday to Seaford on the south coast. We stopped in London and I went to HMV at the tTottenham Court Rd end of Oxford Street. ‘Unknown Pleasures’ had just been released and was all you could see when entering the shop. Factory definitely had their marketing dept. On full alert with it. Anyway I think it cost £2.99 at the time and I remember thinking that it, along with ‘Electricity’ by Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark both had very tactile sleeves. ‘Disorder’ is such an incredible opening track. Curtis’ lyrics are amazing and sonically it takes you to a place that most bands of that time weren’t capable of, or hadn’t conceived. You can feel the way things were going to evolve well before New Order started. Every element is perfect.

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Track Of The Day: DJ Ali - In The Day (The Leaf Label)

 


Definitely a b anger this one. DJ Ali came up with some quite original tunes when tribal west coast house was at it’s peak. However, most of those he’ll be remembered for were vocal led by Tim Fuller. ‘In The Day’ is a more functional piece in that respect. However, there is a lot more to it than meets the ear. It drives along relentlessly, powered by level upon level of percussive bombast, all of which is topped off by the most subtle use of the 303 which is, as far as I’m concerned, it’s hallmark.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Track Of The Day: Moodymann - Bosconi (Planet E)

 


The other side of ‘Dem Young Sconies’, so often overlooked; ‘Bosconi’ is every bit as sonically interesting as the A, probably because it really does sound that it came out of the same recording session. The two tracks are two sides of the same coin, with the more languid, horizontal sound of this track playing off against something more upfront and abrasive. Kenny Dixon Jnr very quickly established a sound which is simultaneously abstract and soulful, wrapped it in mystique and, in the process, became house music’s most enigmatic producer. It can often feel like he gets away with murder, but that’s all part of the appeal.

Monday, March 30, 2026

Track Of The Day: Miles Davis - Interlude (CBS)


It’s been a while since I posted anything by Miles. How did that happen? Anyway it’s Monday, I’m resting up after some minor surgery and out of action, so how about an interlude that lasts over twenty minutes and is a completely immersive piece of fusion. And I think the world is starting to catch Miles up as far as this era of his artistry is concerned. The album on which this features, ‘Agharta’ divided a lot of listeners at the time. Which I imagine was part of the motivation for making it in the first place. I guess that’s easy to understand when comparing stuff like it, recorded in an afternoon in 1975 at a concert in Osaka, to what came before ‘In A Silent Way’. There’s such a minimalist approach, particularly to Davis’ own input, compared to what was previously expected of jazz musicians. So without wanting to overstate anything, this is as out there as it gets, at any period in the evolution of music.

004.15-BARDO-IVAN+VLADIMIR

 

Sound Metaphors Mix Series 48 : DJ Sundae

 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Track Of The Day: Connective Zone - Dude (Delsin)

 


Originally released just as this century was starting on Emoticon, Connective Zone’s ‘Qwerty’ EP badly needed a rerelease to prevent it from becoming a “lost classic” and to defang the Discogs sharks. And it’s aged very well. ‘Dude’ is a wonderfully lush break beat banger, which bangs as much as it can while under a metaphysical headlock. So it sounds blissful as it’s twatting your head against a brick wall.

Rhadoo @ SUPER DOMMUNE - 27.03.2026

 

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Track Of The Day: The Black Dog - Parallel (General Production Recordings)

 


First released in 1991, and then later in 1995 as part of a compilation, ‘Parallel’ is a great example of the incredible sound that The black Dog were producing at that time. The design and density of this track is as good, if not better, than anything that came before and has been released since. It’s wonderful when hearing music like this for the first time and trying to imagine what inspired it. Your head really starts spinning at the thought of the multiple concepts that are involved in the imagination necessary to put this tune together. So apart from the music, the mystical dimension to this composition really comes through. And once the grey matter has grasped the calibration of transcendence, you are in the right place to be taken somewhere else.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Track Of The Day: Mood ll Swing - I See You Dancing (Groove On)

 


If we all hang around long enough every Mood ll Swing release will make it onto these pages. It’s as inevitable as Tom Cruise winning an Oscar in his dotage. Anyway, as far as I can see this gen hasn’t been posted yet. Iy has the hallmark groove of a classic Mood ll Swing track with added drum rolls, but what sets it apart is its synth work, which up close sounds like a wildly flanging guitar. One to raise the hairs on the back of your neck on the dance floor when all else is lost to inebriation me thinks.

Track Of Yesterday: Galaxian - Forget About It (Foul-Up)


This is one of Galaxian’s best, even though it might sound a bit earnest for some. Atmospheric and, as a result of some sterling work with disembodied voice transfiguration, sinister and poignant simultaneously. (Read that last bit in the exaggerated accent of a hippy Californian futurist). A set ender if ever I’ve heard one, leaving the crowd to disperse to their early morning food for thought.