Title: Alliance Remixed
Artist: GLOK/Timothy Clerkin
Label: Bytes
Cat Number: BYTES33
Genre: Cosmic
01: Empyrean (FROID DUB Remix)
02: AmigA (bdrmm Remix)
03: Nothing Ever (Tom Sharkett Remix)
04: Scattered (Yu Su’s Scattering Cross-Section)
05: The Witching Hour (Richard Sen Remix)
06: E-Theme (Legowelt Rave Filter Remix)
07: Nothing Ever Reprise (Xylitol Remix)
08: AmigA (Timothy Clerkin Jungle Mix)
09: The Empyrean Hour (Timothy Clerkin Mix)
Well worth the wait this. An album full of reinterpretations of 2024’s ‘Alliance’ which, while excellent, was always crying out to move in tangential directions. The FROID DUB remix of ‘Empyrean’ sounds like something the Lost ones would soundtrack their cylindrical wanderings to (Beckett innit). Magnificent 303 squelches like popping, muddy geysers. I’m taking the two ‘AmigA’ mixes together, obviously because they’re drum and bass, or are they jungle? (Paging Amol Rajan). Timothy Clerkin seems to think so. It’s much harsher than the drum and bass from bdrmm, and has a bit more vim and vigour. Both keep the chiming overlay motif, with Clerkin amplifying the chorals and bdrmm taking the sub bass to the bridge. Both great and sufficiently distinct. Tom Sharkett utilises break beats and a singular synth to support the bittersweet vocals of ‘Nothing Ever’. While the ‘Xylitol Remix’ of the same track once more dips the listener in the sheep dip of drum and bass, or is it jungle? I’m guessing somewhere on the genre’s asteroid belt. Richard Sen’s version of ‘The Witching Hour’ is the most chug-friendly track on this release so far. And I’ve definitely heard this before at some of the right places. Brilliant logo funk cauterised by hubby overtones straight from the krautrock firmament. ‘’E-Theme (Legowelt Rave Filter Remix)’ delves into Detroit for its template and while it’s at it, overlays itself with enough woozy auditory embellishments to induce a sonic hangover. There’s more than an ambient, disembodied whiff of being caught inside an hallucinatory lost frontier while listening to ‘Scattered (Yu Su’s Scattering Cross-Section)’. It’s impressionism perfectly evoking the parts other drugs cannot reach. And everything seems to coalesce perfectly at the last during Timothy Clekin’s remix of ‘The Empyrean Hour’. A wonderfully dissonant romp through a myriad of the best bits of ‘The Empyrean’ and ‘The Witching Hour’, which combine to create some sort of chugtastic offspring. Lovely stuff.

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