Harmonica Track

27th September 2010 Comments Off on Harmonica Track

Coming October 3 2010 on Leaders of the New School Records (Beatport and Toolroom website exclusive) – Chris Coco & Captain Bliss – Harmonica track with a nice bouncy remix from Sergio Fernandez and a spacy house remix from Chris Coco. listen on youtube buy on Toolroom website buy on Beatport

Dirty Weekend

27th September 2010 Comments Off on Dirty Weekend

Beyond on the farm gate Somewhere behind the line of trees Over the fields and far away There is an empty beach Messages from other people’s lives Some sense of belonging to something much bigger than all of us.

Melodica 27.09.10

27th September 2010 Comments Off on Melodica 27.09.10 , ,

In this episode we are driven to abstraction with new music from Flying Lotus, Balearic dubstep from Scuba and Synkro, some wonky house, a Prins Thomas remix, AfroEuro collaboration and messages from round the world. Eek. [setlist] No Regular Play – Strange Cameo – Wolf + Lamb Matias Aguayo – Menta Latte (Prins Thomas Diskomiks) – Kompakt Gregor Salto & Mokoomba – Messe Messe – G-Rex Music Falty DL – Filthy Divinity – Planet Mu Letherette – Cherryade – Ho Tep Synkro – just Say – Box Clever Scuba – Three Sided Shape – Hotflush Seeland – How To Live – Loaf Flying Lotus – Clay – Warp Lone – Raptured – Werk Raffertie – Rank Functions (Ital Tek Remix) – Super Geddes & Mic Newman – Rework Master – Murmur M.In – Who Said I’m Crazy (Luna City Express Remix) – Baalsaal Records Belbury Poly and Mordant Music – Study Series 03 Welcome to Godalming Inn Ohm The Lake – Ghost Box

Techno Logic and Imaginary Numbers

24th September 2010 Comments Off on Techno Logic and Imaginary Numbers

This week I have been getting into techno again, listening to Adam Beyer’s Drumcode on Mixcloud, downloading classics from Plastikman and Carl Craig. It’s something to do with my search for the right sound for the new songs. At the moment they just sound too nice, too chillout chalet. I did have a flirtation with chillcore or chillwave, and you know I have an ongoing love affair with dubstep but both those genres are really being taken care of by dem youth in a quite magisterial way. Which leaves the source, the core, to draw inspiration and sound ideas from, and for me that is house and techno. So it’s all about the ones and zeros, the bassline, the kick drum, the harshness of the hats, the breakdowns, this raw energy, this crack that I need to use in my own mellow meanderings. Some kind of pure techno logic that flows out of the machines if you programme them just right. Like Marshall Jefferson once explained, you can have just a kick drum in a drum machine but it will sound groovy or not groovy depending on who it is who turns it on. I’ve been investigating maths too, listening to a show on BBC Radio 4 about imaginary numbers (check out the definition on Wikipedia for some real head spinning ideas). My imaginary numbers are here in the computer. They are imaginary, not because they answer the questions posed by equations in some third dimension of mathematics but because they are themselves complicated equations that require an answer in the mix; a delicate balance of parts and plug-ins, levels and layers, music and beats and noises that must come together in some kind of perfection that currently only exists in my head. Talking of perfection, if it’s perfect pop you are after, look no further the current blog hit, Cee-Lo’s Fuck You. It feels like every other music blog in the world has posted the video for this tune so I definitely don’t need to, but it has managed to give me a musical feeling that I had almost forgotten. The feeling that accompanies the message from music brain that says, in capital letters, I NEED THAT TUNE. It’s a perfectly modern pop song, you sing along the first time you’ve heard it; it contains countless swear words so it can’t be played in most conventional radio allowing it to run riot in blogland online; it’s about love and money and how the two are strangely more closely linked that any of us not rich would like; the song is as up and happy as the lyrics are arch and funny; it’s sideways subversive in a way that I find immensely pleasing, in a way that only a hugely popular, great pop song can be; and it’s the kind of tune I know I will be bored with as soon as I own a copy of it that’s high enough quality to play out. Must. Get. Tune. Now.

Oxjam, Brick Lane, London

23rd September 2010 Comments Off on Oxjam, Brick Lane, London ,

Oxfam website [setlist] A charity do for Oxfam, get involved.[/setlist]