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White Noise

Wednesday, 2 January 2013

Best Tracks of 2012: 75 – 51



Year End Coverage


Here's 25 more of our favourite tracks of the year. Enjoy!

75 – Jack Sparrow – Good Old Days feat. Ruckspin
Deep Medi shows there’s still life in the old 140 horse yet, with this sultry jazz-inspired number from the Author duo.

74 – Marquis Hawkes – Sealion Woman

Tough, analogue workout accompanied by a showstopping US folk vocal-line. Something special.

73 – Bicep – Vision Of Love

Pitch-perfect piano House from the Northern Irish duo. Literally cannot be overplayed. EP Review.

72 – Jack Dixon – Find Shelter

Polished House number shows Dixon has a few real surprises up his sleeve. Detailed sounds and a strong groove make this one essential. EP Review.

71 – Helix – Honig
Proper Techno workout from one of the year’s most talented breakthroughs. Bright synth streaks and hammering beats sure to murder the dancefloor.

70 – Kuedo – Work, Live & Sleep In Collapsing Space
Destructive future-sounds from one of the scene’s most unique voices. Otherwordly sci-fi soundtracking.

69 – Disclosure – Tenderly

Infectiously bouncy Bass number courtesy of Disclosure, one of the year’s mainstream crossover successes. EP Review.

68 – Daphni – Yes I Know

Caribou’s Dan Snaith offers a soul-injected House workout under his Daphni moniker. Worth the price for the vocal sample alone. Album Review.

67 – Presk – Nobody Makes Me Do

Wonky stepper with a couple of earworm vocals and some seriously polished production skills. EP Review.

66 – u-202 – Straightjacket
Pure strangeness from the L.I.E.S. camp. Takes its time to build into a loping House roller. 

65 – Artifact – Deserted

4am stepper deal in drama with monstrous drops and moody synthwork. EP Review.

64 – Dark Sky – Shades
Epic night stomper from the Dark Sky trio. Powerful grooves and an unstoppable bass bounce. EP Review.

63 – Downliners Sekt – Trim / Tab (part one)

Beautiful dance deconstructions from a White Noise favourite. Vocals, piano chords and haunted beats are consigned to the fragmented clicks and all-consuming vinyl hiss. EP Review.

62 – XI – Squeeze
Tough percussive Garage from Toronto on Orca. Stop-start rhythms and a de-oxygenated vocal cry make this one something special. EP Review.

61 – Swindle – Mischief
140 Jazz madness from the Deep Medi camp. Totally unique, genre-defying stuff.

60 – Boddika – Acid Jackson
A red-hot slice of future Acid from the man who probably sleeps tucked up next to his 303.

59 – Airhead – Wait

A track that polarized opinions, here at White Noise we loved Airhead’s Karen O collage. Atmospheric and emotive. EP Review.

58 – Akkord – The Drums
The most atmospheric of the shadowy Manchester group’s releases so far. Fantastic vocals and rugged beat patterns. EP Review.

57 – Mosca – Eva Mendes

Unstoppable Jersey House track from one of the scene’s most dependable producers. Guaranteed to get any club moving.

56 – No Fixed Abode – Indian Street Slang
Leftfield electronic tune from our favourite of the LHF collective. Cross-cultural, cross-genre, totally brilliant. Album Review and EP Review.

55 – NY Stomp – The NY House Trak
Gerd, one of the House scene’s worst-kept secrets, put out one of the genre’s most irresistible, no-nonsense stompers this year under his NY Stomp alias. Perfectly judged vocal snips and a great synthline make this one a surefire weapon at any party.

54 – Bondax – Baby I Got That

Poppy Bass/ Disco hybrid from the impossibly young duo. If any song gave us summer in four short minutes, this was it.

53 – Last Magpie – (Who Knows) Where The Love Goes

Chilled House number that we couldn’t stop playing over the last few months. Addictive vocal, lush chords, punchy beats and a deep ambient hiss kept this one on repeat long after the summer had gone.

52 – Boddika & Joy Orbison – Swims
Ubiquitous acid number from two of the scene’s biggest stars. Superb vocal and the best cowbell solo you’ve ever heard. EP Review. (Dun Dun was a close second).

51 – Dean Blunt – track 2 feat inga copeland
The Hype Williams duo stepped out from the cloud of weed smoke for this nakedly beautiful warped-Pop track. A simple piano loop and a dusty drum machine was all that was needed to create a career highlight.

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Wednesday, 3 October 2012

September Roundup 2012



Fact: September has been easily the biggest, best month of dance releases we’ve had all year.

Fact: White Noise has collected the vast majority of them together in a Youtube playlist, for your listening pleasure.

Enjoy.


Tracklist:
Trimbal – Confidence Boost (Harmonimix)
Maddslinky – Compuphonic
Tom Demac – Critical Distance Pt. 2
Dusk + Blackdown – Dasaflex
Bicep – Vision of Love
Krystal Klear – More Attention feat Jenna G
Last Magpie – (Who Knows) Where Love Goes
Bondax – Baby I Got That
T. Williams – Think Of You
Andrew Ashong –Flowers
A Thousand Years – Flying High
Illum Sphere – h808er
Fis – DMT Usher
Recondite – DRGN
Downliners Sekt – Trim / Tab (part one)
The xx – Chained

And a lot of these tracks are included in our resident DJ Moth’s September mix, check it here:

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Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Downliners Sekt – Trim / Tab


Label: InFiné

For the past few years, the mysterious Spanish collective Downliners Sekt has been one of those names that you can always count on to be doing something different, away from all the hubbub of today’s hottest genres and sounds. Having moved from somewhere near post-rock to the shadowy corners of electronic production in their more recent releases, the group (of unknown names and origins) have finally started to build a name for themselves. They’ve been releasing since about 2004, but it was Downliners Sekt’s trilogy of EPs on Disboot (released from 2010-2011) which have shown the group stepping into the light a little more.

Trim / Tab (Part One)

The group’s sound has always contained the deconstructed ghosts of a whole range of genres; from dub to techno to UK garage, and each time reference points are crushed, distorted and ultimately resculpted into an intriguingly different and powerfully atmospheric sound. While their earlier EPs were marked with contrasting ghostly textures and abrasive sub-bass growls, in their latest the tracks were more subtle and delicately textured while retaining the experimental essence of the earlier structures and sonics, resulting in the sublime Meet the Decline. Apparently tapped to produce an original track for Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan which never made it into the film, the collective are certainly building a cachet in certain circles, and their first release on French label InFiné, ahead of a full album in 2013, shows the group are still on rare form.

Trim / Tab is still complex and mysterious but it’s clearly more accessible than any of the Sekt’s previous output, and this is no bad thing. Now the vocals and melodies which filter through the static and dust are more nakedly beautiful, and the music itself is more approachable for the outside listener. The two 6-minute tracks, each hovering around the 150bpm mark, are two variations on the same beat, showcasing the group’s dexterity in manipulating source audio in impressive and unexpected ways (it’s not that surprising to hear that the group occasionally even sample their own sounds in later work). Each tune offers a long-form approach to their sound, and can be seen as suites of deconstructed clicks and beats laced with recurring motifs; vocal samples and shifting synth fields which lend the broken soundfield a fractured cohesion- occupying that curious middle-ground that Downliners Sekt have always excelled in creating.

Trim / Tab (Part Two)

In Trim / Tab (Part One) the sounds are allowed time to grow and build throughout the track, with a shuffling beat and a mist of static offering an anchor to the shifting soundscape of ghostly vocal samples and subdued synth stabs that shine out somewhere far off in the darkness. Their collage approach to sounds and samples achieves the tricky balance of sounding spontaneous, with the sounds giving the impression that they’ve just fallen naturally into place rather than being synthetically programmed, while simultaneously feeling lovingly structured and meticulous, allowing rewarding moments of recognition as the same samples and sounds are repeated and warped across the EP. On the flipside we have Part Two, a darker affair with the beat flipped into an edgy garage shuffle as dusty soul samples (and a beautiful piano sequence) try and claim prominence amidst the shifting static.

In an interview with Fact a few years back, the group stated, “We’re not intentionally producing dark music. For different reasons, we’ve always been kind of ‘out of tune’ with the world we’ve been thrown into. We’re always in transition, in between cities, in between relationships.” Perhaps the reason that the Sekt put out such consistently excellent music is that they acknowledge the middle space between sounds, between genre and between space. By not trying to be any one specific thing, they achieve impossible balances; their music is current yet utterly uncompromising, fractured and sinister while retaining moments that border on the serene and beautiful. With this transitional approach, Downliners Sekt have clearly struck gold, as they continue to create music more defiantly interesting than the scores of genre-obsessed, trend-watching producers that today populate more of our clubs than ever.

8/10

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Friday, 16 December 2011

12 Best EPs of 2011


Best of 2011



We’ve had a mammoth year for Electronic and Dance music, and the EP format has not only seen a huge amount of great releases but also some redefining ones; from dance classics which are essentially triple A-sides (Mosca, Scuba, Jacques Greene) to releases which are LPs in all but name, like Floating Points’ staggering late-entry Shadows. Here are my 12 favourite EPs of the year, with links to my original review where available. The list is in no particular order, because when it comes down to the very best of the year, they’re all fantastic. Here’s to a great 2012.




Mountains Pt 1

On this spectacular EP DjRUM finally made good on all the promises made by his early work, producing four varied and exquisitely produced cuts situated somewhere between Dubstep, Garage and Ambient.




Sais

With Shadows, Floating Points produced what is sure to be one of the most lasting EPs of the year, including distended experimental pieces fusing Techno, Jazz influences and references to today’s nebulous Bass scene. Above all, it was his finest release to date, and sounded utterly like nothing else.




Breakup

If Sepalcure’s full-length didn’t quite meet my expectations this year, Praveen Sharma’s debut EP as Braille certainly exceeded them. Showing a straight-up House muscle unseen on the duo’s deviations, here Braille amazed with a selection of dancefloor powerhouses that showed a skill evident on Sepalcure’s compositions but a sound entirely Sharma’s own.




Motivation

This has been a great year for Greene and the Canadian Bass set, who brought a whole new meaning to RnB sampling. Not content to rest on his laurels after the killer Another Girl, here Greene focussed his attentions elsewhere, issuing on this White Label release not only the best RnB inflected track of the year in Motivation, but some fantastic forays outside the RnB bubble on this Triple-A side.




Let Me See You

The 100% Silk label has been flying high this year, and nowhere is this shown more clearly than in Octo Octa’s gorgeous debut EP. Every track on here is a winner, from the fantastic old-school sounds of the title track to end of the night stomper Coldwaves by way of the utter brilliance of EP standout I’m Trying.




No Think

I’ve already discussed my opinions on Sepalcure’s full-length, but at the beginning of the year their Fleur EP was a fierce mission statement. Defining the ill-defined Bass sound with lush and beautiful compositions, here the pair really flexed their muscles, veering from the rich beats of the title track to Ambient closer Inside by way of surprising Techno stunner No Think.

Bok Bok – Southside



Silo Pass

Night Slugs didn’t have quite as big a year in 2011 as they did in 2010, but their few releases like EPs from Bok Bok and Jam City continued their mind-bending sounds. On the Southside EP, label-head Bok Bok mixed Bass and Dubstep and Grime traits to create something gritty, brilliant, and utterly unique.




Rising Saudade

The anonymous group completed their three-part series of free EPs this year with Meet The Decline, their most accomplished release to date. Across the four tracks Downliners Sekt deconstructed popular Dance and Electronic tropes with unerring precision and skill, creating a brilliant set of dusty, fascinating tracks which offer gorgeous worlds to explore.




Orange Jack

It’s been a great year for Mosca, with his flawless double-A side Done Me Wrong / Bax dominating the sets of all the best DJs this year. On the Wavey EP, he released a surprising but brilliant set of Techno tunes that will be sure to fill up dancefloors in the year to come.




Stolen Dog

After a much-felt absence, the king of dusty and emotive Dubstep returned for his first solo release in four years. Every track here is a stunning construction of his trademark DIY percussion and deeply atmospheric sounds, from the late-night dance cut Street Halo to the gorgeous and melancholy Stolen Dog.

Scuba – Adrenalin



Adrenaline

Hotflush head Paul Rose finally came out of his shell this year, turning from his normal cerebral dance cuts to Adrenaline, which essentially made Trance cool for the first time in over ten years. Add this to a killer couple of tunes on the B-side (including the fantastically groovy Never), and you’ve got one of the most impressive and enjoyable releases of the year.




I See U

Lunice was another producer to emerge from the Canadian ether this year, releasing a sexy selection of Hip-Hop infused Bass cuts, none more sinister and alluring than summer anthem I See U.

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