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White Noise

Saturday, 9 January 2016

Best Tracks of 2015 - Part 3


Our last two instalments lined up some of the very best tunes of the last year, but now we’ve got the absolute crème – White Noise’s twenty favourite tunes of the year.

20. Denis Sulta – It’s Only Real [Numbers]
Glasgow’s Denis Sulta’s two releases on Dixon Avenue Basement Jams marked him out as a serious new talent, and this single-sided outing on Numbers showed that he could pull of an anthem too. It’s Only Real is deceptively simple, essentially an unchanging drum loop and one showstopping melody, but it tears apart dancefloors like little else.

19. Pender Street Steppers – The Glass City [Mood Hut]
Scene favourites Pender Street Steppers offered a perfect distillation of their sound with this year’s The Glass City, an ultra-chilled confection of gentle percussion, fluttering melody and a broad bass swagger.

18. Bicep – Just [Aus]

Honestly, we didn’t expect to see Bicep on this list again. After the trend for balls-to-the-wall 90s diva house faded, we rather thought the Northern Irish duo would disappear along with it. But we’ll be the first to admit where we were wrong. Bicep turned out the winning Just in 2015 and rightly dominated dancefloors. While earlier Bicep tracks were instant-gratification affairs, Just is sinuous and subtle, its earworm synthline calling out like a siren til the soaring scifi keys reach boiling point.

17. Khotin – Sorry Sequence [Normals Welcome]
We expected great things from Dan White on his split EP with Khotin, and we got them, but we never thought he would get so dramatically upstaged. Sorry Sequence is a stunner, raw yet melancholy with its stainproof rhythm, cycling melody and corrosive acid flex.

16. Soichi Terada – Sun Showered [Rush Hour]
It was hard to pick a single tune from Hunee’s superbly curated compilation of Soichi Terada’s forgotten house gems, but Sun Showered hits the sweet spot of rhythmic drama, colourful melody and flat-out optimism that makes all his tracks so winning.

15. Merle – Mimi Likes 2 Dance [Stripped & Chewed]
Chicago outpost Stripped & Chewed did a stellar job reissuing this lost beauty from ’99. Merwyn Sanders even reworked the original lead single, with a new vocal line and cleaner production (and a change of title as a nod to his wife). With its catchy pop vox, funky backbone and urgent synth sweeps, this cut adds a pinch of joy to any set.

14. Whispers Beirut – Away [Unreleased]
Still officially unreleased, this collaboration between Baba Stiltz and Petrodollar caught us off-guard with its simplicity and its melancholy. A yearning synth rules the track’s first half, before a slack hip hop beat picks up the pace. Sometimes less is so much more.

13. Hidden Spheres – Waiting [Distant Hawaii]
If you’re going to open a sub-label just for one release, it better be a good one. Lobster Theremin heeded this rule when they opened Distant Hawaii for a single summer release by Mancunian Hidden Spheres. Opener Waiting was the most sublimely chilled house track we heard all year, a breeze of warm melodies wafting over a textured drum workout.

12. Palms Trax – Sumo Acid Crew [Dekmantel]
Two years after Equation, Palms Trax went one better with this elegant slice of acid. Here the 303 is far from its alienating roots, burbling beside warm Chicago pads and harmonising with a soaring synth climax.

11. Harvey Sutherland – Bermuda [MCDE]
It’s easy to see why Motor City Drum Ensemble snatched up this synth-maestro for his own label – in 2015 Sutherland brought the funk like no other. Bermuda is an absolute masterclass in songwriting, from its virtuosic opening to its astonishing climax which crams in more melodies than we would’ve ever considered coherent. But Sutherland pulls it off with flair. More please.

10. Florist – Final Bounce [All Caps]
After a long gestation period on Soundcloud, one of the Vancouver scene’s best releases showed up unexpectedly on the Glaswegian All Caps imprint. The Phenomena EP was a winner, the feather in its cap Final Bounce, a spare slice of house with aquatic vibes and a soulful choir that rises magnificently from the mist.

9. Haydn – Booty Meat [Junk Yard Connections]
Buried on the B2 of a V/A release from Sweden’s underlooked Junk Yard Connections imprint, Haydn’s Booty Meat is the definition of a secret weapon. The unusual combination of gentle keys and a racy vocal line keeps dancers on their toes, and when that mighty rhythm kicks back in after the dubby breakdown everyone on the ‘floor will drop to make it clap.

8. Raw M.T. – Untitled [Mörk]
After he wowed us with the brittle techno of Walkman Is Dead a couple of years back, Italian producer Raw M.T. was back with a vengeance this year. In the middle of a superb EP on Lobster Theremin offshoot Mörk was Untitled, a humid house killer with exotic vocals and a malevolent bassline. Intoxicating stuff.

7. Nebraska – Emotional Rescue [Mister Saturday Night]
White Noise’s favourite party-starter of 2015 came from the reliable MSN stable courtesy of Nebraska. On the diverse Stand Your Ground EP a disco killer nestled on the B2, a shot of euphoria served over filtering brass and earworm vocals.

6. Route 8 – The Sunrise In Her Eyes [Lobster Theremin]
We’ve got a bit of a fetish for melancholy deep house heavy on the ambience, and few producers bring the feels as magically as Hungarian talent Route 8. The opener to This Raw Feeling is as dreamy as its title suggests, warm pads caressing the ear like a gentle tide, a quickened pulse and hopeful chimes leading us deeper down the rabbit hole.

5. Fatima Yamaha – What’s A Girl To Do [Dekmantel]
Okay, so maybe everyone’s sick of hearing about this tune by now. But if we leave aside the bittersweet melody, searing synth lead and solemn bassline, we’re left with a hopeful story.

Keeping up with the lightning-paced electronic music world can lead us to treat tracks as disposable tools, each EP skimmed for parts, forgotten by the month’s end. The fact that a house tune from 2004 caused such a stir in 2015 proves that longevity and beauty can triumph over disposability. We are capable of treasuring our beloved music like the art it is.

4. Dude Energy – Renee Running [Animals Dancing]
Not content just issuing a fine album under his Suzanne Kraft moniker this year, Californian wizard Diego Herrera also dropped one of our favourite club tunes of the year as Dude Energy. Combining impressive bass weight, razor snares and a mesmerising melody that sounds plucked from a gypsy songbook, this tune was a shot in the arm of samey dancefloors throughout the year.

3. Leon Vynehall – Midnight On Rainbow Road [Rush Hour]
From the very start, Leon Vynehall has had a way of evoking complex emotions with his music that few artists can parallel. His only release this year was a solitary tune on Gerd Janson’s lovely Musik For Autobahns 2, and, though beatless, it's one of his greatest compositions to date. A glittering melody flutters through a rain-streaked landscape, accompanied by skipping snares, traffic sounds and a heaving ambient wash. It’s music to get lost in, and you won’t want to be found.

2. Fit Siegel – Carmine [Fit]
Detroit’s Aaron Siegel doesn’t put out much music, but when he does it’s practically buy-on-sight. This year’s Carmine was an immensely emotive slice of house that takes you places that little music can reach. A delicate construction of gossamer synthwork, filtered snares rattling through the scales and a taut electro rhythm, this was the tearjerker to rule every 5am dancefloor in 2015.

1. DJ Sotofett – Nondo [Honest Jon’s]
Sex Tags head DJ Sotofett has risen to underground legend status over the last few years, and it’s not hard to see why. With an excellent label and mix series, an adventurous DJing style and a penchant for explorative, breakbeat-fuelled remixes, Sotofett (and his crew) stand as rather unique figures in an often homogeneous scene.

Yet one of the reasons why Sotofett’s releases are so successful is how adeptly he adapts and works with a stream of varied collaborators. This is the story of White Noise’s favourite tune of 2015. On a superb album chock full of ace collaborative efforts, the standout tune had Sotofett jamming with Karolin Tampere on drum machines and synths while Maimouna Haugen offered hushed, sinuous vocals. With a seductive synth motif and spare afrobeat percussion it’s a simple piece, but all the deadlier for it. It’s easy to feel jaded by the 4/4 scene if you don’t keep searching for something different. Sotofett always provides.

*** 

That’s all for 2015, we’ll be back soon with fresh coverage for the new year. Hope you enjoyed the roundups, check out all our Best Of articles below:


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Tuesday, 7 July 2015

June Roundup 2015


The summer is certainly beaming now, and our roundup reflects this, evenly divided between colourful club joints and smoky deep house numbers for those sultry evenings. Here we have a couple of superb remixes and edits courtesy of Maurice Fulton (a reissue of a bona fide classic) and Samo DJ, alongside some top-quality material from Morgan Geist's Galleria project (with WN favourite Jessy Lanza on vocals) and the bizarrely catchy French pop of Domenique Dumont. We then venture into jazzier territory with the Mood Hut crew following up last month's PSS outing with a superb Jack J single on Future Times and an ace new House of Doors single. Finally we take it way deeper with Arnaldo, Session Victim's Matthias Reiling and Raw M.T, closing with the seductive melodies of Nicolas Jaar and John Roberts. To say that this month is an all-star line up would be an understatement. Get listening.


Alice Smith - Love Endeavour (Maurice Fulton Remix)
Domenique Dumont - L'esprit de l'Escalier
Jack J - Thirstin'
Ben Sun - Seven Sisters
Samo DJ - Flyer Edit
The Galleria feat. Jessy Lanza - Mezzanine
A.A.L. - I Never Dream
Kornél Kovács - Malon
House Of Doors - Starcave
J. Albert - We Know
Unknown Artist - Une Ile
Steve Murphy - UK Treatment
Martyn - EF40
DJ Koze - XTC 
Matthias Reiling - Silverhope Rd
Raw M.T. - Falling Into Nowhere
Arnaldo - With You By The Lake
Nicolas Jaar - Swim

And the inevitable couple we couldn't find on youtube:

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Thursday, 30 April 2015

Raw M.T. - La Duna

Label: Lobster Theremin
The 2013 debut EP of Italian producer Raw M.T. on Wicked Bass really blew us away, and the potency of Walkman Is Dead has only strengthened in the two-year radio silence that ensued. On his return, here on the UK’s on-point Lobster Theremin imprint, M.T. is back guns blazing, peddling his sly rhythms in a diverse and compelling three-tracker.

Each of these tracks brings a distinct flavour to the table, like an action movie dream-team. Title track La Duna is a patient deep house number, the starkness of Walkman Is Dead replaced by airy synthwork that shifts and parts like clouds. Yet the focus is still unashamedly on rhythm, the drum section fluid and intricate, a perfect eyes-down groover. Untitled is the main course, an exotic roller that would sit right at home on the Workshop catalogue. Here a chunky beat pattern and bird calls build to a fizzing bassline and a celestial synth hum, all topped off by an ethereal, garbled vocal in who knows what language, easily making for one of the year’s finest tracks to date.

Til this point we’ve seen heard little of the darkness of Raw M.T.’s debut release, but he lets the night loose on claustrophobic closer Strike. There is a constant pressure to his rhythms, muffled Shed-like kicks and knotty percussion barely contained by corrosive, acid-hungry synths. La Duna is a supremely assured sophomore release, as Raw M.T. stretches in three directions at once and nails each one. With another release lined up soon on Wicked Bass, it’s clear that M.T. is still a voice to be very excited about.


8/10

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Monday, 30 March 2015

Roundup March 2015


Here are our favourite tunes from March (and a few we missed from earlier in the year), ranging from future funk sounds to ambient meditations via fathomless house, choppy analog numbers and some of the rough stuff.

 

Tracklist:
D.K. - Licence To Dream
Soichi Terada - Saturday Love Sunday
Palmbomen II - Mary Louise Lefante
Raw M.T. - Untitled
Fit Siegel - Carmine
So Inagawa - Reminder
Entro Senestre - Rosegold
Chateau Flight - Rise & Fall of Babylon
Roman Flügel - Black Towers
Fort Romeau - All I Want
Chambray - Anew
Florian Kupfer - Discotag
Cassius Select - Crook
DjRum - Plantain
The Horn - Villager

And the inevitable couple we couldn't find on Youtube:



If you dig any of these tunes, we highly recommend you check out their accompanying album / EPs. Enjoy!

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Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Raw M.T. - Raw Music Theory

Label: Wicked Bass

While it may have started in 2011, it was around a year ago that Kiev’s Wicked Bass imprint really started coming into its own. Honing in on lofi house and techno which didn’t sacrifice its dancefloor edge, the label was responsible for breaking two of our favourite recent artists: Huerco S on the No Jack EP and Innershades with his ghetto anthem That Girl. Both artists have gone from success to success, Huerco with his recent Colonial Patterns LP and Innershades on his delectable new EP for Crème, so when Wicked Bass turned up with another fresh face, Italian newcomer Raw M.T., we were listening – and weren’t disappointed. Raw Music Theory is a storming EP from start to finish, with two excellent original cuts and a pair of remixes by rising star Greg Beato.

 
Walkman Is Dead / Greg Beato Trippinn Remix / Sara / Greg Beato Remix

Despite the rising hype status of his remixer, Raw M.T.’s tracks more than hold their own across the release. Opener Walkman Is Dead comes into view with nervy synthwork, rattling hi-hats and a shattering stomp, and it makes quite an impact. The raw dancefloor potential is undeniable, but there’s real class to the composition, from the metallic percussion that accents the kick to the scorching acid line which ebbs and flows across the course of the track. Yet Mr M.T. is not content with a weaker rehash on the B-side: instead we get Sara, a graceful number where jelly-synths play delicately across the twitching percussive field. It’s an understated number, brimming with melancholic optimism, but pays off blissfully in its closing minutes, as a soaring melody brings the tune to a close with a trace of hope.

Wicked Bass’ A&R department must have been working overtime to secure both an eminently talented newcomer and a remixer as hotly-tipped as Greg Beato. Off the back of recent EPs on Funkineven's Apron, L.I.E.S and those weird Russian Torrent EPs, the Miami-based producer has come into view with a dark, brutalist sound entirely his own. His ‘Trippinn Remix’ of Walkman Is Dead hollows out the track’s core, swapping polish for grit with unsettling distorted synth tones and half-heard whispers. It’s not a comfortable listen but it’s a strong sound, setting the stage for his superior rework of B-side Sara. On this final cut Beato straightens the original’s fluttering melodies over a shattering kick, as metronomic hi-hats keep pace over a psychedelic breakdown. It’s so rare that a package’s remixes and originals are all of superb quality, but the consistency here can’t be faulted: Wicked Bass have scored another winner, and we’re eager to hear whatever they come out with next.

8.5/10 

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