Wednesday, April 30, 2014

The Death of Rave - Embalmed


Leyland Kirby aka The Caretaker aka V/Vm is issuing on vinyl and CD a selection of tracks from his vast (I never actually made it all the way through) The Death of Rave online-only project of 2006: 200 tracks and nineteen hours of music "constructed from fragments of rave anthems, which were fired through Kirby’s usual arsenal of computer-assisted noise generators to result in a cacophony of mournful nostalgia and mischief" (FACT).  The release is due at the end of May on History Always Favours the Winners.

Snippet from Retromania on The Death of Rave:

"Collective memory was the subject of the Death of Rave project, inspired by Kirby's participation in the Manchester club scene of the late Eighties and early Nineties. "The energy in clubs at this time was amazing. Nobody knew what to expect next." But by the middle of the 2000s, Kirby felt that when he visited dance clubs "the energy and adventure seemed completely lost. I just wanted to reflect that. I took old rave tracks and stripped them down, removing all their life."  Spectral echoes of familiar rush-inducing riffs and anthemic refrains intermittently flicker through the dense smog of sound, but "the beat and drive have gone." Recalling the surge years of rave between 1988-1996, Kirby says "Everyone thought everything was possible on those long nights. The world was ours.  Now I think this generation is very disillusioned. They saw a glimpse of light on the dancefloors but that light has gone out and the future seems grim and predictable." "


K-Punk / Mark Fisher on The Death of Rave:

"Rave as revenant, reduced to reverberations. The Death of Rave can be heard as a supplement to the Burial album; another seance of the underground, another burned-out synaptic journey into rave's lost Eternal Now, another delving the dank dilapidation of its deserted spaces... The temporality of The Death of Rave is that of the flashback, the irruption of a lost future (from the near-past) into the present..."




Tracklist for The Death of Rave:
01 Monroes Stockport
02 Moggy & Wearden
03 Machete’s at The Banshee
04 Acid Alan, Haggis & Scott
05 Marple Libradome ‘91
06 Smithy & Dave the Rave
07 Big Eddie’s van – Bowlers car park
08 XR2 mk1 Sale Waterpark

Sunday, April 20, 2014

eon's ago



another h-core classic never realised there was a video for

darkside before darkside

this one is Ian Loveday's masterpiece though



Think I reviewed this for the Melody Maker Singles Page. Had this pre-rave-conversion phase of loving and buying and writing about techno whenever it swam into my ken (DHS "House of God", heard on Peel, bought at Brixton record store Red) or turned up in the MM box of singles and 12s to review. But I was writing from a position not fully inside the music, let's say.




Losing it, a bit



"white coat mix", tee hee. but forgot, or never knew, there was a "black coat mix"



interesting version by J. Saul Kane of "Spice" - loping and ninja



don't remember this one at all



nor knew about this Eon single that Discogs places between "Inner Mind" and "Basket Case"




complete with a Juan Atkins rmx on the flip



or is it two versions?




yet another version of "Spice"



and some early efforts in an acieed tekno new beat bass'n' bleepy zone






   

RIP Ian Loveday aka Eon - talented geezer


Thursday, April 17, 2014

you are now about to witness the strength of road knowledge

reflections on grime, masculinity, turf warfare, and street (or rather, road)  knowledge by Martin "Blackdown" Clark, using Robyn Travis's memoir Prisoner To The Streets  - the source of the samples used on No Fixed Abode's "Certified" (as discussed in two earlier installments of the reflections)




Tuesday, April 15, 2014

DJBroadcast piece about electronic dance music journalism by Dan Cole + quotes from Mixmag's Duncan Dick, Resident Advisor's Ryan Keeling, and Energy Flash's Simon Reynolds.

The latter opines that:

The main thing I’ve noticed since the rise of internet-only magazines and blogging is that the ‘journalism’ element has largely dropped out. By which I mean that it is quite rare you come across a reported story. There’s loads of high-powered, intellectual, vividly written writing about dance records, but you rarely get the sense that the writer is drawing on experiences of going to clubs or raves. You get a lot of pattern-recognition: writers competing to detect the emergence of a new subgenre. Or you get producers treated as auteurs, their work explicable in terms of intent and concept and technique. There’s surprising little sense that this is physical music,  [whose] meaning and impact is determined by the dancefloor. It’s very cerebral, considering that it’s body music first and foremost."

This he attributed partly to the way that "Internet writing as a whole tends to become informationalized and ‘meta.’ You see this in writing about politics, there’s a lot of opinions and conjecture, articles about the ‘optics’ of political events, but very little reporting in online political journalism. The online outlets can’t afford to do that kind of reporting, but they are parasitic on it to some extent. So basically they are analyzing data flows, opinion patterns. And music journalism of all kinds, not just dance music journalism, is going the same way, for economic reasons it is dispensing with a reported, out-in-the-world dimension. Indeed most of the writing is criticism rather than journalism."

But he would like to point out that his claim in the article to have been one of the pioneers of this cerebralized dance critique, alongside such as Kodwo Eshun and Philip Sherburne, was meant to be ambivalent, since in retrospect he finds the juiciest bits of E-Flash or the hardcore continuum series to be those aspects grounded in observation, eye-witness account, personal experience (as well as interviewing those who were there and directly involved in scenes/places/moments that he could not access for reasons of geographical or historical remoteness). So ironically, it's the more traditional reporterly elements, (sometimes also shading into the participant-observer tradition in anthropology and cultural studies) that read the best to him now. That, and the messianic mission-statement / manifesto "believer's eye" prosody.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Out-takes from the SR contributions to the DJBroadcast feature:

 "What’s missing is that observational element – how people are moving to the music, the behavior and vibe it’s catalyzing, the rituals, the clothes, the drugs.  Instead the writing mostly takes the form of taxonomy (analyzing a track or a producer in terms of its relation to genre, what styles are being mixed up) and close description of tracks...

"Some of my favorite dance writers in the Nineties, like Tony Marcus and Bethan Cole at Mixmag, what they did  was smart and analytical but there was a very strong sense of it based on being out in the clubs. Almost a “gonzo” aspect: the writer living that lifestyle, the hedonism, the all-night adventures...."



"I think ideally you should have both the being-there and the deep reflection aspects: a sense of what goes down when the music drops in terms of crowd-response and atmosphere, as well as precise and vivid description of the music, and more speculative elements of theorizing in terms of the music’s relationship to the wider culture, society, etc. Of all the aspects, the genre-tracking aspect is probably the least juicy element for me, these days...."



"The “informational” aspect is made worse because so many people do interviews by email, so there’s not even that basic contact between two human bodies in the same physical space. You get the interviewee responding with these well-written, well-thought-out answers that break down their influences and so forth.  Again, that is caused by economic factors: if you’re a badly paid freelancer, it’s much more cost-effective, because much less labor-intensive, to do email interviews because you avoid the trip to the location, the transcription time, etc. And it’s more convenient for artists and publicists, the replying can be slotted into gaps in the schedule. But it means the results are airless because there’s been no actual encounter. The artist is able to control what they say, how much they reveal, and how they come across to much greater extent...."


"[Today's electronic dance music criticism] is often very good in terms of the writing, the thinking. More than indie rock, it seems to be what draws the intellectuals these days! But to continue the previous comment, I do think that the journalistic aspect needs to be brought back...."



Friday, April 4, 2014

final four episodes of the most interesting interview with Hyper-On Experience's Alex Banks conducted by Tim Cant












 (via blog to the old skool)

and in case you missed the first two instalments




 And next came Flytronix and E-Z Rollers... who had their moments

 

  


Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Trancework





Strange days we living through in this atemporal age of ours! Viz, Trancework: a fizzy, superfun collision between 90s trance and 00s footwork, orchestrated by We Buy Gold in collaboration with London fashion brand Long Clothing.

You can download the compilation with the full length tracks for free here.

There is also a Mike Paradinas mix using tracks from Trancework here.





From the press release: 

"TRANCEWORK is what happens when you get 19 of the world’s best bass music producers to refix Ibiza Trance Classics at 160 beats-per-minute, an alternative Ibiza Annual where Cosmic Culture hits the streets, Tiesto gets turned up with Teklife and 808 kicks and claps inspire clubbers to reach for the lasers. An all night flight from London, Glasgow, Oslo, New York, Texas and Chicago, straight to Ibiza Airport and all the way back again"

Here's the track list:
 
Da Hool - Meet her at the Love Parade (Slick Shoota Remix)
Paul Van Dyk - For an angel (Gash & Simtek Remix)
CRW - I feel love (Nikes & Mike G Remix)
Storm - Storm (Sarantis Remix)
Binary Finary - 1998 (Taz Remix)
ATB - 9pm (til I come) (DJ Paypal Remix)
Fragma - Toca’s miracle (Ticklish Remix)
DJ Jean - The launch (My Life Extra LDN 94 Remix)
System F - Out of the blue (Junglord Remix)
Age of Love - Age of Love (Chrissy Murderbot Remix)
Energy 52 - Cafe del Mar (Deville Remix)
Mauro Picotto- Iguana (Wheez-ie Bootleg)
Chicane - Saltwater (Leatherface Remix)
Moogwai - Viola (Sidney Looper Remix)
Albion - Air (Footmerc Remix)
DJ Dado - X Files (DJ Flawlez Remix)
Olive - You’re not alone (EQ Why Remix)
Alice Deejay - Better off alone (Shauny B VIP)
Robert Miles - Children (Sines Remix)    


Also fun is this long YouTube clip + commentaries job by Joe Muggs for FACT that sifts through the first half of the 90s for early trance classics. 

One of Joe's inclusions I was actually looking to post the other day as wry comment on the recent flurry of quakes in Southern California, except memory failed me and so did Google: 


  
 And here's one that Joe didn't include that I always thought was immense: 


Very close really to some of the Dance Ecstasy 2001 stuff

Like this one -- acid, hardtrance, or gabba?