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Sunday, September 29, 2019

'Western society has little space for ecstasy': back to Berlin's 90s club scene

Feted for her macabre and freaky stage shows, Gisèle Vienne has created a time-bending piece of ‘physical philosophy’ inspired by her clubbing days

When Gisèle Vienne was growing up in Grenoble, France, her artist mother used to say, “paintings are cheaper than wallpaper”. So that’s exactly what they had, all over their walls. Vienne’s mum is Dorli Vienne-Pollak (a former student of Oskar Kokoschka), who made “pretty crazy, transgressive works” inspired by everything from 80s punks and strip clubs to fantasy battle scenes. It must have been quite an eyeful for a child.

Today, Vienne’s Paris home is completely white. It’s a small rebellion against her upbringing, which, balanced with the influence of her “overeducated French intellectual” father, makes complete sense of the artist Vienne has become. Her works in puppetry, theatre and dance (including Jerk, Kindertotenlieder, The Ventriloquists Convention) make headlines for their macabre obsessions: sex, violence, fantasy, serial killers and freaky dolls. Bubbling under all that is a vibrant intellect. Vienne’s conversation down the phone from France bounces fizzily from early 20th-century sociology to transcendental meditation.

Crowd is at Sadler’s Wells, London, 8-9 October, as part of Dance Umbrella, and at Tramway, Glasgow, on 16 October.

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by Lyndsey Winship via Electronic music | The Guardian

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Dance revolution: Has Boiler Room changed club culture forever?

After its online parties and DJ sets brought huge commercial success, the company is now preparing to launch its first ever festival next month

Six months ago Sherelle was ready to quit music for good, focus on the day job and give up the idea of being a professional DJ. Then her Boiler Room set happened. Fewer than 100 people were invited to see the 26-year-old play a studio in Hackney, but millions watched online; Sherelle went viral. The jungle and footwork music specialist is now one of the most talked about talents in club culture: two agents, her own record label, and a residency on BBC Radio 1 have followed.

“I amassed thousands of followers overnight,” she told the Observer. “Some of them were DJs and producers who I love and respected for years. My mind was blown.”

Boiler Room has always bridged the gap between championing the underground and making it accessible to see your favourite artists.

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by Nosheen Iqbal via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, September 27, 2019

Dele Sosimi at Paradiso Amsterdam 19/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at The Queen’s Head 25/10

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DJ Dom Servini at The Standard 12/10

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The Milk at Sunset/Sunside 24/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Hypothalamus 11/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Forum Zülpich 10/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Astra Stube 8/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Groove City 8/10

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Tegan and Sara: Hey, I'm Just Like You review

(Warner Records)
Reworked songs of teenage travails from the Quin twins, who go back to their youth in slick, pulsating pop

As tracklists go, you don’t get much more evocative than the one attached to Tegan and Sara’s ninth album, a series of furiously indignant, laughably melodramatic and stomach-churningly poignant missives from the standard-issue internal monologue of the unhappy teenager. It’s tempting to leave the likes of Hold My Breath Until I Die and Don’t Believe the Things They Tell You (They Lie) as song titles alone, imagining the contents to fit your own heady nostalgia trip. But if you do decide to dive in, you’ll discover plenty more painfully perfect evocations of adolescent angst inside.

Related: Tegan and Sara: ‘People never talk about women and drug use positively’

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by Rachel Aroesti via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Death, data and digital doppelgangers: Sui Zhen's uncanny valley

As she began work on her new album, Becky Freeman’s mother was diagnosed with cancer. Her interest in the digital lives we leave behind took on a new form

There’s a recording studio in Melbourne, Australia that’s been filling up with Lindas. On the computer screen, when the Guardian visits, is an early digital Linda prototype, bathed in computer-generated grey waves. A white plaster Linda is serenely meditating in its plastic storage box. And then there’s the final form (for now at least): a silicone mask, with vacant white polystyrene voids in place of eyes.

The doppelganger has been created by avant-pop musician and visual artist Becky Freeman, aka Sui Zhen, for her new album Losing, Linda.

Related: L-FRESH the LION, Tones and I, Tkay Maidza: the best Australian music for September

Related: Adrian Eagle on surviving self-hate: 'My anxiety was extreme. I didn't want to see anybody'

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by Nick Buckley via Electronic music | The Guardian

Dom Servini at KOI 4/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rain Abandon at Dreikoenigskeller 3/10

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Sturgill Simpson: Sound & Fury review – country's outlaw catches fire

(Elektra Records)
Another big shift in direction for Simpson, with anime visuals, glam rock, disco and grunge ornamenting never-more-country lyrics: it’s extraordinary

It seems almost beside the point to note that Sturgill Simpson’s fourth album sounds nothing like its predecessors, as his previous three albums didn’t sound much like each other either. His self-funded 2013 debut, High Top Mountain, suggested the arrival of an arch-traditionalist, a former serviceman and railroad worker, whose vision of country music was rooted in that of artists who balked at Nashville’s tendency to slather everything in a coat of gloss: a defiantly retro reanimation of the late 70s “outlaw country” of Waylon Jennings or Hank Williams Jr. But its successor, Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, was a kind of psychedelic opus, sprinkled with paeans to LSD and DMT – “woke up this morning and decided to kill my ego … gonna break on through and blast off to the Bardo,” opened Just Let Go – frequently set to music that matched: Mellotron and wah-wah guitars, vocals drenched in spaced-out echo.

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by Alexis Petridis via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Dom Servini with Chris Goss at The Horse & Groom 26/10

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Dom Servini with DJ LAG at The Jazz Cafe 25/10

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Dom Servini at Century 24/10

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Dom Servini with Rainer Trüby at Jazzhaus Freiburg 18/10

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Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Mark Radcliffe, electronica god: 'I'm not just some radio bloke having a dabble'

The DJ has made an album inspired by untranslatable words, recorded with a bloke he met in the pub called Paul Langley. So what does ‘boketto’ mean?

Mark Radcliffe and Paul Langley are sipping tea in central Manchester. The former is the much-loved radio star; the latter is something of a mystery. “Good, the less said the better,” Langley says from behind his spectacles and pot of Earl Grey. However, I do know he once made an EP in an outfit called Rack-It! “That was with Martyn Walsh from Inspiral Carpets,” he laughs. “He said, ‘You wanna do a track called Sex on Acid – that’ll annoy people.’ And it did.”

Radcliffe and Langley are, they tell me, “soon to be legendary”. This will be in the guise of UNE, the name they have given themselves. The pair have made Lost, an album of lovely, plaintive electronica over which Radcliffe sings. They met five years ago in the Builder’s Arms in Knutsford, Cheshire. Radcliffe, new to the area, asked locals which pub was dog-friendly. This led to dog-walk encounters with Langley, and the pair were soon bantering over pints, about music and Manchester City.

When I heard Paul's music, I thought: 'This is surprisingly good'

Related: Mark Radcliffe ‘surprised’ to lose BBC show during cancer

Lost is out on 18 October. UNE play the Old Courts, Wigan, 3 October, and more dates before Christmas. Mark Radcliffe’s book, Crossroads, is published by Canongate.

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by Dave Simpson via Electronic music | The Guardian

Gary Numan review – terrace chants for thrashing synthpop star

De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea
The Numanoids are out in force for their idol, who throws in guitar and beefy rhythms for this 40th anniversary tour

Gary Numan’s latest UK tour comes under the banner of a 40th anniversary, although it doesn’t say of what. Perhaps it doesn’t need to. Everyone with even a passing interest knows 1979 was Numan’s annus mirabilis: two No 1 singles and two No 1 albums, and a sense that the future was here. Few things said “the 80s are coming” like Numan performing Cars on the telly, every musician prodding at a synthesiser, not a guitar in sight; his star briefly burned so bright that his idol, David Bowie, felt threatened enough to write a song slagging him off.

You definitely wouldn’t need to remind tonight’s audience, heavy on Numanoids, the diehards who sustained him through his subsequent lean years before he was hailed as an influence by everyone from Detroit’s techno pioneers to Marilyn Manson and Trent Renzor. Less inclined to dress up like their hero than they once were, they nevertheless have their own terrace chant, deployed before, after and occasionally during songs: “Nuuuuu-muh-un! Nuuuuu-muh-un!”

Related: Gary Numan: ‘Eye contact is something I find incredibly difficult’ | This much I know

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by Alexis Petridis via Electronic music | The Guardian

Monday, September 23, 2019

Dom Servini – Unherd Radio Show #33 on Soho Radio

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Sampa The Great – Summer feat. Steam Down

Surprise Chef – Blyth Street Nocturn

Abro – Angels feat. Karolina

Run Child Run – Must I

The Milk – Never Come Down (Radio Edit)

Tawiah – Recreate

Einstein Madiro / Malcom Ross – Uptown Bridges

Michael Kiwanuka – You Ain’t The Problem

Hector Plimmer – Somebody Else feat. Andrew Ashong

Hefner – Dive Into You feat. Josée

Jamael Dean – Eledumare

Strata-Gemma – Sceicco

Gin Tonic Orchestra – Hands on the Drums (Kaidi Tatham Remix)

EVM128 / Renato Paris – Changes (Renato’s Live Version)

Eric Kol – You’re My Solution

Sidiku Buari – Adesa A

I Gemin – Your Love

Delfonic & Kapote – In The Lyte Rejam

Daniel Maunick – Biology

KOKI – Travelling (Mike Steva Remix)

Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon – Yesu Yan Yan (Village Cuts Remix)

Burland – Agbekor

Ismaîl & Sixu Touré – Ntinkerinta (Bosq Rework)

Koop – Relaxin’ At Club F****n (Dorfmeister Vs Madrid De Los Austrias Version)

Middle Name Dance Band – Weekend Love Chant (Radio Edit)

Sault – Up All Night

Homeboy Sandman – Far Out

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Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Klunkerkranich 06/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Import Export 05/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at The Jazz Cafe 01/10

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Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon at Kulturschiff Blaue Donau 27/09

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Monday, September 16, 2019

Can a disco-house haven bring queer culture to Ibiza?

Despite dance music’s roots in gay subculture, the island’s superclubs are overwhelmingly straight. Enter Glitterbox: a riot of bare buttocks, trans go-go dancers and, yes, glitter

When it comes to sparkle application, the women crewing up Glitterbox’s “glitter stations” are used to outlandish requests. “We’ve heard it all!” explains the scouse woman who is currently smearing specks of blue on my face. As a season-long employee of Ibiza’s most dazzling party of the decade, she has learned to set some ground rules. Long beards are a no-no, they use up too much product. And she recoils in mock horror at the thought of getting stuck into a hairy chest. “But girl’s chests are fine” she says.

Anything goes at Glitterbox, within reason. Birthed in Ibiza in 2014 and currently held at the superclub , the weekly house and disco night aims to distil the ephemeral hedonism of classic disco nights, such as New York’s Paradise Garage, with a little of Mudd Club’s scuffed-up edge, diverse bookings and a rotating phalanx of resplendent LGBTQ+ dancers. That’s a bold approach in Ibiza, the global epicentre for commercial dance that’s still dominated by older male DJs such as Carl Cox, Martin Garrix and, sadly, David Guetta, with his excruciatingly titled party Fuck Me I’m Famous. But the ethos is working for Glitterbox: punters pack out Hï’s 5,500 capacity every Sunday in the summer, and the night also hosts one-off events at London’s Ministry of Sound and New York’s House of Yes.

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by Owen Myers via Electronic music | The Guardian

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Aphex Twin review – wild lights, jungle buzzsaw and a boo for Boris

Printworks, London
The electronic music legend melted genres at breakneck speed in this peerless ambient-to-hardcore festival outing – to the delight of a young crowd

When Printworks opened to much hurrah two years ago, it did so during a run of venue closures in London. It’s aesthetically impressive and has quickly become one of the best venues for large-scale electronic events, and so is ripe for an Aphex Twin brain-tickle – even if free earplugs, sadly, aren’t on offer. Although the musician has never relied on album cycles to draw in new audiences, it is striking how young the audience winding through Printworks is.

As well as releasing around a dozen EPs in the past decade on his own label, Rephlex, and Warp, there was mass excitement about Richard David James’s “return” as an album artist in 2014, with the Grammy award-winning Syro – and the memorable flight of a neon-green blimp bearing the Aphex Twin logo over London. Along with the weight of his back catalogue and mythical status, what makes shows such as these sell out in minutes is Aphex Twin’s love of spectacle and keen support for new electronic artists. The former is a perfect fit for this, the Red Bull music festival’s high concept (and budget). In terms of the latter, he’s viewed as a switched-on father figure to younger artists and fans, his hybrid set blending new club tracks with live modular jams, his own music, and ripe selections of 90s UK hardcore.

The lasers are, bluntly, insane, an impressive sensory assault. It’s unabashedly fun, strangers craning their necks and grinning at each other

Related: Aphex Twin's best songs – ranked!

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by Lauren Martin via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, September 13, 2019

Sampa the Great: The Return review

(Ninja Tune)
She’s charismatic and her challenges to western orthodoxy are welcome, but Sampa needs to find a fresher sonic palette

Over the past decade, hip-hop has relaxed its borders - welcoming in a flood of new styles, characters and concepts. One thing that still unites most rappers, however, is braggadocio; the aggressive, occasionally tiresome boasting that stems from rap’s battle past. As a Zambia-born, Botswana-raised, Australia-based woman, Sampa Tembo belongs firmly in rap’s inclusive modern age – but as her moniker suggests, she’s no stranger to a spot of rampant egotism. “I’m boutta blow up soon / I ain’t wasting time chilling with you”, she crows on Grass Is Greener, before describing herself in more biblically bombastic terms – as “The end / Beginning and on / and on” – over the intricate percussion of Dare to Fly.

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by Rachel Aroesti via Electronic music | The Guardian

Charli XCX: Charli review – a raw, rousing step towards superstardom

(Asylum/Atlantic)
The embattled singer reveals her anxieties and coaxes brilliance from various guests in a candid, confident third album

In the five years since Charli XCX released her last album, she’s sworn that industry interference meant she would never make another. But here we are: after an overwhelmingly productive half-decade of unofficial releases and collaborations, Charli is an album proper, a diminishingly important semantic distinction but one that puts the 27-year-old firmly at its heart.

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by Laura Snapes via Electronic music | The Guardian

The 100 best albums of the 21st century

We polled 45 music writers to rank the definitive LPs of the 21st century so far. Read our countdown of passionate pop, electrifying rock and anthemic rap – and see if you agree

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas (1-50); Laura Snapes and April Curtin (51-100) via Electronic music | The Guardian

Jóhann Jóhannsson: 12 Conversations with Thilo Heinzmann | John Lewis's contemporary album of the month

(Deutsche Grammophon)
Jóhannsson’s piece, inspired by artist Heinzmann, lacks the composer’s electronic trademarks, but it is full of poignant beauty in this reworking by Echo Collective

Since his death in February 2018 aged 48, the Icelandic composer Jóhann Jóhannsson seems to have spawned a posthumous catalogue to rival Tupac Shakur’s. In the last 18 months, we’ve seen five film soundtracks that were completed shortly before his death, an expanded version of his debut album Englabörn, and an epic seven-disc Retrospective of early film soundtracks, including several previously unreleased scores (Retrospective II will follow soon). Also being unearthed from the archives is an album of fractured synth-pop that he recorded in 1999 under the name Dip, featuring assorted Icelandic indie royalty including Sugarcubes drummer Sigtryggur Baldursson, Jónsi from Sigur Rós and Emiliana Torrini.

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by John Lewis via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

The Shock of the Future review – when synths ruled the world

A young woman in late-70s Paris explores the thrilling possibilities of electronic music in a drama with a timely feminist slant

From Vangelis to John Carpenter, synthesised music was a liquescent shot in the arm for late 70s/early 80s cinema. Now French musician and producer Marc Collin has mounted this perhaps over-reverential tribute, which makes a timely nod to a nucleus of female pioneers, among them Delia Derbyshire, Laurie Spiegel and Wendy Carlos. If that doesn’t have the needle spiking on the hipster gauge, Alma Jodorowsky – granddaughter of Alejandro – plays Ana, a frustrated jingle-writer in 1978 in Paris who is beginning to see the landscape-shifting possibilities of the wall of synths and sequencers in the flat she is housesitting.

Collin is clearly a stan, the camera lovingly worshipping the banks of dials and knobs, the soundtrack overflowing with the likes of Nitzer Ebb, Throbbing Gristle and Jean-Michel Jarre, the retro-futuristic love-in extending to all manner of directional brown-and-orange furnishings. Ana has a full-blown techgasm when a friend turns up with a Roland CR-78 beatbox.

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by Phil Hoad via Electronic music | The Guardian

Objekt: the pioneering producer uniting chinstrokers and ravers

TJ Hertz grew up without a clue electronic music existed. Now he’s the genre’s most cutting-edge star – but the studio still gives him the jitters

It is 4am on a balmy June night in Barcelona, and on a beachside stage at Primavera Sound festival, one of the finest talents in electronic music is leaping into the unknown. TJ Hertz, AKA Objekt, is one of the most beloved DJs and producers around. His tracks and albums routinely top end-of-year lists in the dance music press; their density and technique pleases the chinstrokers at the back, while their goofiness and fun gets hands in the air down the front.

And yet this is his first ever live set, a show he brings to the UK this week. Hertz stands behind a bank of equipment playing crystalline, deconstructed club music and singing through a vocoder while Ezra Miller, a young American visual artist, stands opposite triggering mesmeric visuals in time with the staccato beats and broken melodies.

Objekt plays at the Islington Assembly Hall in London on 12 September.

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by Kit Macdonald via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, September 6, 2019

Octo Octa: Resonant Body review – upbeat, free-spirited electronica

(T4t Luv Nrg)
Octo Octa’s trans journey is mirrored in her electronic palette, using crunching beats, ambience and supple synths on celebratory tracks

For Octo Octa, music has been a journey of self-discovery that’s mirrored the development of her own identity. The electronic music producer and DJ publicly came out as trans in 2016 and refers to prior albums such as Between Two Selves as a “coded message” for her experiences. Since that pivotal moment, she’s found herself embraced by queer scenes all over, a shift that goes hand-in-hand with her move away from live sets and towards DJing, following a year of heavy touring. Her dance music baptism came in the form of drum’n’bass and breakcore, where percussive chaos channelled the same free-spirited energy she now also finds in house music. All three genres serve as major influences for her latest album, created in her New Hampshire cabin home.

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by Tayyab Amin via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, September 5, 2019

DOM SERVINI’S SOULGLIDING TEN :: AUGUST 2019

  1. Kellee Patterson – Maiden Voyage (Black Jazz LP)
  2. New Hope – Let Us Be One (Free LP)
  3. Ronald Langestraat – Then and Forever (South / North LP)
  4. Michael Franks – When The Cookie Jar Is Empty (Warners 12)
  5. Masekela – I’ll Make You Feel Alright (Casablanca LP)
  6. Art Farmer – Soulsides (Mainstream LP)
  7. Smokey Robinson & The Miracles – We Had A Love So Strong (Tamla LP)
  8. Toshiyuki Honda – Lament (Electric Bird LP)
  9. Jasmine – Everything I Do With You (Inner City LP)
  10.  Starbound – High Waves of the Sea (Starbound LP)

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DOM SERVINI’S ALLO LOVE TEN :: JULY 2019

  1. O’Flynn – Sunspear (Silver Bear 12)
  2. Julie Coker – A Life In The Limelight (Kalita LP)
  3. Khalab – Bafia (Bodycode presents RANGr Remix) (On The Corner Promo DL)
  4. La Boa – Por Eso (Big in Japan Promo DL)
  5. Neu Grafik Ensemble – Foulden Road (TRC Promo DL)
  6. Whitney Houston – Love Will Save The Day (MdCL Remix) (G.A.M.M. 12)
  7. Garden of Eden – Everybody’s On A Trip (Backatcha 7)
  8. Jordan Rakei – Origin (Ninja Tune Promo DL)
  9. Ernest Ranglin – Be What You Want To Be (Emotional Rescue LP)
  10.  Rex Suru – Na Control (Alex Phountzi Remix) (BIK Promo DL)

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Wah Wah Radio – August 2019

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Dom flies solo for a special end of summer show running through some of the gigs and events coming up as well as selecting a couple of new cuts from the label, current faves and some old skool late summer treats.

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Dom Servini – Unherd Radio Show #32 on Soho Radio

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Tropical Beach Club Special

Bato Bato – Son Castello

Starbound – High Waves of the Sea

The Black Seeds – Mariana Trench

Em Vee – Talkin’

Quantic – Now or Never feat. Alice Russell

Seu Jorge and Almaz – Everybody Loves The Sunshine (Joey Altruda Remix)

Eddie Hooper – Tomorrow’s Sun

Darkhouse Family – All The Way feat. Tyler Daley & Kaidi Tatham

Omar – Pass It On feat. Terri Walker

Dego – A Strong Move For Truth feat. Nadine Charles

Scrimshire – Thru You feat. Georgia Anne Muldrow

Abro – Honey Bee feat. KerenDun

Discuji – Warmth Radius

Sidiku Buari – Ankowar (Truth)

Tantra – Get happy (Delfonic Edit)

Gaoule Mizik – A Ka Titine (Kaye Edit)

GUTS – L’Origine du Monde

Zilla With Her Eyes Shut – Get Your Way (Bambooman Remix)

Particle Ray – Saints Stomp Their Feet

Steve Cobby – Feline Plastique

Godtet – Oubladi feat. Miriam Sawires

Corey King – Beautiful People

Bato Bato – Luna de Escape La Luz

Us – Do It Again

Nancy Wilson – Sunshine

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Dele Sosimi at 91 Living Room 13/09

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Dom Servini at Century 12/09

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