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Friday, November 29, 2019

Doon Kanda: Labyrinth review – welcome to the haunted fun fair

(Hyperdub)
The designer and musician makes his mark using synthetic-sounding instruments to produce his spooky electronics

Jesse Kanda has made a considerable mark on culture with his graphic design – his mythic, bulbous, gender-indeterminate beings are the perfect foil for Arca’s music, and he has made beautiful, influential collaborations with FKA twigs and Björk. He then moved into music, as Doon Kanda, with two EPs leading up to this debut album, featuring another melancholy demigod on the cover.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

Omar Souleyman: Shlon review | Ammar Kalia's global album of the month

(Mad Decent)
The Syrian musician has released 500 records and now lives in exile in Turkey, but this short, sharp record shows an undimmed spirit

There was a glorious moment during Syrian singer Omar Souleyman’s 2011 Glastonbury set. Having just opened to a crowd of sedate, sun-baked West Holts revellers with the trilling saz lines of ballad Saba, he gives one waft of his hand and commands the entire crowd into a dabke-fuelled frenzy.

His keyboard player starts hammering out electronic drums on the keys, while Souleyman wails deep-throated entreaties to his audience; it is a joyous encapsulation of his music and appeal.

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by Ammar Kalia via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

The month's best mixes: celestial acid and rave nuttiness

Afrodeutsche brings her dark electro from Berlin’s Griessmuehle, UK techno elder statesman Luke Slater does an Essential Mix and Hessle Audio’s Ben UFO goes back to back with Joy Orbison

Honcho Campout Series: Mike Servito

Related: The month's best mixes: digital sludge, techno slammers and Kylie

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by Lauren Martin via Electronic music | The Guardian

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

DOM SERVINI’S ALLO LOVE BIRTHDAY TEN :: NOVEMBER 2019

  1. Espen Horne – Magnetica (Wah Wah 45s 7)
  2. Debbie Cameron & Richard Boone – Gimme-Gimme (Metronome LP)
  3. Hackney Colliery Band – Africa (Wah Wah 45 7)
  4. Qwestlife – Fever (KON Remix) feat. Sugarhill Gang & Siedah Garrett (KON DL)
  5. Rosie Brown – Bliss (Quantic Remix) (Wah Wah 45s 7)
  6. Donna Summer – If It Hurts Just a Little (Young Pulse Re-work) (DL)
  7. Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon – Yesu Yan Yan (Village Cuts Remix) (Wah Wah 45s 12)
  8. Patrice Rushen – Haven’t You Heard (Elektra 12)
  9. Dele Sosimi – You No Fit Touch Am (Medlar Remix) (Wah Wah 45s 12)
  10. Rodney Franklin – In The Centre (Columbia LP)

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Scrimshire at Bussey Building 21/12

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DJ Dom Servini at The Jazz Cafe 30/11

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DJ Dom Servini at The Jazz Cafe 27/12

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Wah Wah 45s at The Horse & Groom 30/11

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DJ Dom Servini & Scrimshire at Bussey Building 21/12

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John Morales at The Jazz Cafe 06/12

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Wah Wah 45s at Horse & Groom 30/11

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DJ Dom Servini at The Jazz Cafe 29/11

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Resonators at OCCII 13/12

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Wah Wah 45s at Bussey Building 7/12

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Soothsayers at Portico Gallery 29/11

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Why is 2019 so nostalgic for 80s rave?

Once the subject of tabloid moral panics, dance music’s early days are now being celebrated in books and galleries. What can 21st-century Britain learn from the ‘second summer of love’?

Visitors entered this summer’s Sweet Harmony exhibition through a tangle of ripped-up fencing, as if stealthily gaining access to a forbidden ritual. Inside, old-skool rave anthems rattled the Saatchi Gallery’s window frames. On the walls were hundreds of flyers alongside photographs of saucer-eyed youngsters waving air-horns and wearing T-shirts adorned with amusingly brazen drug references.

Dave Swindells, the man responsible for many of these classic photographs – and, indeed, many of the most memorable visual documentations of 1988’s summer of love – was struck by how much his images meant to strangers whose reckless youth he captured. “It’s emotional. I was getting messages from people saying how amazing it was that they were on the walls of the Saatchi!”

Related: Aciiiiid! Rave's first 30 years – in pictures

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by Phil Harrison via Electronic music | The Guardian

Modern Toss

On rave culture ...

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by Modern Toss via Electronic music | The Guardian

Monday, November 25, 2019

'It's more important than family': the music scene keeping Bristol weird

By blending noise, punk and techno, the ‘misfits and weirdos’ of Bristol are shaking the city out of its trip-hop nostalgia – in various states of nudity

In the smoke-filled basement of Bristol’s Brunswick Club, the T-shirts are off for Giant Swan. The duo coax unearthly noise from a web of drum machines and guitar effects pedals; as Robin Stewart’s robotic howls and Harry Wright’s clattering beats resolve into techno, their audience of peers in Bristol’s music community disrobe from the sweat and explode into dance.

For the family of artists in the room, in January 2018 at the last festival by Howling Owl Records, this closing show marks the start of a new chapter – one that has been moving into the spotlight ever since.

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by Alastair Shuttleworth via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, November 22, 2019

More to the floor: the decade the dancefloor was decolonised

Collectives like NON and Naafi helped to loosen the west’s stranglehold on club culture – and now the most exciting dance music is coming from east Asia, Africa and Latin America

In the first half of the 2010s, the western world dominated the conversation in electronic music. White, male producers and DJs, often based in London, New York or Los Angeles, mostly controlled the barriers to entry, and took music from foreign cultures without consequence. Diplo, cherry-picking from baile funk, dancehall and reggaeton and tailoring each rhythm to suit an English-speaking market, is the most high-profile example of this appropriation, but he is just one of many white producers in the post-internet decade who dabbled in different cultures with boyish insouciance they regarded drop-crotch trousers, curtained hair, or any other passing trend.

In the second half of the decade, however, multilateral club scenes from Latin America, Africa and east Asia have come to define the global underground, each pressing their native sounds towards the razor’s edge with confidence and technical prowess.

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by Whitney Wei via Electronic music | The Guardian

Chemical Brothers review – a glorious, meaningless sensory overload

First Direct Arena, Leeds
Against huge projections of robots, disco balls and angels, the band deliver a rousing set that even makes the players themselves punch the air

In the 90s electronic boom, when the Chemical Brothers, Leftfield, Orbital and the Prodigy formed the “big four” acts making dance music a live experience, occasional festival appearances were the only real opportunities they had to take their music to the masses. Most of their gigs saw audiences crammed into student halls and mid-sized venues. Today, as live music has exploded along with bigger, visuals-friendly venues and the band’s influence (this week they were nominated for three Grammy awards), the Chems have made the step into arenas, where they can showcase their electric dreams on the scale they’ve long imagined.

At first, the opening night of their first regional tour in 20 years feels like an old-school rave. Some people have exhumed their 90s bucket hats – once popularised by Stone Roses drummer Reni. Others in the balconies are constantly up and in the aisles all night, giving security staff a headache. Meanwhile, DJs play vintage dance tracks before the main act come on. LFO’s thumping sub-bass workout of the same name, once popularised in nearby Leeds Warehouse, gets rapturous cheers of recognition.

Related: Sign up for the Sleeve Notes email: music news, bold reviews and unexpected extras

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by Dave Simpson via Electronic music | The Guardian

Hannah Diamond: Reflections review – 303s and heartbreak

(PC Music)
On these melancholy bangers, the PC Music singer uses nursery rhyme-like trance-pop melodies and a girlish sing-song delivery to essay the pain of being lovelorn and vulnerable

Here’s an affecting companion piece to Caroline Polachek’s recently acclaimed Pang: another breakup album with production handled by one of the PC Music collective, who rescue trance-pop sonics from the tyranny of good taste. Polachek’s record featured work by Danny L Harle, while Diamond’s is produced by AG Cook. Where Polachek is erudite and poetic, Diamond is prosaic; where Polachek’s vocals are astonishingly skilful, swooping into high registers, Diamond’s are unremarkably ordinary.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, November 21, 2019

'We're all Earthlings': the scientists using art to explore the cosmos

Can art advance science? Researchers on the hunt for extraterrestrial intelligence are using videos, music and more to go beyond the final frontier

Since 1984, the scientific research institute SETI has worked with some of the brightest minds on our planet: astronomers, solar system dynamics experts, exoplanet detection specialists, astrochemists. All of them are on a mission to decode the universe’s mysteries – but has one area of expertise been overlooked?

Jill Tarter thinks so. She’s the chair emeritus of SETI – whose name stands for “search for extraterrestrial intelligence” – and the inspiration for Jodie Foster’s character in the movie Contact. Tarter believes scientists should look to the art world to help solve some of their biggest problems. “Art gives people an opportunity to think about bigger-picture ideas or think about them in a new way,” she says. “It can make people think differently about who they are, where they are, or questions such as: where do we come from? Where are we going? Is there anybody else out there?”

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by Melissa Clocker via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Lizzo, Billie Eilish and Lil Nas X top 2020 Grammy nominations

Lizzo scores eight nominations with Eilish and Lil Nas X on seven, but British artists largely snubbed in major categories

The 17-year-old pop sensation Billie Eilish has become the youngest artist to be nominated in all four of the most prestigious Grammy award categories: record, album and song of the year, and best new artist.

Her gothic, innovative single Bad Guy, which topped the US charts, is nominated in the song and record categories, while her similarly chart-topping album When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? is nominated for the album prize. She completed a sweep of the top categories with a best new artist nomination, and has six nominations in all. Her album engineers got a nod in the best engineered album category, including her brother and collaborator Finneas, who received three nominations in total.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

Björk review – a spectacular vision of Utopia

O2 Arena, London
Writhing alien life forms engulf a set so elaborate it reduces the audience at the singer’s Cornucopia stadium show to hushed awe. But her voice rings out clear

When Björk first conceived of the live show for her ninth studio album, 2017’s lush Utopia, she envisioned something “a little bit Pollyanna”. Having cut short the tour for the preceding Vulnicura album owing to the emotional weight of its dense break-up songs, this was a chance to create a new world, one bathed in light. Cornucopia has been billed by Björk as her “most elaborate staged concert to date”, which is saying something considering that 2011’s Biophilia jaunt utilised actual lightning to make beats. Her choice of arena-sized venues suggests that logistics won out over intimacy. Everything here is oversized, from the constantly shifting fringed screens that drape the stage – made up of a collection of fungi-like pods – to the crisp projections showing polymorphous alien-like flora and fauna that often engulf the 18-piece choir and the flute septet, to the dome-like reverberation chamber into which Björk occasionally disappears to sing without a microphone. That it’s predominantly soundtracked by Utopia’s birdcall-heavy art-pop makes it feel as if you’ve been shrunk and let loose in an underwater episode of Blue Planet.

It’s an unnerving experience at first, with the crowd hushed as if in a theatre, all polite applause and near silence between songs. It’s a respect that Björk – resplendent in a peach ruffled dress and gold headpiece – wallows in, unleashing that crystal clear voice on opener The Gate, before kicking and prodding at an imaginary figure on the gloopy Arisen My Senses. Her movements often seem to relate to a different song entirely, as if these sprawling, densely layered epics read as pop to her now. Even when cloaked in blossoming flowers or, as on the rumbling highlight Body Memory, surrounded by CGI bodies crashing into each other, she remains your main focus. When she loses her way during Hidden Place – one of the few songs from her pre-2015 discography – she styles it out with some trademark, wordless ad-libs, while a cute cry that “flutes rock!” is met with the night’s only real concession to arena-sized cheering.

Related: Björk – her 20 greatest songs ranked!

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by Michael Cragg via Electronic music | The Guardian

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Wah Wah Radio 20th Birthday Special – November 2019

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Hardkandy – Brief Encounters feat. Scarlett Fae

Time Grove – Sir Blunt

Resonators – Sweet Love Affair

Richard Groove Holmes – No Trouble on the Mountain 

The Gene Dudley Group – No Trouble on the Mountain feat. Anne Frankenstein

Talc – Modern Sleepover

Stac – All or Nothing

Stac – Glory (Elias Linn Remix)

Henri-Pierre Noel – Diskette (The Reflex Revision Long Version)

Soothsayers – Watching The Stars feat. Julia Biel

Isaac Birituro & The Rail Abandon – Für Svenja

Kutiman – So Long feat. Rioghach Connolly

Paper Tiger – Weight in Space feat. Shafiq Husayn

The Milk – Colours

Hackney Colliery Band – Africa

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No Bra: 'In Britain, I was seen as page-three humour'

Susanne Oberbeck sings sexually charged songs in a German accent while standing topless and sporting a moustache – and at last she’s found an audience that understands her

Two decades ago, Susanne Oberbeck saw a headline in the Sunday Sport referring to a member of S Club 7. “Rachel Stevens,” it said, “with no bra.” Oberbeck, who is German, was sufficiently intrigued by this sleazy tabloid prurience to name her own band No Bra.

Originally a duo, No Bra soon became known for Oberbeck’s habit of intoning sexually charged lyrics in a Nico-esque accent over industrial sounds while standing topless and wearing a moustache. No Bra’s single Munchausen – in which two hipsters try to outdo each other with extravagant boasts (“I used to share a squat in Camden with Nina Hagen and she used to make pizza out of dead cats”) – even got championed by the unlikely figure of BBC Radio 1’s Pete Tong when it was released in 2005.

Love and Power is out 27 November.

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by Alex Needham via Electronic music | The Guardian

Monday, November 18, 2019

Dom Servini – Unherd Radio Show #35 on Soho Radio

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Brainstory – Peter Pan

Alps 2 – I Wonder

Tawiah – Recreate

Hardkandy – Brief Encounters feat. Scarlett Fae

Remi – Brain feat. Lori

Gang Starr – Family & Loyalty feat. J. Cole

Masok – Regimen

Klik & Frik – Achalay

Synthia – Tonight You Might

Dwight Druik – Georgy Porgy (Disco Version)

Ti Seles – Pa Dekouraje’w Toni 

The Quiet Ones – Matamba feat. Sergio Perere

Quantic – Orquídea feat. Sly5thAve (Sampology Remix)

Danny Goliger – Giselle

Orchestra Baobab – Sibou Odia (Ben Gomori Edit)

DJ Raff – Memoria (El Buho Remix)

CVER – Feeling U (Delfonic Remix)

Donna Summer – If It Hurts Just a Little (Young Pulse Remix)

Qwestlife – Fever feat. The Sugar Hill Gang and Siedah Garrett (KON Remix)

Liotia – Blackout (Afrikanz on Marz Vocal Remix) 

Leon Vynehall – I, Cavallo

Rayowa – Better Man

The Pendletons – Keep It Working (Jaques Renault Remix)

Hypnotic Brass Ensemble – In The House

Psychemagik – Gonna Fly Now

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Saturday, November 16, 2019

One to watch: Giant Swan

Progressive club music is Bristol’s latest export, and this duo work the dancefloor perfectly

Bristol has long held a reputation as one of the UK’s more formidable musical cities – from 1970s post-punk pioneers the Pop Group to the 90s trip-hop of Massive Attack. In recent years, forward-thinking artists such as Batu and his Timedance label, as well as producers Hodge & Facta, have been perfecting an incisive gut-punch of a techno sound with regular DIY parties in the city.

And now comes electronic duo Giant Swan. Robin Stewart and Harry Wright met as skateboarding 11-year-olds, and formed guitar band the Naturals, immersing themselves in Bristol’s local indie scene. Later, formative trips to London clubs such as Corsica Studiosturned them on to the hedonism of the dancefloor, and they soon began to experiment with analogue setups, exchanging instruments for electronics.

Giant Swan’s album is out now on Keck. They play the Star and Shadow cinema, Newcastle, on Friday, and the Loco Klub, Bristol, 23 November

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by Ammar Kalia via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, November 15, 2019

Arthur Russell: Iowa Dream review – lopsided, funky and staggeringly beautiful

(Audika)
This collection of unreleased tracks from the electronic pioneer is a treasure trove of Russell’s guileless, always melodic songs

When he died in 1992 of Aids-related illnesses at the age of 40, Arthur Russell left behind one of the most staggeringly beautiful bodies of songwriting ever – and it is still emerging. This compilation of unreleased tracks from his archive mostly date from the mid-1970s, recalling the country-tinged songwriting collected on 2008’s Love Is Overtaking Me, with a scattering of the lopsided, slightly wacky funk and new wave he scaled up to in the 80s.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

Shanti Celeste: Tangerine review – club music with subtlety and depth

(Peach Discs)
The Bristolian DJ and producer’s nuanced debut is an enveloping listen, folding softer textures into its 2am beats

The transition from DJ to album artist is a tricky one. While one art is about reading the room, the other is a more isolated and intimate experience. For Bristolian Shanti Celeste, on her debut full-length Tangerine, it’s an opportunity to show subtlety and depths that she doesn’t often have space to explore on the dancefloor.

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by Aimee Cliff via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, November 14, 2019

No fighting or ego biting! Homoelectric, Manchester's queer clubbing utopia

Founded in 1997, Homoelectric railed against the tacky scene in Manchester’s Gay Village with acid, techno and Italo disco. It has now scaled up to a 10,000-person festival, complete with unicorn drag queens

‘For homos, heteros, lesbos and don’t knows.” Since 1997, these words have guided Manchester’s Homoelectric. Started as a retort to the entrenched etiquette and increasingly tacky music of the bars clustered around Canal Street in the city’s Gay Village, Homoelectric grew to become one of the UK’s best-loved institutions. Prioritising a musical policy of house, techno, space disco, Italo, acid and outsider pop that was uncommonly eclectic for the time, it has survived waves of changes to Manchester’s physical landscape, as well as shifts in the wider social ones. Upscaling an independent and nomadic gay night to a 10,000-capacity festival, though? A high-stakes manoeuvre.

It had been in Homoelectric co-founder Luke Unabomber’s mind for years, but repeated attempts to establish it as a summer knees-up on the outskirts of Manchester kept falling through. Suddenly, a dream spot was available. The cavernous Mayfield Depot, just a few hundred yards from Homoelectric’s first venue, Follies, and within earshot of Piccadilly station, had broken free from red tape. In 2018, Warehouse Project, the big beast of Manchester clubbing, acquired the rights to host shows there. They were keen to assist in making Homobloc a reality, but aware enough to let it be established on Homoelectric’s terms, so as best to encourage discerning Mancunian clubbers who prize independence and authenticity. From the announcement on 10 July, the hype was deafening.

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by Gabriel Szatan via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Dom Servini at Supermax 15/11

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Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Dom Servini at Kasheme 19/10/19

Dom delivers nearly 6 hours of gorgeous, horizontal grooves recorded live at the beautiful Kasheme in Zürich, Switzerland. Listen here!

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Friday, November 8, 2019

Moor Mother: Analog Fluids of Sonic Black Holes review – raging protest poetry

(Don Giovanni Records)
The activist and musician overlays stunning sound collages with furious verses laying bare the lie of post-racial America

Philadelphian poet, activist and musician Moor Mother has gone from the corners of her city’s underground scene to presenting work at high-cultural institutions such as London’s ICA and Barbican, and collaborating with others to make industrial dub as Zonal and wavy club music as 700 Bliss: an intense but sustained flurry of activity that is testament to how keen and lucid her feeling is.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

Decks appeal: the album you play on two turntables at once

Fed up with texting her husband when he was working abroad, Laima Leyton turned domestic drama into a rapturous electronic pop album – with a twist

When you are a musician and the primary parent at home – with five children between you and your partner – how do you make space to be creative? Especially when you have recently arrived in Britain from Brazil, and your husband, with whom you regularly make music, is often away for his work.

Out of the culture shock and loneliness, Laima Leyton has made an album full of sharp, precise electronic pop: the inventive and thoughtful Home. Pulsing in between the sounds of Jenny Hval, Ladytron and Laurie Anderson, it is about the questions thrown at you by long-term relationships, parenthood and where you belong. “I got to the stage where I wasn’t fussed about being a big techno DJ any more, pleasing the kids,” Leyton says. “I thought: ‘Why can’t I share the other things I think about? Why can’t I turn that into music?’”

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by Jude Rogers via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Beverly Glenn-Copeland review – a trance state of love, nature and spirituality

St George’s, Bristol
Now 75, the ambient composer is on his first world tour, playing spectral music that carries the audience to a higher plane

‘This is from a recent album,” begins Beverly Glenn-Copeland, his hands in the air like a preacher, his gorgeous smile wide. “It’s from, er, 2003. Time goes fast when you’re old.” At 75, the Canadian musician’s spiritual blend of minimalism, new-age electronica, folk and lieder-style singing is having a moment, spurred on by a reissue of his 1986 album Keyboard Fantasies in 2017, and this year’s rerelease of 2004’s cosmic Primal Prayer, alongside a film, and his first ever world tour.

Related: Glenn Copeland: the trans musical visionary finding an audience at 74

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by Jude Rogers via Electronic music | The Guardian

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Dele Sosimi at The Jazz Cafe 24/1

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Monday, November 4, 2019

50 great tracks for November from Dua Lipa, Destroyer, Selena Gomez and more

From Victoria Monét’s sublime R&B to Lanark Artefax’s squirming electronics, check out 50 new tracks and read about our 10 favourites

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas and Laura Snapes via Electronic music | The Guardian

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Underworld: Drift Series One: Sampler Edition review – a year’s worth of inspiration

(Caroline)

In the last century, when buying music used to necessitate a physical product, John Peel favourites the Wedding Present once pulled off the seemingly incredible feat of releasing a single a month for a year. The advent of streaming and downloading has rather raised the ante: Underworld have been releasing a song a week for the past year, and these are now collated in a seven-CD box set, with this standalone disc acting as an overview of the project.

The endeavour has clearly proved liberating, and prompted a renewed sense of creativity: after all, if one week’s effort fails to hit the mark, there’s not long to wait for it to be rectified by the next instalment. While considerations of space dictate that the sampler doesn’t include some of the most expansive cuts(the wonderfully sprawling Appleshine Continuum, a 34-minute collaboration with experimental jazz trio the Necks, is particularly ambitious), there is still plenty of boundary-pushing going on, from the propulsive Border Country to the atmospheric ambience of Brilliant Yes That Would Be. The standout is the dazzling STAR (Rebel Tech), in which Karl Hyde reimagines Janet and Allan Ahlberg’s children’s classic Each Peach Pear Plum via a rapid-fire stream of consciousness that replaces Mother Goose, Bo Peep et al with political heroes and popular cultural mainstays including David Beckham, the Dalai Lama and Dr Dre.

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by Phil Mongredien via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, November 1, 2019

Jeff Lynne's ELO: From Out of Nowhere review – it's a pleasure to have him back

(Sony/RCA)
Lynne has come out of semi-retirement with an album of creamy harmonies and good-natured pop, firmly in the lineage of classic ELO

There’s something rather heartwarming about the return of Jeff Lynne’s ELO. While being a semi-retired rock star, forced out of the fray by the passing tides of fashion, is no one’s idea of a hard life, it’s also not what anyone with a yearning to make music for an audience wants for themselves. It all turned round for Lynne in 2014, when Radio 2’s head of music, Jeff Smith, persuaded him to headline the station’s Hyde Park concert. Five years on, the new-look ELO have had a platinum album, played Wembley Stadium and filled multiple arenas.

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by Michael Hann via Electronic music | The Guardian
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