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Saturday, February 29, 2020

Grimes: Miss Anthropocene review – a deep, dark trip

(4AD)

“I’ll never be your dream girl,” sang Grimes on the last line of her aggressively poppy 2015 album Art Angels. On her fifth record, the Canadian producer embodies a living nightmare: Miss Anthropocene, goddess of climate change. So Heavy I Fell Through the Earth, the slow and sensual opener (described by Grimes as “a super-dark, heavy ballad about fighting Balrogs in the centre of the Earth that is a sex metaphor”), fanfares a conceptual darkening with endless layers of synth and gravity-well bass. Grimes has been listening to a lot of Burial and Vangelis, and it shows in the sci-fi soundtrack gloss; 4ÆM’s racing breakbeats and peppy chorus will indeed grace forthcoming game Cyberpunk 2077, in which Grimes plays cybernetic-jawed rocker Lizzy Wizzy.

Darkseid sees a welcome return from Taiwanese rapper Pan, who guested on Art Angels under the name Aristophanes; her breathlessly intent flow adds urgency to the pulsing sub-bass and crunching beats. Delete Forever, meanwhile, written about the death of Lil Peep and the opioid crisis, reminds you Grimes can do beauty and emotion as well as worldbuilding, with heartfelt acoustic strums and even banjo; here and on the birdsong-and-melodica adorned headrush Idoru, her voice reveals new richness of expression. Miss Anthropocene is a deep, dark trip – shame the climate crisis bit isn’t also part of Grimes’s wild imagination.

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by Emily Mackay via Electronic music | The Guardian

One to watch: Sofia Kourtesis

The Berlin-based producer is a musical magpie with a distinct dancefloor-friendly style

Listen to the opening number of the Peruvian-born producer Sofia Kourtesis’s first, self-titled EP, and you imagine a train made of rackety sonic junk clattering down a track. Its destination? A good time, surely: while her brand of house may be arrestingly distinct, clicking and juddering with distorted vocals and fragments of field recordings, she always keeps her eyes firmly on the dancefloor rather than the navel.

Kourtesis, who is based in Berlin, started out in a hip-hop band at 18 (“We were really bad”) before migrating to the mixing deck after meeting her now ex-partner Derwin Schlecker, AKA Gold Panda, and later becoming a booker for clubs including Berlin’s Funkhaus. Released last year by Studio Barnhus, the eclectic Stockholm-based dance label, the EP won glowing reviews (Pitchfork called it “magical”).

Sarita Colonia is out now on Studio Barnhus

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by Holly Williams via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, February 28, 2020

Vladislav Delay: Rakka review – techno from the end of the world

(Cosmo Rhythmatic)
Inspired by the arctic tundra and the climate crisis, the Finnish producer’s angriest work to date is a mix of unstable, deconstructed beats and bludgeoning noise

Most people tend to start out angry at injustice in the world, and then have that anger pared down by the passage of time until they’re playing golf and voting Conservative. Vladislav Delay, AKA Finnish producer Sasu Ripatti, has done the reverse. As Luomo in the mid-00s, he evolved the elegant minimal house that plays in cocktail bars into its ideal form. Sensual and subtly detailed, his tracks had a quiet toughness, but all certainly felt well with the world. His Vladislav Delay moniker was for even more beatific ambient techno. But by the time of his 2012 masterpiece Kuopio, its equally strong sister EP Espoo and the skittish jazz-techno fusion group Vladislav Delay Quartet, disquiet had crept in. The beats drummed like quick, nervous fingers on a tabletop, or a steady fist at a door.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Caribou: Suddenly review – perfectly imperfect pop

(City Slang)
Dan Snaith’s project returns after five years away to confront grief and family, beautifully warping songs that are drenched in melody

Some artists’ careers seem to progress according to a carefully calculated plan, and there are others whose career seems to progress as a result of happy accidents and unexpected outcomes. Dan Snaith, who records as Caribou and Daphni, belongs firmly in the latter category. In the early 00s, he started out making critically acclaimed electronica that variously tilted towards psychedelia, krautrock and the wistful techno of Boards of Canada; he did it while studying for a PhD in pure mathematics, which added to its cerebral, rarefied air. There were artists who seemed less likely than Snaith to release an Ibiza-approved dancefloor banger, but they largely resided in the realms of funeral doom metal and musique concrète.

This made it a surprise to everyone – including Snaith – when Sun, a track from 2010’s Swim, became an Ibiza-approved dancefloor banger. To compound his amazement further, Caribou unexpectedly went from being a live act who played small venues to audiences that seemed not unlike Snaith himself – a self-described “music nerdy-type person” – to a reliably festival-rousing draw. He described Swim’s follow-up, Your Love, as “mind-numbingly straightforward”. It was anything but – wildly unconventional and dealing in subtleties and weird juxtapositions, which didn’t stop it making the UK Top 10.

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by Alexis Petridis via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Wah Wah Radio – February 2020

A Simon Says Special

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Dom and Chris present a Simon Says Special ahead of the final charity event at The Jazz Cafe on Thursday March 5th in memory of Chris’ late brother, Simon. The show includes some classic tunes from his DJ sets, music from the artists performing at the event, and a very special mix from BobaFatt. Get yourself in the mood for our very unique night with this very unique radio show.

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Friday, February 21, 2020

DJ Dom Servini at Brixton Village 21/03/20

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DJ Dom Servini at The Jazz Cafe 05/03/20

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DOM SERVINI’S ALLO LOVE TEN :: FEBRUARY 2020

  1. Lotte Kærså & Græsrødderne – Jubiiilaeum (Tartelet LP)
  2. Gee-O x Arthur Verocai – Caboclo (Promo DL)

3. Nick Walters – Dansoman Last Stop (22a LP)

4. Horatio Luna – Yes Doctor (Lasape Records Promo DL)

5. Hannibal Rex – This Place (Promo DL)

6. Cem G – By The Sea (Red Motorbike 7)

7. Sepalot Quartet – Tocole (Eskapaden Music Promo DL)

8. Calibro 35 – Black Moon feat. MEI (Record Kicks LP)

9. Reid Inc – What Am I Gonna Do(Bold/Octave Japan 7)

10. Collocutor – Lost and Found (On The Corner Promo DL)

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Captcha Radio, Madrid with Dom Servini

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Recorded in the “Comfort Zone” courtesy of Captcha Radio in the heart of Madrid on February 8th following Dom’s debut at ClubBerlin. Joining him is El Barrio DJ/producer Isaias Sanz for a journey through jazz, latin, Brazilian, soul, AOR and a touch of disco. Features music from Caroline Peyton, Dexter Wansel, Candeias, Rosie Turton, Domenico Di Vito, Charlotte Dos Santos, Cedar Walton, The Milk, Feather, Sun Ra and many more…

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Sightless Pit: Grave of a Dog review – witchy trio unleash hell

(Thrill Jockey)
The underground supergroup bin their guitars in favour of obscure sound-making – and conjure a gloriously hellish mood

‘When shall we three meet again in thunder, lightning or in rain?” That’s what you can imagine this decidedly witchy trio saying to each other after finishing this study in brutality. They are an underground supergroup of Kristin Hayter (AKA doom-laden torch singer Lingua Ignota), Lee Buford (drummer from the utterly brilliant outsider metal duo the Body) and Dylan Walker (vocalist from the equally brilliant grindcore band Full of Hell).

The trio subvert expectations by doing away with guitars and live drums altogether, instead using drum machines, samples and more obscure means to scorch the earth. As ever, Hayter sound like she’s delivering a benediction in a church on fire, and she’s trying nobly to withstand the flames. When the group’s productions pare back to quivering ambient drift and pulsations from far below, on Violent Rain and Love Is Dead, All Love Is Dead, she seems to regard the wreckage around her sadly. Walker, meanwhile, is the sound of the violence that got us here, his unhinged howl often fed through a mesh of static.

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

The Orielles: the hotly tipped band leaving Halifax for the stars

Energised by gong baths and Korean dance music, the northern band are topping playlists with their cosmic psychedelia

Twenty minutes into the gong bath, Orielles vocalist and bassist Esmé Hand-Halford knew that she was ready to do her vocal take. Stockport’s Eve Studios – a shrine containing BBC Radiophonic Workshop memorabilia, original rugs from the 1951 Festival of Britain and Europe’s largest collection of vintage BBC equipment – became, she says, “like a commune” as the mellow, relaxing drone reverberated through the room.

The Orielles are a Halifax trio aged between 21 and 24: Esmé; her sister, Sidonie, on drums; and guitarist Henry Carlyle-Wade. They get heavy rotation on 6Music and are as in demand as in demand for their cosmic remixes for other bands as they are for their high-energy festival sets. Their penchant for a notably retro vision of the future means they are the latest exponents of the kind of woozy psychedelia played by Broadcast and Stereolab – bands who remembered the future as if it were yesterday.

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by Fergal Kinney via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, February 20, 2020

‘It feels like an extra limb’ – musicians on the bond with their instruments

Horrible things happen to instruments in transit – as Ballaké Sissoko and others have recently learned. Five musicians explain why the damage goes more than skin deep

One thing successful musicians have to do a lot of is travel, and when you travel with an instrument, you increase its chances of getting damaged. Early this month, the Malian musician Ballaké Sissoko’s kora was taken apart by US border agents when he left New York, something Sissoko only discovered when he picked it up in Paris. A few days later, Louis Levitt discovered a four-inch crack in his $100,000 double bass after it had been unpacked for security screening at Newark airport, and a few days after that, specialist instrument movers dropped Angela Hewitt’s £150,000 F278 Fazioli piano while removing it from a studio after a recording session, rendering it “unsalvageable”.

The loss of an instrument, though, is about more than inconvenience or financial cost. It’s about the loss of something that can feel like an integral part of a musician’s being – it’s their means of self-expression. And after years of playing one instrument, simply swapping to another isn’t as easy as it sounds – musicians and their instruments have relationships and losing one can be as hard as losing a lover. Here, five musicians talk about the instruments they play, and what those instruments mean to them.

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by Michael Hann via Electronic music | The Guardian

Grimes: Miss Anthropocene review – a toxicity report on modern celebrity

(4AD)
Notionally a concept album about the goddess of climate crisis, the Canadian’s fifth album is actually a compellingly chaotic statement about her own private life

Miss Anthropocene has had a lengthy, difficult birth. As perhaps befits an album that was announced in 2017, then derailed by ferocious-sounding spats between artist and record company, rerecording, and rejigging of the track listing, it comes with a weighty concept attached. Miss Anthropocene is, Grimes says, a work based around the idea of anthropomorphising climate change into the figure of a villainous goddess (“she’s naked all the time and she’s made out of ivory and oil”) whose name is a conflation of “misanthrope” and the proposed scientific term for the current geological epoch, and who celebrates the imminent destruction of the world.

'This is the sound of the end of the world,' she sings over a haze of noisy, shoegazey guitar

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by Alexis Petridis via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Pop star, producer or pariah? The conflicted brilliance of Grimes

Claire Boucher has spent a decade battling the press to reclaim her reputation. Dating Elon Musk means she’s never been more controversial – but could her new album set her free?

Grimes has always had a tortured relationship with visibility. No sooner had Claire Boucher broken beyond the Montreal warehouse scene at the turn of the 2010s than she was telling journalists that she only fronted her music because she couldn’t afford to hire someone to do it for her. She wanted to be Phil Spector – though maybe she also wanted to be Britney. “I really hate being in front of people,” she told Pitchfork in 2012. “But I’m also obsessed with being a pop star.”

That ambivalence colours Boucher’s earliest press. She could make “dumb fucking hits all day” but didn’t, because “that’s obviously not how I want Grimes to be perceived”. She once asked: “What’s the difference between Napoleon and everyone else? Napoleon had great image branding.” Given that her style and hair colour changed in every photo, Boucher disrupted the possibility of ever solidifying into the kind of stable pop silhouette connoted by either bicorne hat or cone bra. She craved a new archetype: whether she resembled a space lieutenant or racoon-eyed wraith, the one consistent would be her iconoclastic skill as the sole producer of her music.

Grimes was deified like a pop star, and there was a triumph-of-the-weird will to see her become one

Against all odds, Miss Anthropocene is Boucher’s continuing personal testament to creativity as resistance against destruction

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by Laura Snapes via Electronic music | The Guardian

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Andrew Weatherall obituary

DJ and record producer whose work on Primal Scream’s 1991 album Screamadelica helped it win the first Mercury music prize

The list of Andrew Weatherall’s achievements as DJ, musician, songwriter, producer and remixer could fill a hefty volume. His career took him from working as an acid house DJ in the late 1980s to being a celebrated remixer of tracks by Happy Mondays, New Order and Primal Scream. His production work on Primal Scream’s album Screamadelica (1991), creating a revolutionary mix of indie, hard rock, house and rave, helped the record to win the inaugural Mercury music prize the following year, and remains Weatherall’s most memorable calling card to a mainstream audience.

Then he moved on to an assortment of collaborative projects such as Blood Sugar, Two Lone Swordsmen and the Asphodells. More recently he had released a sequence of solo albums including Convenanza, Consolamentum (both 2016) and Qualia (2017).

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by Adam Sweeting via Electronic music | The Guardian

Andrew Weatherall: 10 of his greatest tracks

From My Bloody Valentine to Saint Etienne and Ricardo Villalobos, Andrew Weatherall sprinkled magic throughout his career

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by Gabriel Szatan via Electronic music | The Guardian

Pi'erre Bourne review – rapper-producer with an eye on Kanye's crown

Yes, Manchester
Known for beats for 21 Savage, Young Thug and Chance the Rapper, the South Carolinian producer dances gracefully through genres in his live show

‘When I say, ‘Yo Pi’erre’, you say, ‘You wanna come out here?’” instructs Pi’erre Bourne to an obliging audience as he steps on stage. The line – a dialogue sample from The Jamie Foxx Show – has become the rapper and producer’s tagline since it featured on Playboi Carti’s Magnolia, a monster hit propelled by Bourne’s game-changing earworm of a beat.

The South Carolinian’s board skills have rocketed him upwards, and he is now one of the most sought-after producers in hip-hop, working with Lil Uzi Vert, 21 Savage, Young Thug, Chance the Rapper and even his hero Kanye West. It was West’s dual role as producer and rapper that Bourne once looked to shadow, saying: “I could really be the next Kanye type of star.” In 2019, he released his major label debut, The Life of Pi’erre 4, a T-Pain-esque overload of Auto-Tune crooning above deft production skills.

Touring until 19 February.

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by Daniel Dylan Wray via Electronic music | The Guardian

Monday, February 17, 2020

Andrew Weatherall: lone swordsman who cut new shapes for British music

From producing dub symphonies, or DJing ferocious techno, to never losing his insatiable musical curiosity, Weatherall was a truly inspirational figure

There was a point, quite early on in Andrew Weatherall’s career, when vast commercial success appeared to beckon him. Already an acclaimed DJ and remixer, his production work on Primal Scream’s 1991 album Screamadelica had helped turn a middling indie act whose career had given every appearance of being in its terminal phase, into an award-winning, multi-million selling band suddenly at the cutting edge, the epitome of the fruitful interface between rock music and the post-acid house dance scene.

Related: Andrew Weatherall, British producer behind Screamadelica, dies aged 56

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by Alexis Petridis via Electronic music | The Guardian

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Moses Boyd: Dark Matter review – party-facing solo debut

(Exodus)

Moses Boyd is a drummer in the same way Questlove from the Roots is a drummer, which is to say that the twice Mobo-winning 28-year-old Londoner is a producer-composer-collaborator-influencer not bound by the kit surrounding him. A progenitor of the current London jazz scene, Boyd’s official solo debut goes large on cross-pollination – and dancing.

Whereas Boyd’s previous Mobo-winning duo with the saxophonist Binker Golding and his Exodus ensemble remained more or less on-genre, Dark Matter exists very much in the wake of Boyd’s breakout track of 2016, Rye Lane Shuffle (which featured Four Tet and Floating Points on mixes). This is the London hybrid jazz of now – a party-facing electronic record that takes note of Afrobeats, two-step garage and Boyd’s travels in South Africa.

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by Kitty Empire via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, February 14, 2020

Katie Gately: Loom review – nightmarish orchestrated despair

(Houndstooth)
Earthquakes, shovels and screaming peacocks are all sampled in a bombastic and occasionally ingenious album

A nail-bomb of grief explodes in this second album by US musician Katie Gately, trauma seeming to rip open its edges. It was written while her mother was dying from a rare form of cancer; the title suggests this horror looming into her life, but also somewhere she can thread it together and tie it down.

Related: Katie Gately: ‘I’m a pretty diehard Billy Joel fan’

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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas via Electronic music | The Guardian

DJ Diaki: Balani Fou review | Ammar Kalia's global album of the month

(Nyege Nyege Tapes)
DJ Diaki’s debut is a speeding cascade of sound that skilfully re-creates the pounding atmosphere of Malian street party Balani Show

Recent years have seen some of the most exciting dancefloor-focused music moving further and further away from its spiritual homes of Detroit, Chicago, Berlin or London. Now, styles such as South African gqom or Angolan kuduro-techno are pushing their way into club sound systems with rattling tempos in excess of 200bpm and unpredictable polyrhythms replacing the familiar four-to-the-floor kick.

The work released by Ugandan label Nyege Nyege Tapes is among the most inventive of these styles. Encompassing sounds from the ground-shaking rhythms of Tanzanian singeli to the electro-synths of Ugandan acholi, the label has been challenging a recent trend towards often purposefully punishing “deconstructed” club music with their joyous reimaginings of east African music. Their latest release by Malian DJ Diaki is no less formidable. A stalwart of the Balani Show sound system – a party setup playing electronic, layered versions of the marimba-style instrument balafon – Diaki now releases his debut on Nyege Nyege.

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by Ammar Kalia via Electronic music | The Guardian

Pone: the paralysed producer making music with his eyes

Motor neurone disease has left the French hip-hop artist totally immobile – yet he still found the means to compose a remarkable album inspired by Kate Bush

Interviewing an artist who can’t speak is an unusual, almost meditative experience. I am in a small town outside Toulouse in south-western France to meet Pone, a beatmaker who helped shape the sound of French hip-hop in the 1990s. As part of Marseille’s seminal group Fonky Family, he produced hits such as Art De Rue, Sans Rémission and the hair-raising Mystère et Suspense, as well as 113’s hypnotic single Hold Up. But we are here to discuss Kate & Me, an instrumental beat album created as an ode to Kate Bush, and the first album in history to be entirely produced through an eye-tracking device.

The silence in Pone’s bedroom is punctuated by the amplified sound of a breathing machine, his torso slowly moving up and down under a blanket, and the playful mewing of his daughters downstairs. Every so often, his wife, Wahiba, stands up from the couch at the sound of her husband’s computerised voice. “Eyes, please,” is a request to soothe his eyes with sterilised pads.

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by Anaïs Brémond via Electronic music | The Guardian

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Inversia: the Arctic music festival lighting up perpetual night

In Russia’s frozen far north, Murmansk’s Inversia festival draws artists reflecting on the edges of the earth – including Brits, despite ever chillier diplomatic relations

In the Arctic Circle during the dim days of February, reality becomes a little attenuated. At 10am, it’s still dark, the streetlights colouring the pavements pale orange and making sallow shadows of the trees. When the forecast announces that today it’ll only be -11C, there’s a palpable sense of relief: someone gruffly makes a joke about global warming. By early afternoon, you’re into dusk, a meditative dwindling and diminishing that makes you wonder if it ever really got light. For what seems an eternity, the sky is rimmed with whitish-pink; the snow goes through every shade of blue, from azure and ultramarine through to deep indigo. The sense is that winter has frozen not only the ground, but time itself.

Given the sensory intensity, it’s little wonder that the wintry far north has proved so seductive to musicians and artists – or festival organisers. The Dark Music Days gathering in Iceland has been a mainstay of the experimental scene for 40 years, encouraging Europe’s most innovative composers and performers to flock to Reykjavik during late January. More recently, it’s been joined by Svalbard’s Polarjazz festival, Tromso’s Insomnia and at least two separate events, in Canada and Norway, named after the northern lights.

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by Andrew Dickson via Electronic music | The Guardian

Simon Says 10th Anniversary Event

On March 5th 2020 Wah Wah 45s return to The Jazz Cafe to remember Simon Goss and reflect on not only his life, but the 10th anniversary of his passing with one final, huge party at our spiritual home. 

The full line-up the return of some favourites, like the wonderful Nawi Collective and the inimitable Suitman Jungle; cult Simon Says regulars Rags Rudi; an all-star DJ line-up from Soulvent Records and Hospital Records boss man Tony Colman, AKA London Elektricity, as well as an exclusive spoken word set from Hospital starlet Inja.

The Wah Wah 45s Players will be back, featuring regular Rick Nunn from The Milk as well as the incredible Natalie Williams, making her Simon Says debut. Also playing the event for the first time will be one of our favourite vocalists, Rachel K Collier; German DJ legend Raimund Flöck and two of the UK’s finest spinners and two of our favourite people, the incredible Bobby Bignell AKA DJ BobaFatt and Worldwide FM’s Leanne Wright…

It’s an insane line up for our last event show at The Jazz Cafe, so grab those tickets!

Every penny goes to the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation as always…

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DJ Dom Servini at The Jazz Cafe 17/04/20

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DJ Dom Servini at The Jazz Cafe 10/04/20

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Saturday, February 8, 2020

One to watch: Pongo

The Lisbon-based musician’s bold take on Angolan kuduro and quickfire rap are infused with a true survivor’s energy

After a few years when pop was all about emotional bloodletting, now stars are refusing to be defined by trauma – see recent records by Kesha and Selena Gomez, which celebrated survival over suffering, and Frank Ocean’s promise that he’s trading vulnerability for fantasy.

Pongo, 27, mainlines a similar philosophy. As a child, she and her family fled Luanda for Lisbon to escape the Angolan civil war. In Portugal she experienced intense racism, and claimed that the police abused her when she made a domestic violence complaint. Despite these hardships, her music is defiantly joyful: “a place to be happy with my memories of Angola”, she has said.

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by Laura Snapes via Electronic music | The Guardian

Friday, February 7, 2020

HMLTD: West of Eden review – riotous rock and grand guignol glam

(Lucky Number)
The London band throw together glam, goth, electro, Kurt Weill … and have even added conventional pop to the mix

It seemed as though HMLTD’s moment had come and gone. A couple of years ago, their riotous gigs were the most fun you could have while paying too much for warm cans of lager, but a deal with Sony seemed a stretch for a band who, no matter how great they were live, didn’t seem to be rolling in radio-friendly hit singles. They were duly dropped and, as their contemporaries from the scene based around the Windmill in south London overtook them – Shame, Goat Girl, Black Midi – HMLTD seemed condemned to having been a brief but startling firework.

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by Michael Hann via Electronic music | The Guardian

Dom Servini – Unherd Radio Show #38 on Soho Radio

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Lotte Kærså & Græsrødderne – Du Kan Bruge Din Krop

Lagartijeando – La Frontera feat. Minük (DJ Raff Remix)Linkwood & Foat – Es Vedra

Hannibal Rex – This Place

Black Soyls – Gladdics

Little Dragon – Hold On

Sepalot Quartet – Tocole

Collocutor – Lost and Found

Mowgan – Badenya Te Sisi feat. Solo Sanou

Pat Thomas & Kwashibu Area Band – Yamona (Detroit Swindle Remix)

Horatio Luna – Yes Doctor

Luedji Luna – Banho de Folhas (Tahira Edit)

Dumama & Kechou – Mother Time

Hila – 22

Forest Law – New Thoughts New Eyes (Extended)

Shur-I-Kan – This Situation

LaRombé – You’re The Best (Curtom Disco Version)

Twylyte ’81 – Can I Change

Nick Walters – Dansoman Last Stop

Calibro 35 – Black Moon feat. MEI

Omar – Long Time Coming

Seu Jorge & Roge – Sarava

Gee-O – Caboclo

Raw Humps – Oddysey

Underground Canopy, Bluestaeb & S. Fidelity – Danse Dorée

Sure Thing – Special Love (Nuff Pedals Remix)

Debbie Jacobs – Don’t You Want My Love (Dimitri From Paris Classic Re-Edit)

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Beatrice Dillon: Workaround review – a global future-folk manifesto

(PAN)
These exuberant electronic experiments in mixing 150bpm dub-techno with live instrumentation fizz with the joy of artistic creation

At the end of last year, the Guardian declared Beatrice Dillon “the most thrilling new voice in British electronic music”, and her first full-fledged solo LP, Workaround, demonstrates why. Put together during stolen moments over three years, it feels as though it’s been in the works for even longer. She released a solo mini-album in 2014 and has busied herself with collaborations, DJ sets and art commissions since. Her musical knowledge came through countless hours absorbing music as a record shop assistant. Visual art, literary and other cross-media influences began to crystallise some time after her fine art studies, lending themselves to her installation work. Dillon’s defining feature, however, is the insatiable curiosity for sound that sees her follow sonic leads to their unpredictable ends and beyond. Playful percussion and electro-acoustic experiments are central to her records with Rupert Clervaux, with dubby, jazz-tinged house and techno coming into focus on her club-peripheral productions.

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by Tayyab Amin via Electronic music | The Guardian

La Roux: Supervision review – obliquely beautiful, contrarian electro visionary

(Supercolour Records)
Her second release as a solo artist sees 1980s pop muted though Elly Jackson’s idiosyncratic and unique sound palette

When La Roux came to prominence in the late-00s with two shrill synthpop smashes – Bulletproof and In for the Kill – the duo were frequently discussed in terms of their nostalgia value. With their tinny, falsetto-driven, slightly wobbly electro – not to mention vocalist Elly Jackson’s gravity-defying quiff – it did seem a bit like the band were indulging in some 1980s new wave cosplay. Yet, funnily enough, those two tracks now feel headily redolent of the era they were made in. Not just thanks to their ubiquitous popularity, but because they chimed with the direction pop was taking at that time, being of a piece both with Lady Gaga’s dead-eyed, big-chorused anthems and the honking electro practised by indie acts such as MGMT and Empire of the Sun.

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by Rachel Aroesti via Electronic music | The Guardian

Thursday, February 6, 2020

La Roux review – synth star throws a joyously sleazy blowout

Fabric, London
A tricky live setup can’t prevent Elly Jackson from laying on a display of mesmerising pop that leaves the crowd eating out of her hand

Whether it’s the spikier 80s synths of her 2009 breakthrough hits or the breezy disco stylings of her wonderful second album, 2014’s Trouble in Paradise, La Roux has the kind of back catalogue that can inject even the most lifeless dancefloor with a touch of euphoria. Hence why, in theory, Elly Jackson playing the legendary club Fabric seems like a foolproof match.

The place has been kitted out to fit her aesthetic – there are waves, palm trees and even a neon flamingo on stage. The colours change throughout in a way that’s fun and softly sleazy – Jackson announces that the stage is her “Sexoteque” after playing the tropical shuffle of a song by that name. But from opener Uptight Downtown, the venue feels surprisingly unwieldy for a live band set-up – downstairs, the sound desk mounted in the middle of the crowd means that many in the audience can’t really see, and for a club so famous for its sound system, the sound is overly bass-heavy, while Jackson’s words are unclear.

Related: La Roux: 'My label dropped me on New Year's Day. I was like, yippee!'

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by Tara Joshi via Electronic music | The Guardian

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

Austerity, gentrification and big tunes: why illegal raves are flourishing

Amid disillusionment with mainstream clubbing, illegal events are harking back to the original spirit of rave – but police maintain they are as dangerous and criminal as ever

It’s an hour after midnight on New Year’s Day 2020, and a stream of revellers is gathering in an alleyway next to KFC on London’s Old Kent Road. They pass between piles of car tyres and through a gap in a gate where a group, wrapped in hats and scarves, are taking £5 notes from each person who enters the yard of a recently abandoned Carpetright warehouse.

Inside, the lights are on and groups of partygoers are huddled in groups talking, waiting and smoking as a behemoth sound system and makeshift bar are constructed against one wall. Next door, in a larger abandoned warehouse that was formerly an Office Outlet, an even bigger sound system is being built.

I played an illegal rave in a forest last night in Blackburn those kids are brilliant,there love for the music is pure! #dropjaw ⚡️

People are risking arrest to create a space where people can come together, no matter who they are, in a country where social divides are increasing

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by Wil Crisp via Electronic music | The Guardian

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

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