Archive for August, 2008
Siopis – Penny From The Lane Review
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
You may know Siopis as Silversurfer of Kiki and Silversurfer fame. On Penny from the Lane he goes solo on his debut release for Get Physical. Getting some vocal backup from Mr Brean, Siopis creates an oddball blend of ghetto tech and electronic house. There are hints of Diplo and Switch in there with the usual haunting Kiki and Silversurfer feel. Title track Penny from the Lane has swagger and funk through its strange Baltimore breaks style rhythm yet Siopis keeps his familiar out there bleepiness. It’s an interesting combo and it seems to work. Second track Klein Mine is similar in style. A Ballsy break beat which seems to mutate over the track as haunting electronic synth stabs sift through from the background. The vocals are more restrained and could function as more of a dub version of the title track. Push Fog is just a broody bass heavy house track. It’s slow and quite sinister as the cauldron of bass is stirred. Creaking away, disco funk elements seep through in the percussion. A great moody track to go with a “different but in a good way” release.
Siopis – Penny from the Lane is out now on Beatport
http://www.physical-music.com/
Dousk – Kind of Human Review
Monday, August 25th, 2008 | Album Review | No Comments
Yannis Douskos aka Dousk is a producer from Greece who first found success on prog label Bedrock back in 2004. Since then his music has become much more diverse, taking input from his studies in Classical and Jazz music, his new album Kind of Human reflects this diversity by taking cues from Jazz, Blues and lounge. The sound is a lot more organic and natural with the varied range of instruments and samples that he uses. This album is kind of reminiscent of the Big Beat days of taking old samples and turning them into fun danceable tracks.
Tracks like Gigi are heavily influenced by jazz, using the light pitta patter of jazz percussion and the round sounds of the double bass. Loose has a bluesier take on things, using honky tonk and blues samples combined with jazz percussion all wrapped up in a steady house beat.
Another stand out track is Serenata Deluxe. It uses as simple piano ostinato to plod the track along with a spring in its step as clichéd 50s advert vocals swirl about with muted trumpets. It sounds retro but is quite infectious and is quite similar in style to Noze who also take a similar but quirkier approach to music.
What’s great about this album is the shear diversity of influences, moving from jazz and blues to 50s retro and lounge. On Flunked Dousk combines electro funk and Spanish guitars. The result is a body popping track with computer game elements that ooze funk. On the flip, The Place is a laidback harmonic string workout with a xylophone riff whilst Fat Princess has a similar theme using guitars. Both tracks are so relaxed that it feels as if you’re drifting off into the celestial ether.
Some of Dousk’s roots in the housier and techy tracks are included in between all the variety. Cuckoo Rocks, Ko Lee, Dreamhill and Pentatonic are more “middle of the road” tracks which are interesting in their own right, but compared to the previously mentioned tracks they don’t seem to have the same quirkiness or uniqueness.
This album has plenty of quality and the tracks which we pointed out are nothing short of brilliant. However seventeen tracks is quite sizeable for an album and it’s unfortunate that on Kind of Human the more normal house tracks seem to be filler when put next to the more individual songs. Maybe this should have been two albums where both sides of Dousk could shine?
Dousk Kind of Human is out now on MP3 and on CD from the 27th August
Sascha Funke – Mango Remixes (DJ Koze, Superpitcher & Tobias Thomas) Review
Tuesday, August 19th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
You may recall Sascha Funke dropped his Mango album a few months back. The title track was a light breathy melodic number which slowly phased through string and guitar harmonies. Now it’s the turn of the remixes. BPitch have brought in a few heavyweights. The first remix comes from DJ Koze. His Pink Moon mix starts with a similar pace retaining much of the original harmonies whilst a UR style spoken word vocal preaches over the top. After the epic intro based mainly on the original, Koze slowly slips the track into his own dream world. A restrained kick drum drops and slowly becomes more and more dominant as metallic percussion and claps scatter across. By this point the harmonies are slowly whittling away into the background becoming a distant blur of what they used to be. The swirl of sound is washed away leaving barely a hint of percussion to tick over. At which point the dream turns into an evil nightmare. A Growling bass roars along with a tougher kick drum and echoed claps. Even the once coherent vocals murmur into an unrecognisable mess. It’s become a dark and twisted shadow of its former self. Like a bad trip Koze has just plunged you into chaos. Brilliant interpretation.
The second remix comes from a Tobias Thomas and Superpitcher collaboration. They bolster the original track with a growling sub bassline and organ skits creating a beefier more club friendly version of the original track. The only bit I’m not sure about is brief mango lyrics sung by Superpitcher himself. But all in all this is a great release.
Sascha Funke – Mango Remixes is available from Beatport now
Eastern Electric’s Venue Announced
Tuesday, August 19th, 2008 | Event Preview | No Comments
Stuck for something to do this weekend? Well swap that Clapham park grass for a bit of urban concrete. This weekend sees the first Eastern Electrics festival to be held in the Ewer Street car park near Southwark tube station. Apparently they’ve got a DC-10-esque courtyard as well as two indoor areas. But probably the most important is that there are no neighbours! So hopefully the party can be cranked up right through till 6am.
The Mulletover folks host the outdoor area through the day with everyone’s favourite Romanian prodigy Raresh. Guillaume Coutu Doumont will be providing a bit of support with regulars Simon Morell and Geddes. Resident Advisor will be doing inside at night with the Berlinette Cassy and those dub heads Appleblim. Sounds fantastic.
Ewer Street Car Park
Great Suffolk Street
London SE1 0NR
Line-up /
Outdoor stage hosted by mulletover (2pm – 10pm):
14.00pm Simon Morell (DDD)
16.00pm Guillaume & The Coutu Dumonts (Musique Risque / Circus Company)
18.00pm Raresh (a:rpia:r)
20.00pm Geddes (murmur)
Indoor Marquee hosted by Resident Advisor:
22.00pm Will Saul (Simple Records)
23.30pm Gerd Janson (Running Back)
01.00am Cassy (Perlon / Beatstreet)
03.00am Appleblim (Skull Disco / Apple Pips)
Indoor Marquee hosted by Disco Bloodbath:
21.00pm Dan Beaumont (Disco Bloodbath)
23.00pm Damon Martin (Disco Bloodbath)
01.00am Maurice Fulton (DFA)
02.30am I-F (Viewlexx)
04.00am Ben Pistor (Disco Bloodbath)
Both days open from 2pm-6am
Tickets £15 advance from:
www.ticketweb.co.uk www.residentadvisor.net/ee
www.mulletover.co.uk
www.residentadvisor.net
www.myspace.com/discobloodbathdisco
What’s the ‘matter’ with this new venue at the O2?
Tuesday, August 19th, 2008 | Event Preview, News | 1 Comment
Nothing at all that’s what. Those folks at Fabric are close to unveiling their new project ‘matter’, a purpose built venue/club where their aim was to create “the most vivid and palpable audio, visual kinaesthetic experience imaginable”. Sounds complicated!
Set across three floors covering 32,737 sq ft, matter has a humongous capacity of 2,600. They’ve installed a body kinetic dancefloor which apparently pumps the music to your feet through an array of audio to kinetic transducers embedded into the dancefloor. Apparently it’s an evolution of Fabric’s body sonic dancefloor. I always thought it was just a really weak floor with a massive system. Shows what I know.
As well as making you feel the music matter will let you see the music through a 360 degree projection system mapped to the interior architecture, allowing all surfaces to be projected on. No doubt the audio quality will be of the highest caliber if Fabric is anything to go by. With audio, visual and feel covered off they just need to come up with something to make you smell the music rather than all those smoking ban farts.
In terms of lineups you can expect matter to deliver the best in live and club music. Their live launch party features James Lavelle’s legendary UNKLE whilst the club launch plays host to big boy Carl Cox who rarely plays London these days. Over the opening months the likes of Mylo, Renaissance with Sasha, Bedrock with John Digweed, Simian Mobile Disco and Justice will all be passing through the doors.
So matter looks set to keep us highly entertain through those winter months. Who said winter blues, not matter.
September
19th – Live Launch Night – UNKLE Live, Late Of The Pier Live , Iglu & Hartley Live, Huw Stephens (Radio 1) (£20)
20th – Club Launch Night – Carl Cox, Kissy Sell Out, Yousef & More TBA (£18)
26th – Mylo, Reverend and The Makers Live, Casino Royale Live, Riotous Rockers more TBA (£15)
27th – Renaissance – Sasha, Marcus James. Room 2: CR2 Live & Direct – Mark Brown, Micky Slim, Steve Mac, Arno Cost (£16)
October
2nd – Mousetrap Party: Deadmau5 Live, Chris Lake (£12.50)
3rd – This is Not London – Simian Mobile Disco (£15 Early Bird, £20 Door)
10th – BedRock 10th Anniversary – John Digweed (All night) (Limited £10 tickets)
17th – This Is Not London – Southern Fried Records, Armand Van Helden
(£15 Early Bird, £20 Door)
18th – This Is Not London – Moshi Moshi Records Label Party
(£15 Early Bird, £20 Door)
24th – This Is Not London – James Murphy (£15 Early Bird, £20 Door)
31st – This Is Not London – details TBA (£15 Early Bird, £20 Door)
Birthday Gigs With Seb Fontaine @ Ihale, Inigos Clapham
Tuesday, August 12th, 2008 | Event Preview | No Comments
I’m turning old this weekend and to celebrate i’m playing for our friends Inhale! Seb Fontaine comes back from the dead to headline the night. We had wondered what had happened to Seb. But we do know that the ex Radio 1 and Cream resident knows a thing or two, so he is sure to knock those cotton white socks off your feet. Come down to Inigos this Friday, help me celebrate my birthday and hear a few tunes from me… Its free before 9ish and cheap after. GET INVOLVED!
EarPipe’s Large Weekend For No Real Reason!
Wednesday, August 6th, 2008 | Event Preview | No Comments
Tally Ho! There is a rather large weekend on the horizon and it’s not even a bank holiday or anything special like that. Why would the gods bless us with such entertainment? I don’t have the answer to that. All I do know is that some serious fun can be had and I mean that with a capital S. First up, if you like your hip hop with a bit of humour then Fabric is right up your street. They have Yoda and DJ Format, truly the greatest DJs of the happy fun hip hop genre. If that doesn’t wet your whistle they stuck the Scratch Perverts in there for shits n giggles. But wait, we’re not done yet. We haven’t even talked about room 2 yet. Goldie, Dillinja, High Contrast, Commix and Nu:Tone. That’s pretty much everything that’s good about drum n bass in one place. If Fabric were to collapse that night the genre would be in dire straits. Tickets are still available, get em whilst their hot, else you’ll be stuck in a queue until next week: Buy Tickets Here
So that will kick your weekend off, but the main event for us is of course Field Day. We’ve been banging on about it a little. Take note of our useful guide of things we would like to see or our little chat with organiser Tom Baker. Taking place this Saturday at London’s Victoria Park, it’s sure to be a giggle with bands and DJs from that field they call left as well as a country style village fete. Surely a winner and at sub £30 you don’t even need to question the purchase. Hurry now if you have got one, I’ll even point you in the right direction: Buy Tickets Here
Of course day time fun is one thing night time is the other. And this Saturday its about Fabric….again… .You maybe sick of those three rooms from Friday, but this lineup is just too good to pass up. First of all room one is being headlined by the prince of dark regretimized music. Our man from Brighton who rocks Berlin it is of course Radioslave. He’s being supported by Sebo K, Mobilee man of mystery. His deluxe deep and dark house sounds will be perfect for that main room. Down the corridor they’ve gone and shoved in the Scottish Sunday party fiends Optimo! They also have stalwart Andrew Weatherhall chipping in too. Then in room three Greg Wilson is serving up a hot dish of electro funk. Richards and Francis will be there to make sure the place don’t burn down too. Probably one of the best Fabric lineups I’ve seen for a long time. Definitely get involved: Buy Tickets Here
If you haven’t moved into the foetal position come Sunday morning. Then those that like their Sunday afternoon’s debauched can head to Secretsundaze where they have once again taken over the Ministry courtyard. The parties have been fun all summer and this one will be no exception. They have got Pokerflat maestro Steve Bug!! I don’t even need to say anymore. Tickets are still available: Buy Tickets Here
So there you have it. Four great parties. Please do indulge.
EarPipe’s Field Day Recommendations
Wednesday, August 6th, 2008 | Event Preview | 2 Comments
The weekend is nearly here! And that means that our Saturday day time is going to be filled with the joys of Field Day. We’ll be splating rats and sack racing at the village fete and will no doubt be getting slightly inebriated in a field, well Victoria Park to be precise. But amongst all that there is actually some acts and djs to catch. So here’s who EarPipe will be checking out this Saturday.
James Holden
The Border Community head honcho and quirker electronic music extraordinaire is set to play the Bugged Out stage. James isn’t your straight forward techno and electronic dance music DJ. His extensive repertoire of music crosses all boundaries and genres so you’re never really too sure where he’s going to take you. If you’ve heard his At The Controls compilation or album The Idiots Are Winning then you will know what I’m on about. Do not miss this man!
Richie Hawtin
As ever Richie is still a firm favourite of ours at EarPipe. His Contakt set at Sonar was pretty good fun, but this Saturday it will be unadulterated, pure Hawtin. No cube gimmicks, no collaborative dj set antics. Just straight up Hawtin and techno. Well there is the addition of Ali Demirel and his meta-control visual display. Not sure what that means, but if it was the stuff that was on the screens at Sonar then I’m all for that.
The Field
Again another favourite from Sonar, we’ll be happy to catch this man again on the main stage. His warped electronic soundscapes will be a great accompaniment to the sunshine we’re keeping fingers crossed for.
Benga
Fancy taking it a bit urban? Benga is sure to entertain. This man can do no wrong on the dubstep scene at the moment. Everything he releases is touching to gold and his DJ skills are supposed to be a bit alright like. You may know him for that track Night, you know the one that goes bo bo bo bo boooooooooooooo.
Foals
This five piece indie dance amalgamation from Oxford is set to play the main stage. They were there last year as support but this year they come back to headline. Their high paced tracks with hints of punk and urm maybe a bit of funk will no doubt get the Shoreditch fashionistas revelling around.
Modeselektor
The duo from Berlin will be found on the Bugged Out stage. If you heard their Boogybytes CD from last year you will know these guys will cause a stir. House, techno, electronic dance music, the lot. They even have Thom Yorke as a fan.
Simian Mobile Disco
We all know who these boys are. They want to be our friends with those French Justice lot. They did and now we love them all. Their live show is something to be seen with the old skool synths and their taste for electronic music is impeccable. And if their forthcoming Fabric CD is anything to go by then be sure to strap on your air punching arm.
Mystery Jets
The Mystery Jets have a nostalgic kind of eighties feel about them. Their sound is slightly retro with the synths and drums. They combine it with that UK indie sound and the results are colourful. Erol Alkan has produced these guys and with once a father son lineup they’re sure to be interesting.
Crookers
Riding on the crest of fidget house, this Italian duo have been invading speakers with their blend of ghetto tech sounds with hip hop vocals on switch style fidgety beats. Plain fun bounce around beats to where those bright coloured plastic sunglasses with the struts across where the lens should be.
DJ T – Outbreak Review
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
DJ T, the Monza and Get Physical don is back with Outbreak, his first release in over a year since The Dawn. On Outbreak he serves up a 32oz cut of heavy tribal beats cooked raw. It’s a gutsy track which focuses on percussion, not getting too distracted by those things called melodies. It is quite simply seven minutes of heavy beats and intricate bongo percussion stopping for breath only occasionally. On the flip the True School mix takes a more drawn out Detroit approach. This mix takes its time in introducing the various elements of the track, starting with a Carl Craig Sandstorm-esque synth which then evolves and grows to include the other elements. It all accumulates at the end in a swirl of electronic sound. Both are excellent tracks, but the original mix makes you want to don some war paint and spears which always gets our vote.
DJ T – Outbreak is out now on Beatport
Mike Shannon – Memory Seed EP Review
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
Mike Shannon marks his decade of active service with the release of Memory Seed on Richie Hawtin’s Plus 8 label. The full LP is forthcoming, but this little EP gives you a little taster of what’s to come. The EP starts with Mercury Mile a twisted electronic workout. Its long beatless intro slowly builds amidst a wash of static noise, warbling bass and twisted synths before slipping into a shuffling beat of tinkering percussion. In contrast the X Flex mix of Dr. Flex skips along with an elastic beat and bass, keeping few elements involved. This makes the track simple yet quite effective. Each element makes an impact on their individual introductions which creates a hypnotic robotic vibe.
The final track on this release is The Love Fry which comes in two flavours. Both versions work around an electric organ riff which phases in and out in a Doppler effect manner, increasing in intensity before the pressure value equalises the track back to the skipping beat. The original flourishes into some summer vibe synth riff whilst the Raw mix does without keeping to the original organ elements.
A varied and interesting release from Mike Shannon showing the various shades from his forthcoming LP. Love Fry is definitely our pick on this one. Its twisted and warped organ synth is sure to play havoc with the altered minds on a dancefloor.
Mike Shannon – Memory Seed is out now on Beatport
Jennifer Cardini & Shonky – Tuesday Paranoia EP Review
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
After their seminal Mlle Caro remix of Far Away, the French duo return with their own EP Tuesday Paranoia on Crosstown Rebels. The title track is a dark and twisted mental workout. The old skool drum programming brings in classic elements of acid house whilst the bassline rumbles away in the sub bass. The track switches between the eerie sirens and the bright string washes hanging you in a state of confusion as you decide whether the tracks is dark and brooding or bright and colourful. Come Down to Earth the second track on this release is sure to be a winner with most people. Reminiscent of their Far Away remix, Come Down to Earth is a slow ominous track. Life support machine blips echo through the track as the sawtooth bassline vibrates the low end. The track takes its time in developing adding in new elements ever so slowly. Sure to be a hit for the summer.
Jamie Jones remixes the title track and comes out with an evil tech house monster ready to eat your mind. He cuts and stutters the vocal and uses the sirens sparingly for a proper dancefloor shaker. One of his best yet. Great dark tracks to lose your mind to.
Jennifer Cardini & Shonky Tuesday Paranoia is out now on Beatport
Bearwesel – Orpington EP Review
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
Murmur continues their impressive form of quality with their third release from Bearweasel. The duo made up of Dean Mushin of Urban Gorilla fame and Louisa Page has a particular penchant for dub house. This shows in their first release for the label. Wander Down is a stripped back deep dubby house track. Synth stabs ride throughout the track as a low pulsating bass bubbles up at the end of each bar. The remix comes from DubShape who adds a little spice with new riffs and additional layers of percussion to give the track more progression and dynamic. The final track Pillowhead is another simple dub house groover. It’s steady in its pace and groove with subtle changes to keep things interesting. Solid dub house but it maybe lack in progression for many people out there.
Bearwesel Orpington EP is out now on Beatport
GummiHz – Under the Sun EP Review
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
GummiHz comes back with his 5th Mobilee release “Under the Sun”. The title track has a fun rolling beat and rattling percussion before the staccato trumpets echo in to add a splash of sunshine. A round bass compliments the key changes of the trumpets to deliver a full sounding house track for the summer. It is effective but it could do with more of a hook to make it more memorable. On the flip is You and Me which features vocals from Ruxsandra and sounds a little like Size 9’s Are You Ready or Lil Louis’ French Kiss in the way the organ riff continually builds in the background. Ruxsandra’s vocals gently echo and pan around the foreground as a rattling percussion ticks along. It develops slowly to the peak before gently rolling off. A subtle and slow burner for all those warm up moments.
GummiHz – Under The Sun is out now on Beatport
Tracks we missed back in June – Monika Kruse, Chic Miniature, Brendon Moeller and Jennifer Cardini & Shonky
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Single Review | No Comments
EarPipe was a little bit busy through June and July with all the festivals and nights going on which meant we missed out on telling you about these tracks. But with out further ado if you haven’t already purchased them, here they are:
Brendon Moeller – Electricity

Release number seven on new label Leena comes from Brendon Moeller, a bit of a stalwart on the scene with releases on Third Ear and Echocord over his ten year career. His Leena release Electricity covers the spacier house sounds currently out there. Title track Electricity is a smooth and relaxed house beat awash with harmonies and synth stabs. It slowly sweeps over various synth swirls to create a deep and dreamy house mover. B-Side Sweet Decade is a little more abstract. The bulk of the track resides mainly in the bass regions as it rumbles and bubbles with the occasional synth stab that breaks through into the higher frequencies. Its an interesting concept, but I’m not sure if it would work well on the dancefloor. Maybe as a warm up track.
The final track on this release is Tiger. Another spaced out house number with bright synth washes and a shuffling Chicago-esque percussion. The dubby synth in the foreground reverberates and adds intensity as the splashes of synths in the background tickle your senses. Warm deep tracks for the warm up/wind down slot but lacks something to really grab me.
Brendon Moeller Electricity is out now on Beatport
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Monika Kruse – Changes in Perception Part 2
Monika Kruse seems to be pressing the right buttons at the moment as her popularity begins to grow outside of her native Germany. This release on Terminal M is the second part of her Changes in Perception series. The first track Spank Me Later is a raw track. It has a rumbling saw bassline which changes from short stabs in the intro to elongated gut rumbling notes after the break. Typical percussion and noises syncopate through echo effects to create a hypnotic but raw sound. The second track Morgana loops a chant sample over a warmer house sound to create a latino feel similar to your Luciano’s and Villalobos’. The round and bassy winding synth riffs make the track easy to follow and will definitely entertain the masses.
Monika Kruse Changes is out now on Beatport
.
Chic Miniature EP
Crosstown Rebels re-emerge from the winter with this delightful Chic Miniature EP. Escandalo is a hypnotic house track with glistening harpsichord riffs in a similar style to Luciano’s infamous “Father”. Chancita on the other hand is its beefier brother. The rolling bassline and vocal stabs rustle about in a peak time pot whilst intricate percussion twitches and scats around. On Kimono, Chic Miniature lay down another couple of a piano riffs with a menacing bass and beat, everything is left to revolve around the piano occupying the high end whilst the beats and bass jostle in the bass regions. Great release.
The Chic Miniature EP is out now on Beatport
Lulu Rouge – Bless You Review
Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | Album Review | No Comments

To be honest, not much comes out of Denmark. There’s the bacon and erm, Lego. So when something good does come along you have to grab it by the bull horns. With Lulu Rouge’s new album Bless You, Trentemoller recommends that you do. He’s hailing Lulu Rouge as the next big thing to come out of the Danish underground since sliced bacon. The duo is made up of T.O.M and Buda, two DJs who came together to put on Sunday afternoon chillout parties by the Copenhagen canels with Trentmoller. You may recognise T.O.M’s name as he was part of Trentemoller’s live/DJ show which toured the world. I never caught it myself but from what I heard T.O.M would spin the tracks and Trentemoller would do stuff on his keyboard.
Fast forward 3 years and T.O.M and Buda have got together to create their debut offering “Bless You” with a little help from Trentemoller. Their collective influences have created a dark melancholy mix of down tempo and 4/4 beats settling within the chill out and trippy house music worlds. The album could be described as Massive Attack to a 4/4 beat.
The introduction track sets the tone for the whole album and is aptly named Melankoli. Its slow, moody and sensual. Alice Carreri’s vocals have a sexy blues breathiness kind of like Peggy Lee’s Fever which compliments the melancholic violin sighs, subtle dub bassline and piano twinkles.
Lulu’s Theme keeps the same dark theme, but bolsters the pace with a more solid kick drum rhythm. Various piano and synth elements reverberate around an industrial soundscape. You can definitely feel Trentemollers influence on this track as it pulsates and breathes like a sleeping monster. The other Trentmoller collaboration on this album is Ninna Nanna. Again the vocals come from the seductive Alice Carreri who applies a nursery rhyme ostinato vocal. Think Suzane Vega’s Tom’s Diner. Its simple chant ripples over the moody strings and a familiar Trentemoller restrained pulsating bass.
Runaway Boy fuses dub and EDM elements on a sinister brooding track. The heavy mechanical nature of the track plays well with a whimsical clarinet riff which to me seems to add a slice of gay pari. Finally, End of The Century is Lulu Rouge’s attempt at Massive Attack. It has all the right elements of being a Massive Attack track. The dark trip hop beats, the atmospheric reverberating sounds, drips of guitars and strings as well as Mikael Simpson’s vocals mirroring that of 3D’s. If you didn’t know you could easily think it was the Bristol band.
This album is dark, moody and melancholic. There are some fantastic soundscapes created by the duo, with some great stand out tracks which could really add another dimension if used in a DJ set. Sterling effort from the new Danish duo.
Bless You is out now on CD.
www.musicfordreams.dk / www.myspace.com/lulurougesoundsystem
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