Bedrock

Jesus Died So We Could Rave for Two Extra Days – Easter Weekend Update!

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010 | Event Preview | No Comments

A weekend bookended by bank holidays, don’t you just love Easter. Jesus died so we could rave for four days with out feeling guilty about work. I’m pretty sure that’s what it said in the bible. Plenty of stuff on so I won’t ramble on in this blasphemous theme.

Thursday

Secretsundaze @ Stamford Works (Buy Tickets)

Ooo its nearly time for Secretsundaze to emerge from its winter cocoon and head back out into the great outdoors. I cannie wait. But just to wet your whistle they’re throwing a Bank Holiday warehouse party this Thursday. I remember reading somewhere that its at the great little warehouse called the Stamford Works in Dalston where the recent DDD birthday took place. Its round the back of the Jazz Bar and Kingsland Road station. However I can’t find where I read that, so the official word is its in Dalston and yet to be announced. For the line-up they’ve got a veteran of the New York scene Morgan Geist of Metro Area fame, whilst in support they have new comer Nina Kraviz who’s found breaking fame on Radioslave’s Rekids. › Continue reading

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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

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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.

www.matterlondon.com

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)

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