eaves

“One question I’ve been asking myself lately is what happens if our architecture pushes to be fictional, forcing our lives into fantasy.”

With his first two releases out in the past year, New York’s Eaves is a relatively new name in the constantly expanding (and blurring) world of club music, but his perspective on the form feels far more articulated than artists and critics both far older and more experienced. Last March’s Hue EP on Seattle’s Hush Hush Records functioned as a startling introduction to Eaves, a chest rattling four-tracker touching on architectural tropes and blending ambient noise (bird sounds, static, eery pads) with a myriad of different percussion arrangements. December’s Gorilla, a uniquely arranged four movement piece for Purple Tape Pedigree, both expand and expound upon his work on Hue, maintaining the spatial awareness and dystopian sonics, but involving a much wider emotional range, full of the sort of anxiety and excitement both inherent in our persons and our environments.

We spoke with Eaves via email about Gorilla, fictional architectures, and having an appreciation for EDM as a musical idea. His Astral Plane mix features a series of vaulting rises and dips in energy, cutting across over 50 tracks from a who’s who of boundary pushing producers and peppered with bizarre vocals from an EDM pack and Call of Duty respectively. Referring to his short attention span, Eaves rejects that he does not see his own art/music/culture consumption as being “a calculated, contemplative experience,” instead seeing the process in terms of “osmosis” or “indigestion” and his Astral Plane mix, along with Gorilla‘s skirting, almost spastic form, certainly reflects (enforces?) that point of view, an almost uncontrollable tumble through the canon with plenty of outside noise and peripheral interference. Check out our full talk with Eaves after the jump as well as a full image-oriented track list and indulge in his Astral Plane mix below.

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It’s release week! Since announcing SHALT’s Acheron EP last month, we’ve been aching to get the full project out to you and it’s finally out on digital platforms this Friday (1/29)! Last Thursday, FACT Magazine premiered the second single from the project, “Unconfined”, and spoke with SHALT about artificial life extension, Tim Hecker, and the club-via-noise context of his music. Check out the interview here, “Unconfined” below and keep an eye out on our Bandcamp for the full release on Friday.

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DJ Hulo isn’t exactly a huge name on the global club music circuit, partially because he’s located in Taipei, but mostly because his blends and mixes function almost entirely in their own lane, combining dancehall and grime with epic soundtrack work the likes of Hans Zimmer and Ryuichi Sakamoto, a quite literally cinematic approach to club dramatics. Edits of Wiley, Shabba Ranks and Gage/Sudanim have become set opening staples for us since first coming across Jamdown 2 last year and the mix series quickly became one of our favorites, full of the sweeping emotional range of Oscar-type movies, ebullient nature of Jamaican music and the syncopated thrust of contemporary UK dance forms. We’re proud to host Jamdown 3 as DJ Hulo’s contribution to the Astral Plane mix series and we spoke to the artist to get an idea of what he’s currently working on, the background for the series and an idea of his favorite composers. He says it far better than we ever could so press play on Jamdown 3 and scroll down to get some insight into one of the most unique DJ-composers anywhere.

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The 10th release on Parisian label [Re]Sources, Chaams’ Untro EP is the French producers first official release to date and a fitting introduction to  boot, spanning three beautiful club works aided by remixes from New York’s Celestial Trax and Atlanta’s Distal. Combining forceful drum beats and searching, minor key synth arrangements, Untro‘s three tracks show off a producer with an ear for outsized club play, bringing a slightly restrained approach to the brass and bass structures of producers like Dullah Beatz, JT The Goon and Preditah. Untro is out January 29 and can be pre-ordered here.

korma

The first release on Korma‘s freshly ordained Heat Records, the Thast Xssory Remixes features a host of versions of buzzing Florida rapper Thast, from Xssory, Ultramiedo, Wristboi and Korma himself. The subject of many an unofficial remix, Thast’s sparse production and fierce, chant-heavy flow is well-primed for reworks and the collection of producers offer a wide range of takes, from Ultramiedo’s metallic, electro reworking to Wristboi’s spastic, start-stop edition. We’ve got Korma’s edition of “Fuck U” on premiere today, an upbeat, 808-heavy production that puts Thast’s exuberant anti-hater chorus at the fore. HEAT001 is out January 19. Previews after the jump.


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tsvi

Almost two years ago, a questionably tagged collection of edits arrived in our inbox from a young Italian producer and ever since, we’ve been infatuated with the one who goes by Tsvi. Those edits, of L-Vis 1990 & Sinjin Hawke, Jam City and Chesslo Junior respectively, still sound fresh today and while Tsvi is two widely acclaimed EPs into his career, runs a rapidly rising label and calls Scratcha DVA “a big brother,” it’s still quite fun to look back at the hardly distant early days. 2014’s Malfunction EP on B.YRSLF was his first official project, a sprawling nine track effort that melds angular synth pop melodics with pulsing rhythms and the sort of start-stop, spacial awareness that sets apart good producers from great ones. Malfunction featured a remix of its title track from Wallwork & RZR, the former of whom would join up with Tsvi last year to create Nervous Horizon, a label that, while still in its infancy, can safely be claimed among the most sonically adventurous club music outlets anywhere.

We’ve wanted to have Tsvi on for an Astral Plane mix for a good while, but it just didn’t come together for some reason until now. It was only right then that the Tuscan artist would give us something completely different, journeying down a musical past that starts with Kiirtan music and System Of A Down, moves on through Thomas Bangalter, and ends with the mechanical bombastics of Malfunction and 2015’s Set You Free EP, the second solo release on Nervous Horizon. Buddhism around the home and a father who owned a club in the 1980s led Tsvi down that path and when he moved to London five years ago to search for work, it was only a matter of time before he found and/created an optimal musical channel.

To get a taste of what a Tsvi club set sounds like, give a listen to him and Wallwork’s Boiler Room session or their guest mix on Plastician’s Rinse show, the former proving a huge breakout moment for the both artist and label and the latter functioning as something of a mission statement for both as well. The following mix is quite different than both, charting Tsvi’s musical history and while it covers a ton of ground and is, by-and-large, situated away from the club, the picture it paints makes perfect sense when you listen back through his catalogue. No track list available at this point, but check out the mix and a quick Q&A below.

Hi Guglielmo, hope you’re good? Where are you answering these questions from right now?

Hey Gabe, i’m good. I’m currently at the studio chilling with Wallwork.

What sort of music did you listen to as a kid and what was the first record you bought?

Growing up with buddhist parents I was naturally exposed to a lot of music from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Since they were (and still are) meditating a lot there was constantly Kiirtan music (singing of a mantra) playing loud in our house. Also, my father had a huge vinyl collection as he used to own a club which was open during the late 80’s. He was obsessed with bands such as Spandau Ballet, My Mine and Depeche Mode. However, the first CD I bought was System Of A Down – Toxicity lol

Where are you from in Italy and what was the impetus to move to London?

I’m from a village (1000 citizen) near Pisa, Tuscany, which is right in the middle of Italy. One of the main reasons why I moved to London 5 years ago is because there is not a lot of job opportunities and I wanted to try my luck in London.

How did you connect with artists like Scratcha DVA, Mickey Pearce, etc. in London?

I started sending music to Scratcha almost a year and half ago, but I didn’t know him personally. After few emails, he asked me and Wallwork to play at Rinse FM on his show. From there we started hanging out together and he introduced us to the Hyperdub family and other He’s. He’s like a big brother for us.

Tell me a little bit about the formation of Nervous Horizon. What was the impetus to start a record label and what are your goals going forward?

The main reason why we started a record label is because we wanted to create a sort of collective of likeminded producers. Curating every single aspect of the music we release makes everyone involved more with each other, like a family (Italian style eheh).

I would like Nervous Horizon to become kind of similar to XL Recordings, in a way they started with very underground music, and then they slowly became one of the biggest and important record labels in the pop world. This is just my dream anyway.

As much as your music is distinctly contemporary in that its soundsystem music made specifically for club play, you also look to other eras quite a bit on tracks like “Cop LAPD”, “Nobody” and your edit of Alan Braxe? Who are your dance music heroes and what’s your secret weapon from a past era?

Yeah i’m obsessed with lots of 80’s and 90’s records. And yes you can tell from these productions you mentioned. I have so many heroes i could go on forever, but if I have to be specific I would say Thomas Bangalter, he’s the best!

The mix you compiled for us clearly isn’t a straightforward club mix. Can you explain the path you chart from start to finish and what these songs means to you?

I would say, this mix is a musical collage of my different influences from different genres. It’s full of stuff that I use to sample and new stuff that is influencing me at the moment. The mix starts with a light tone and happy vibes but slowly unfolds into dark atmosphere. I hope you will enjoy!

morten hd

One of the most active artists in the Classical Trax online community, Norway-based Morten HD has shown off a remarkable work ethic over the past several years, turning out quality originals, edits and mixes at every turn and refusing to measure down his polyglotic approach to a multitude of club-oriented forms. The Xenoglossia LP is out Friday on Druid Cloak’s Apothecary Compositions and is Morten’s host complete project to date, 16 tracks of roughhewn grime with sojourns into noise, jungle and techno. It’s the sort of record that clearly exists in the context of the internet, but is also perfectly ready for club play at a moments notice. “Pink Light Incident” is a Xenoglossia standout and features one of the more jarring arrangements on the record as hurtling noise, church bells and what sounds like a deranged fax machine conglomerate around stop-start drum programming. Xenoglossia is out Friday and pre-orders for the cassette and digital versions are available here.

le motel press

Having already debuted on PBDY’s TAR outpost with the 45°34°50° EP in 2014, Brussels’ Le Motel is back on the Los Angeles label with Ripples, a three track effort that shows off the producer’s beatific, textural approach to footwork rhythms. Having released dozens of one offs, remixes and collaborations over the past few years, touching on a number of styles throughout the footwork canon, Ripples functions as a calm distillation of his aesthetic, touching on classic Chicago tropes while working in the field recordings and swarming noise that make his work so unique. “Blood” is the most unique track on the record, a moody record perfect for winter and with just enough ambiguous menace to unsettle the mind and body. Check out more of Le Motel’s work here and be sure to grab Ripples this Friday (January 8).

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We’ve been listening to Resident Advisor’s Exchange podcast for years and the team’s year end efforts have always been on point, leading to new discoveries, especially in the mix department. It was quite a surprise then to find out that Ryan Keeling, the editor of RA, named Soda Plains’ Astral Plane mix as one his favorites of the year and went on to say the following.

I’ve gone for Soda Plains, the mix he’s done for The Astral Plane. I think I should be honest and say that my pick is more of a big up for The Astral Plane series than it is for this particular mix. I think the series as a whole does a fantastic job of, quite simply, presenting fresh club sounds. But I think why I appreciate them is because with the raft or endless stream of Soundcloud producers and people working in this style they are definitely a very handy filtration tool for the this scene.

Of course, he followed that up with a load of praise for our good friend Soda Plains and all he’s done, but it was a really special moment to essentially come upon one of the nicest bits of praise and affirmation we’ve received for the series to date. Check out the full podcast, which features a host of other great selections in the live performer, DJ, album, etc. departments, and check out Soda Plains’ Astral Plane mix after the jump.

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hhope

Having a regular outlet for our mix work has been a real pleasure this year and we have to give a big shout to great team at Radar Radio for hosting our monthly show. Radar has managed to curate a thoroughly diverse schedule of shows featuring names big and small in a remarkably short period and we couldn’t be happier to be part of the team. Our last show of 2015, from December 28, featured Seattle hardcore techno purveyor HHOPE on the guest mix and a selection of some of our favorite ambient/drone/other non-club oriented musics. You can hear a few tracks from SHALT’s upcoming Acheron EP, out January 29 on Astral Plane Recordings, and some special bootlegs of tracks from October’s Psychotropia compilation. Hit the jump for the full track list, featuring tracks from Sim Hutchins, Exit Sense, Pan Daijing, Chino Amobi and more, stream below and download here.

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