dro carey

As you’ve probably noticed, we’re big fans of Mr. Eugene Hector in these parts and especially of his work as Tuff Sherm. Probably better known as Dro Carey, Hector laces techno and house tunes as Sherm and we were actually lucky enough to get him to contribute a guest addition to our ongoing mix series. Last month, Hector performed at a special Australia addition of Boiler Room and played out 50 minutes of juicy dance tunes. Like most of Hector’s mixes, the song selection is eclectic to say the least and has left me scrambling for a track listing since the mix’s its air date. Despite the mix being labeled as a Tuff Sherm offering, Hector also includes a few grime, dubstep and other amorphous, low end focused tracks. Stream below.

action bronsonIt’s easy to criticize Action Bronson as being solely a formalist New York style MC, but is that really such a bad characterization? With nextbigthing Harry Fraud offering up a classic-sounding, speaker rattling beat, Bronson dedicates “Strictly 4 My Jeeps” to the old heads and waxes poetic about eating steak off of gold plates while being stoned and listening to Coldplay. I’m not so sure how I feel about that Coldplay bit, but I’m all about that gold plate steak life. “Strictly 4 My Jeeps” might just be a sign of an upcoming Bronson/Fraud full length, which would be extravagant to say the least. Stream below.

morri$

If you’re on the internets like we are, you’ve been following Kansas-based Goombawaver MORRI$ for quite some time. At this point, the man born Phil Canty is basically on the precipice of stardom and recently featured on Night Slugs’ latest all stars compilation. With “Ladyboy”, the first release on Bear Club Music Group (BCMG wut), MORRI$ mixes the world of frantic Southern drug programming and what basically amounts to lounge music. The results are angelic to say the least and mutate nicely from laidback drug music to a projectile more worthy of club play. “Ladyboy” is out on February 5, but until then, you can stream below.

stavrogin

In which Astral Plane fave Stavrogin continues to mesh abstractly abrasive sounds with understated synth work. It’s difficult to place “Idle Moments” within a specific context, but it has a way of creeping its way into your ear canal and staying there. It’s not a catchy song in the traditional melodic/harmonic sense, but its fizzling percussion and distorted organ sounding synths work in perfect tandem. As much as we like these Stavrogin one offs, something more substantial would be the perfect way to bring us out of the winter doldrums. Stream below.

mike gao beta world peace

I was first introduced to Los Angeles/San Diego producer Mike Gao’s music when I peeped a Daisuke Tanabe collaboration as I was just getting into ECM (Ear Candy Music, I just coined that).  At the time it wasn’t easy to find much work of his, but what I did hear was enough to convince me that I should keep watching this guy. His blend of hip hop, space funk, abstraction, textures, and a sound design repertoire that could pull it all together cohesively meant he was going to do some serious damage. Enter Beta World Peace. 

Without exception, these are seven bangers. Each track is a creature that lurches along with its own personality, palpitates, and slobbers kicks, hats and snares as it walks. Where Gao excels is in sculpting and sequencing sounds in an original way. His sound design game is off the charts.

The bass that welcomes us to Gao’s world in “Vamos” is redonkulous, and the redonkulosity doesn’t let up for 24 minutes. There’s something deliberately sticky and thick about the drum and bass processing that makes his beats feel like they’re scratching and clawing at your speaker cones. In “Comin Off That High” we are treated to some old school rave/footwork/juke sounding stuff. Then Gao does a quick synth stretch and throws us into the trap pit, then pulls us back out to do it again. I don’t know what high I’m supposed to be coming off of but it’s not working.

Though it’s clear Gao shines at sound design and beat-smithery, sometimes this means the work sacrifices the song as a work of art for the indulgence in these wild sonic acrobatics, but what is at first a challenging meandering feel at its best becomes a language Gao can use to explore horizontal collage and the element of surprise.

“Udon Quixote”, exemplifies this habit. The first minute is a sustained onslaught of synth heavy space funk with crunchy bass. Then without warning we cut to a totally different section based only on a vocal sample and a jazz horn section. As quickly as it disappeared, our tasty space groove reappears. To Gao’s credit, the two sections are kept in the same sound-world by the drum processing and tempo consistency, and the juxtaposition of the minimal section with the synth explosion brings new focus to the power of that complex jazz/soul chord progression.

“Precipice (Precipitate)” stands out as the most successful extreme of this idiosyncratic meandering quality as Gao succeeds in being minimal, intricate, and specific while juggling disparate sonic elements and transitions the song to a confident new place with the almost breakbeat sounding drum roll sample sounding oh so perfectly woven into place. The difference here is that subtle sounds like those sunny synth chords are maintained throughout the transition to gradually pull us into a new place.

Across the board, Beta World Peace Gao creates ear candy and high energy, booming beats. Knowing Gao’s work ethic and track record, this is just a preview of bigger things to come for its producer. World Peace 1.0?

Mike Gao’s ‘Beta World Peace’ is available now via HW&W.

samoyed

In the past few years, Scottish producer Samoyed has amassed a wealth of quality dancefloor releases that belie his relatively low-key stature in the dance music world. He was making throwback, shuffling house music years the likes of Bicep and Ejeca made it the thing to do and has released tunes on Glum, Astro:Dynamics and Flask. On February 18, Samoyed’s most high profile release to date, the Sloe Eyes/Guts single, will hit us in 12″ form. A-side “Sloe Eyes” features signature rave synths and a hyper 4×4 rhythm, but retains a moody atmosphere due to the subdued refrain of “into my arms.” The track features all of the tension of late rave jawns, but without any of the drug-induced madness, opting instead for gleaming soul. Stream “Sloe Eyes” below and grab the single on February 18.

local nativesThere’s been a lot of talk about the decline in quality “indie” music since the grand output of 2009, but honestly we’re not all that interested in that kind of talk… especially with Local Natives’ Hummingbird LP on our minds. The Los Angeles-based band broke onto the scene in 2009 with the impressively cohesive Gorilla Manner and immediately garnered an impressive fan base via their oddly harmonic compositions. Four years later and the band is releasing their second album and based on a first listen, it sees the group striving for a more expansive sound. The first half of Hummingbird is decidedly upbeat, while the second half features a lot of sad piano weak that heavily features vocalist Taylor Rice’s range. This dichotomy isn’t totally consistent, but check out “Heavy Feet” and “Colombia” below for a prime example of how the album is devised. Hit the jump to stream the entirety of Hummingbird, which is out now on Frenchkiss/Infectious.

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short stories

Today marks the release of Sampha (of SBTRKT fame) & Koreless’ collaborative effort On The Way/Let It Go on Young Turks. Coming together as Short Stories, the duo have made waves via their lush take on modern garage and are primed to transcend their respective solo ventures. You’ve probably already heard “On The Way” at this point, but “Let It Go” only surfaced today with the single’s release. Eschewing garage’s traditional structure, both Sampha (in beat work) and Koreless’ (in the vocal sampling) sounds are quite apparent and complement each other in a brilliant fashion. The way the off-kilter percussion meshes with the repeated refrain of “Let It Go” is as unsettling as Sampha’s vocals on SBTRKT yet oddly comforting in a hypnotic fashion. Stream below and cop On The Way/Let It Go here.

samo sound boy and jerome lol

There isn’t a hotter label functioning at the moment than the Jerome LOL and Samo Sound boy helmed Body High. The Los Angeles-based imprint is about as influential as a label can be and have broken down more than a few barriers via releases from DJ Sliink, Myrryrs and Todd Edwards over the past twelve months. If you ever (unfortunately) get into a debate with some anglophile about the viability of American electronic music, just toss a few Body High releases their way and put on your most derisive smirk. But you probably already knew that. Anyways, Jerome and Samo recently graced Diplo’s weekly BBC show and laced it with an all Body High everything mix. It’s (predictably) full to the brim with dancefloor burners and traverses the width of the Body High sound. Stream and download below.

xxxy

Not to belabor the point, but Rinse.FM are fucking awesome. If you live outside of the UK, have a smartphone and don’t have the Rinse.FM app, then you’re slipping. There just isn’t a more consistent, boundary-pushing radio station than Rinse. As of late, the London outpost has upped their curatorial output, releasing originals from he likes of T.Williams, Roska and Royal-T. On February 4, the imprint will release XXXY’s Got Me So EP, a somewhat surprising foray into the world of soulful house jams. Of course, XXXY focuses as much on his delicate samples as he does on punishing low end making the arrangement more fitting. Stream “Studio 9 (Just Like That)” and “Got Me So” below and cop the whole EP on the 4th.