14 February, 2008


Parisian Fluokids Pharrell is touring Us..

21 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ anthem party @ LOS ANGELES
22 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ half alive party @ VANCOUVER
23 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ mezzanine @ SAN FRANCISCO
24 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ era disco @ RIVERSIDE
26 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ cinespace @ LOS ANGELES
27 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ 205 @ NEW YORK
28 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar & lofifnk @ MONTREAL
29 Feb 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar & lofifnk @ TORONTO
1 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar & lofifnk @ highline ballroom @ NYC
4 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ outdanced @ CHICAGO
6 Mar 2008 22:00 TBA
7 Mar 2008 22:00 TBA
8 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ warehouse party @ HOUSTON
12 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ SXSW @ AUSTIN TX
13 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ SXSW @ AUSTIN TX
14 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ SXSW @ AUSTIN TX
15 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ SXSW @ AUSTIN TX
16 Mar 2008 22:00 - dj set w/ redhotcar @ SXSW © AUSTIN TX

13 February, 2008



Don't Fuck About is being super! Thank you very much to Discobelle boys, Pharrell, Casper and Young Lovers. Check pics on DiedLastNight.com and a video..

26 January, 2008



Our lovely friend Congorock recorded a new podcast for No Love Lost Records.

Download it!

TRACKLISTING:

1. DJ Blaqstarr - "Shake It To The Ground (Claud Von Stroke Remix)"
2. Lidell Townsell - "I'll Make you Dance"
3. Unknown - "Acid Side"
4. Armando - "100% of Dissing You"
5. His Majesty Andre - "NRG555"
6. D.I.M. - "Is You (Brodinski Remix)"
7. One Last Riot - "We Make Acid"
8. Jesse Rose - "Wake Up"
9. Hijack - "No More"
10. Bart B. More - "Make Some Noise"
11. Basement Jaxx - "Take Me Back To Your House (Speakerjunk Remix)"
12. Dub Pistols - "Open (Trevor Loveys Remix)"
13. Bloody Beetroots - "Detroit (Ghetto Edit)"
14. Skream - "Midnight Request Line (Switch Remix)"
15. Don Rimini - "Let Me Back Up (Crookers Remix)"
16. Curses - "This Is The Way (Drop The Lime Remix)"
17. Full Phat - "Did Anyone Know (Detboi Remix)"
18. DJ DLG - "Paramount (Brabe Remix)"
19. Crookers - "Knobbers"
20. Bloody Beetroots - "We Are From Venice!"

24 January, 2008



Parisian Fluokids Pharrell is playing at Don't Fuck About next February!

Pharrell - dj set @ Daft Punk aftershow 14 juin 2007 paris

Armand Van Helden - I Want Your Soul (Fake Blood remix)
Todd Terje - Eurodans
Alan Braxe & Kris Menace - Lumberjack
New Order - Jetstream (Jacques Lu Cont remix)
Don Rimini - Sumo & Geishas
Breakbot - Happy Rabbit

19 January, 2008

14 January, 2008


Have you missed Yelle at Plastic last December?
She's musically talented, funny, cute, and (most importantly) French!

Yelle - A Cause of Garcons
Yelle - A Cause des Garcons(Riot in Belgium remix)
Yelle - Mal Poli
Yelle - Short Dick Cuiz (Tepr remix)

08 January, 2008

06 January, 2008


Electro-punks duo Dandi Wind have released 4 eps/singles and a full length album (14 songs / 10 videos) titled “Concrete Igloo” - - Next spring they're releasing second full lenght named "YOLK OF THE GOLDEN EGG"(SLUM). During 2007 Dandi Wind have played every major city in Europe, the US, Canada and even Mexico. Most notably touring for 20 odd shows with The Horrors throughout Europe in spring (Dandi Wind remix of The Horrors “Draw Japan” just released on 7inch via Universal).

Their now legendary show at SxSw last year resulted in damage fines and a picture on the front of the Austin Chronicle. Additionally memorable gigs include those at infamous venues such as the Hammersmith Palais, ICA and Scala in London, in Mexico City and Guadalajara and playing at Fabric – which was oversold to 2300 people with Erol Alkan from Trash djing.

Dandi Wind - Balloon Factory

Odd Nosdam, real name David Madson is a visual artist, DJ, record producer and member of the Anticon hip hop collective. He was one of the founding members of the groundbreaking Clouddead, he was the art director for the Anticon label for five plus years, and he's been an audio-advisor for a good chunk of albums on that label (including work by Sole, Jel, Sage Francis, Why? and others). Odd Nosdam's musical style is heavily influenced by ambient soundscapes, 70's dub, late 80's/early 90's hip hop production as well as indie rock. Most of his early works were released initially only on a limited number of hand-made cassettes and distributed entirely through the internet and tape trading. Level Live Wires is his last album, released in August 2007.

Odd Nosdam - Up in Flames

Odd Nosdam - untitled one

On track 1 (untitled one) of "Burner" (Anticon, 2005) the interaction with the men at the beginning is from a documentary called Titicut Follies directed by Frederick Wiseman. The one man is a mental patient at a hospital and the other is a staffer bringing him to a shower.

05 January, 2008



Chromatics have a new demo available for download on their myspace page. "House of Models" is a short instrumental piano piece that'll probably end up as an interlude or an intro to something else.

Chromatics - House of Models (demo)


Does anyone know that Brooklyn's Black Dice released their 4th album during 2007? It's called "Load Blown" (Paw Tracks) and contains the band's final single for DFA (a three-track 12"), their first for Paw Tracks (a two-song 12"), and five cuts from an EP released simultaneously with Load Blown: it's really more a singles' collection than a real album. "Kokomo” is the first song of their latest record.

Black Dice - Kokomo

04 January, 2008


Anonimity?

Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve are Richard Norris, who just published a biography on Paul Oakenfold and superstar London Dj/producer Erol Alkan. Under this pseudonym the duo are best known for their successful remixes of Peter Bjorn & John, Tracey Thorn and Midlake. But, they’re beginning to build a name for themselves as music makers, thanks to last year’s LP Spring and the new EP George (out on the mysterious 3rd Mynd label)..they cut-up and paste together old psych and krautrock tracks.

Beyond the Wizard's Slave live in Manchester!

03 January, 2008


Sweden once again! Andres Kleerup is a swedish producer based in Stockholm..well known as writer/producer of Robyn hit "With Every Heartbeats", he's also part of Metaboys project with Luciano Leiva and Erik Wikström. During 2007 he produced two good remix for Shout Out Louds and Mika.

Shout Out Louds - Tonight I Have to Leave It (Kleerup remix)
Mika - Happy Ending (Kleerup remix)

02 January, 2008


New Year's Eve at Le Point FMR/Paris was cool! We've been dancing all night long on Detect sounds. He's a young dj from Paris releasing two records: one on Mental Groove, DETECT "DANCE DIVISION" w/ YUKSEK & BLENDE remixes - 4 tracks 12" vinyl only..and DETECT "BANDE A PART" - 8 tracks 7" vinyl only limited to 250 copies on on Corso Fleuri Editions. To celebrate this month double release from Detect, Mental Groove put out a x-mas mix from him just for you!

Our friend Congorock has a busy month coming! :D

Jan 11 2008 8:00P with BANGA, DISCO D @ SUPERZERO - Zurich
Jan 18 2008 8:00P DISCOLIMONE @ Sottomarino Giallo - Milano
Jan 25 2008 8:00P La Valigetta Festival @ CSA Dordoni - Cremona
Feb 1 2008 8:00P with CROOKERS, ZOMBIE DISCO SQUAD - London
Feb 2 2008 8:00P Liars Club @ Stealth - Nottingham

Don't miss him!

Check out Congorock second production "Exodus"
www.congorock.net

Bloc Party - Where is Home? (Burial remix)

Thom Yorke - and It rained all night (Burial remix)

Burial is the working name of an anonymous dubstep musician from London. Burial's eponymous debut album was released in 2006 to critical acclaim. The Wire magazine named it their album of the year and it came fifth in the Mixmag 2006 Album of the Year list. On Friday, September 28, a message on the Hyperdub website announced a new Burial album. Untrue was released on November 5, 2007. Label owner Kode9 also posted tracklistings to dubstepforum.com. The vinyl and CD releases of the album feature different running orders and also have exclusive tracks[2]. Although both albums have been met with much critical acclaim Burial has remained anonymous, in an interview Burial has said 'only five people know I make tunes.



Burial's Myspace

Kode9 Interviews Burial

9: What have you been doing since the last album?
Burial: It was a bit weird people hearing the first record because most of those tunes were made without me expecting them ever to be heard. So I've been recovering.

9: How long did it take you to recover?
Burial: About 2 years [laughs]. I've just been trying to get back to why I wanted to make tunes in the first place. The first one got slightly out of where it belonged, and I found it a bit difficult to just block things out and make tunes in a low key way again, and it took time to just get back to doing that, and liking it, and doing it fast, and not trying to be a perfectionist. Just trying to dream up tunes again without worrying what people were going to think.

9: The tracks on the first album had taken about 6 years to make in total.
Burial: Yeah, that was tunes from 2000 hand picked by you out of loads. So doing the second one was never going to be as easy as that, and also I wanted to try and learn some new stuff but I couldn't, so I just gave up and went back to the old ways [laughs]

9: Were you surprised by the reception of the first album.
Burial: Yeah. I think it promised something, but if you listened to it, it didn't really get there. But I think some people liked it because it was just a no fuss bunch of tunes. I want to do low key records so i got uneasy if there was attention. my tunes aren't for everyone but thats the point of it, it's for those people. But I still want people to like it, Im not some ice cold fretless bass playing psychopath.

9: Don't you think, that whatever you felt about it, people liked it because it made a consistent album.
Burial: Why, 'cos it was all moody?

9: Not that it was moody or not, but just that the whole thing had a consistent mood.
Burial: Yeah, it was just a sad, eerie, night time thing. But the new stuff has changed a bit. No it hasn't. Don't listen to me [laughs]

9: What do you think is the main difference between the two albums?
Burial: This one is a bit more buzzin', glowy. It's a bit more uplifting. It doesn't hang around. It's a bit more up. The tunes were made quite fast in the middle of the night and they had to fight for their right to exist. but they came out of nowhere. Its a bit like an unwanted pregnancy, i wasn't always in a good place, but most of the tunes had to be faith restoring somehow to me, but they still take a while to get into.

9: Its still pretty melancholy record. But now I think its downcast euphoria, as opposed to just downcast like on the first one.
Burial: Yeah, the first one was quite a pissed off basic record, downcast. But this one has more little bits of vocals glowing in it, flickering around and burning in the tune, messed with.

9: Why did you end up doing something a bit more 'glowy'?
Burial: It's always been difficult for me to make tunes. i'd just sit or walk waiting for night to fall hoping i'd make something i liked. Or come back in and try to make the club echo in my head from going out. I'd chosen certain vocals because the mood I was in. I wanted more vocals cos they attempt to form songs, its kind of sad but they get to you in the end, i don't want a singer i want something else. Also all i listened to for a year was Black Secret Technology. I still made most of the tunes in the dead of the night, and when you do that you have to let the tune kind of hypnotize you otherwise you'll just fall asleep or play Playstation. The tunes just lulled me, and you need a vocal to do that, and a certain type of sound to echo and circle and sway into a pattern. The moodiness made the tunes, not me. Now when I listen to them, they're ramshackle, DIY and rolling but I know there is a thing trapped in them so that when I look back on them, even if its dry, I know when it was made, I know what was going on that day, its like stapling real life to the side of the tune. I can't get a singer or some session musician to come in and play or sing some dry song, so I've got to get people singing acapellas or just mates singing in their phones and re-cut up what they're saying. Sometimes I run out of a vocal and I have to re-cut up each word and make them sing a whole new verse, and you cant tell what they're saying. But I feel I can make them say certain lyrics.

9: the puppet master ha ha
Burial: I love the sound of 'girl next door' vocals. The way it used to be. Give me that any day over a really talented trained person that can actually sing. There used to be a girl who used to sing in the flat next door but I didn't have the guts to ask her. That would have been kind of awkward to ask.

9: Why don't you do gigs?
Burial: I'm not that kind of person who can step up. I just want to make tunes.

9: Why don't you want to do pictures?
Burial: Same reason. I like the old records, where you didn't know who made them and it didn't matter. You got into the tunes more. I don't want anyone knowing i do tunes.

9: And the drawing on the front of the new album.
Burial: I've been drawing that same one since I was little. Just some moody kid with a cup of tea sitting at the 24 hour stand in the rain in the middle of the night when you are coming back from somewhere.

9: Why didn't you use a sequencer on the album?
Burial: I tried. I did one tune before. . .Unite. With someone showing me how to use it, and it worked out nice, but in the end I wasn't ready and I wanted to do another record without a sequencer again.

9: You like that ramshackle thing, don't you.
Burial: Yeah, I admire people who understand complicated programs or whatever. But I'm not that into tunes that are so sequenced that all you can hear is the perfect grid, e ven on the echoes. With those kind of tunes, sometimes I just hear Tetris music, i always know where i am in the tune so i cant get lost in it, no rough edges in some tunes even when they try hard to sound rough. I want to learn one day how to make tunes properly , but I wanted to do a tribute to my rubbish, dying computer. It starts smoking sometimes and the screen flickers like a strobelight, it mashes your eyes. The tunes are made where they're made, somewhere in my building, the roof or wherever, but not in some airtight studio. Loads of the album was made with the TV on. I wish i could make technical proper music one day but people who want technical music maybe won't like my new tunes but its not for them.

9: What don't you like just now?
Burial: fiending and fakery. Sometimes you get people who don't seem to really enjoy tunes theyre just checking what other people are into and ripping it or slating it . just because..no reason. some people just talk mostly about things they hate like it matters, like they are fighting through a crowd that isn't there. i liked the world before it was so easy for people to find out stuff and get at it. i like it when people are genuine, they like tunes, they want a dance.. i don't get it when people are ploughing in with negative claimage to something. Sometimes you just want music to stay where it is from. I love drum&bass jungle hardcore, garage, dubstep and always will till i die and i don't want the music i love to be a global samplepack music.. I like Underground tunes that are true and mongrel and you see people trying to break that down, alter its nature. Underground music should have its back turned, it needs to be gone, untrackable, unreadable, just a distant light.

9: There are more vocals on this album.
Burial: When I was growing up it was hardcore or jungle tunes and you would catch people singing them while doing the washing up. Like 'Music is the key' 'Thru the vibe' 'inner city life', 'finley's rainbow' guy called gerald, kemet crew. People would be playing them from cars. But deeper tunes too not just big tunes . They tried to put a vibe into the room. They didn't just walk in and stamp on your head. Or they worked hard to take you out of where you were, make you get lost, steal away. They weren't just serving up an element that you could instantly get into. They would put an atmosphere in the room that wasn't there before, or maybe had never been there, not take the atmosphere out the room. Vocals . . .it needs to be glowing, swaying, but I want the tunes to be likeable. Not dark for the sake of it.

9: Why is the album called Untrue?
Burial: When you are not acting like yourself . . .that's an everyday thing for everyone, but it can be a bit sinister . . .It's like the opposite of Unite.