interview ~ slow hands

it’s been a while since i spoke to a wolf + lamb associate (having done so a lot when this blog was spawned) but nyc man slow hands is certainly tickling my fancy. 


his productions (including one on the up-coming wolf + lamb vs soul clap dj kicks and a heart wrenching remix alongside zev + gadi for the 50th release on will saul’s simple records)  deal in heart warming soul, are alive with well placed and well played instruments and breathe plenty of sultry life into the current slo-mo house revolution.  check him …


what music did you grow up around and when did you first hear electronic music?

read the rest of interview ~ slow hands (…)

isolee/whrume – taktell/thora vukk on pampa

this isolee/robag whrume split release is exciting before you even hit play, simply because the two tracks included are mere pre-cursors of the respective full lengths to come (actually, isolee’s ‘well spent youth’ is already here and is already close to the top of my 2011 ‘best of’ pile). add into that pre-play excitement the fact it comes on koze’s fast flourishing pampa imprint and, despite the lack of any remixes, you have a genuinely semi-inducing prospect.

isolee takes the a side with ‘taktell’, a woozy, gently howling house number whose bottom end sways to-and-fro as diacritic strings and percussion add layer upon layer of deft intonation. its structure is so complex, unconventional and ever shifting that it’s hard to imagine the track being dropped into an average deep house set but, if it were, the way rajko müller hangs his grooves so effortlessly in murky 4/4 would have you wishing they lasted twice as long.

‘thora vukk’ is whrume’s contribution and is one which doesn’t sound out of place next to the work of isolee. it draws from the same sort of off kilter and unhinged sound palette as his, (as well as label mates axel boman and koze) but does so more sparingly. instead of constructing the track with myriad sonic flecks, the former wighnomy brother lays down a steady kick and has his quirky sounds (boingy synths, popping fx, plummeting harmonics) interlope recursively around them to make for an entrancing groove which forever seems to unravel as it goes. his full length can’t come soon enough…

interview ~ lone

here comes a feature/interview i did with notts producer lone for january’s excellent issue of djmag

read the rest of interview ~ lone (…)

teshcast a ~ cedric maison: glass table inspired

yup, another podcast series. this one, though, will be highly irregular. i don’t want to end up asking people for mixes just to fit in with a monthly schedule and, as such, hope that keeps the teshcast all killer and no filler.  


this episdoe has now been archived. either email me and i’ll happily send you it, or check out the rest at official.fm.


the first one – a wide-reaching but fluid trip through oddball tech, candle-lit house, blissed-out dub and more – comes from hypercolour and glass table man, cedric maison, who plays room three of fabric this saturday as part of a, um, hypercolour present glass table special…

read the rest of teshcast a ~ cedric (…)

plat du jour ~ tama sumo

[ok, since i wrote this last night someone by the name of tama sumo has commented on the mix saying it's not hers... whosoever it belongs to, it's good, so listen away...]

tama sumo’s panormamabar 02 mix (the club at which she is resident) from late 2009 was one of the finest of recent memory: great records, well mixed, with the odd well received curveball laid down toward the end.  imagine my delight when i came across this live recording of hers from nye at berghain, then. it’s almost two and half hours long (which means it’s unhurried; records play out as they should – to the end) and starts off with some firm footed dub shrouded in a mist of echo and reverb, before pushing on through some synthy futurism, kicking but controlled techno and plenty of dry, funky subtleness.  things get freaky towards the end with some frantic acid and pure warehouse vibes meaning that although ‘musical journey’ is a cringe-y term, it’s certainly an apt description for what sumo offers up. 


tama sumo ~ live in göteborg, nye 2010 

plat du jour ~ seth troxler

it was his podcasts which first got me interested in seth troxler a few years ago. now here i am, with a blog in his honour and a cat named after him (yeah) delighted to have come across another on soundcloud. previous efforts for ra, save the cannibals (twice) and particularly ibiza-voice laced together deep, trippy, melancholic, moody house and techno with a fluidity few others could match. over the course of almost two hours, this mix nimbly shifts through a number of gears without ever losing focus on the underlying groove. i don’t recognise many of the records but one of the reason i love troxler’s sets is that, inevitably, i’ll remember most of them. each has something to say for itself, not a single one is there to plug a gap, and together they make for awesome listening…


seth troxler ~ igloofest podcast, jan 2011

modern amusement preview, jozif chat

leeds is mentally over run with nights. when a new one pops up it’s generally not worth investigating ’til a few months in (by which time most have joined a long and sorry list of also-rans). modern amusement, though, stuck out from the off, despite much pointy-elbowed competition.

read the rest of modern amusement preview, jozif (…)

deepak sharma & dieter krause – wolkenreise on hidden recordings

i’m gunna put more effort into listening promos from people whose name doesn’t immediately mean anything to me. it’s a risky business, but one of the joys of electronic music is hearing something from an unknown then scurrying off to unearth more. one such catalyst has been this ep from us producer deepak sharma on us label hidden recordings.  a quick google reveals the man to have once booked craig richards & lee burridge as tyrant – one of my enduring favourites – to play at his brooklyn night a few years ago, and anyone who does that is alright by me, even before they soothe your mind and soul with their dragging deep house.

the track he offers here (alongside dieter krause) is built on a raw, unhurried kick. all important contrast comes from  the dry, echoing claps (which cut gorgeously through the bass clouds like, well, thunder) at unexpected intervals; a distant, longing and muted organ line (i think) and some heavy hearted synths.  it’s melancholic but optimistic, and has a certain classiness to it which i really dig.

the first reinterpretation operates on a less emotionally intense, but just as deep, plain than the original. throughout, remixer rene breitbarth is content to go at his own speed, with no curveballs, tempo shifts or huge drops to grab at your attention along the way. he doesn’t really want it, what he wants is for you to get lost in the occult and simmering synths which dissipate over the horizon, or the gentle churn of woody clacks which keep you moving, but somehow moving nowhere. this track could go on forever and you wouldn’t really mind, which is skilful stuff.

that dj qu influences seem to hang heavy in the air of ‘wolkenreise’ is only confirmed when he turns up to remix it.   it’s a sometimes urgent, sometimes sparse cut which has an intimidating backdrop of faintly shimmering bells fading in and out all the way through. squelchy glitches, indecipherable vocal snippets and alien sounds randomly break through to suggest something nasty lurks behind it, but listening in to find out what is as enjoyable as anything. as well as those, there is also a deep disco-fried effort from gustavo lamas, a reverb heavy, analogue sounding deconstruction by karraskilla and a shiny sci-fi excursion from john tejada, but none sound better than the previous three.  hidden recordings, i’m coming looking for you…


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review ~ youandewan, meet me in teufelsberg ep, magicbag

about a year ago i interviewed – very – young dj and producer youandewan.  he already had a couple of auspicious tracks under his belt for fledgling leeds imprint magicbag (including an ep with dop) but it’s his latest outing which really confirms what i initially thought: he got skills.

it’s a very assured collection of four different tracks which all have a clear affinity with the dubbier, sketchier, deeper and dustier trenches of berlin’s underground house and techno scene.  from scb to scuba, basic channel to dettmann, it’s all in there.  opener ‘alone in berlin’ is a brave and successful exercise in slo-mo and deep house tension which tumbles along, fully restrained, at a very teasing 109bpm for seven escapist minutes. it always feels as though it’s going to bubble over and kick on but never quite does, and because of that has you in the palm of its hand from start to finish.
next track ‘jigsaw’ rushes from the off with closer, tighter drums; a slinky percussive skip and controlled but busy background synths adding a lofty ceiling.  in time, the bassline breaks free and swells out below the mix and the synths expand to encompass the whole track. it’s when things get deconstructed and the crisp, surging-into-deep-space-a-la-hot-flush bassline is allowed to pulse that you really begin to look forward to hearing it on a dancefloor, though.
‘crosseyed & painless’ is simple, dusty and swinging house music which recalls kassem mosse as much as ame’s best, whilst sandy ep closer ‘eidolon’ is the same simple construct but after many more drugs, and comes from a much darker corner of the club. it’s heavy, dry clapping, militant and –owing to an expertly used forlorn female refrain in the latter parts – melancholic music which resonates with a deft, real-world roughness.  you can expect more of the same from a super-solid remix the scot’s recently done for midland, or catch him perfecting one of his subtly shifting warm-up sets at mint, leeds, where he is resident for techno types system.  either way, this shit is reaaaaal good.  

new year’s eve by the djs

blog went dark – christmas got in the way – but is back with a selection of thoughts (admittedly intended for another outlet, offline for redesign) on new year’s eve from a number of djs across the world.  happy hunting in 2011 everyone!

lee curtiss

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

i’ve had a bit of a tradition with the wolf+lamb boys that i play for them at the marcy in nyc. we’ve had several amazing nye/nyd parties together. the best nye for me will be hopefully next year when we can do a visionquest nye.

and least favourite?

i had a few stinkers back when i first started djing 12 yrs ago, but i tend to forget those and remember the good ones, it’s better that way.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

this year it would be footprintz the things that last forever, forthcoming on our new visionquest label, it’s perfect for the ball drop.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

i have indeed, to spend more time with my friends and family.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

i am returning to the studio to work on several different projects. i intend to write the music first and then see which label it fits after it’s done. i think that is the way to get the best results, no expectations, just write what comes out and go from there. we have a few visionquest remixes that will be out soon on cocoon, dfa and catwash. i’ll also be looking to finish another solo get physical and supplement facts eps.

ryan crosson

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?
best new years eve in recent memory was probably last year. shaun reeves and i were fortunate enough to have gigs together on nye in brooklyn for blk market and on nyd for droog in l.a. when you have to do a monster flight after a gig and then go play again right when you land it’s a bit tricky, so to have one of your best friends with you always makes it special.

and least favourite?

there have been a few crappy nye nights but one doesn’t really stick out in my mind like, “oh shit! that’s was the worst!” my worst probably would’ve been in high school at some point. chances are we went to some over-planned event that completely sucked and there weren’t enough girls…bummer

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i’ve never been one to cue up a specific track at midnight. i guess it would depend on where i am and what i’m doing. shaun and i were playing at midnight last year but i can’t remember what track was actually playing. slow hands did a pretty cool ‘auld lang syne’ edit. i guess i’ll go with that for now.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

the problem with new year’s resolutions is that i’ve never stuck with one once, ever. but next year i’d like to start exercising at some point and continue cultivating my moustache.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

most importantly our label visionquest is set to launch in january. the first ep will be benoit & sergio. out soon is the supplement facts 025 with guy gerber, dop, varoslav, guti, greg paulus and myself. i have an ep & album coming with cesar merveille on circus company and visionquest respectively. i’m also working with tale of us, dyed soundorom, on a field recording project and on a solo album.

kris wadsworth

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

1999-2000. i have pictures of me and my boys smoking joints that are about as fat as your wrist. it was stupid. we were waiting for the y2k shutdown so we could go loot everything. it never happened.

and least favourite?

2000-2001. my friend was playing a warehouse in east detroit and got in a fight with some marine. he kicked the marine in the face so bad that we both had blood spatters on our jackets at breakfast. orange schnapps, cheap scrambled eggs, and the sense that something really fucked up happened.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

darude–sandstorm

have you any new year’s resolutions?

to keep moving forward and not worry so much.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

a bunch of really awesome collaborations with some really talented people,
working with some new labels, being in a really cool documentary about independent
electronic musicians, and loving my dog even more!

soul clap

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

2008 for sure. We had a residency playing swanky disco vibes at this super posh hotel in Boston and all our friends joined the cougar fest. Plus we got free hotel rooms with a window that opened up to the bathtub above the bed. Special shout out to our ex-girlfriends JK and MM for helping make it a night to remember.

and least favourite?

Maybe it wasn’t the worst, but last year was pretty rough. We had a super cheesy gig in Boston that included an endless stream of terrible requests. Then we took the bus to NYC to play at the Marcy, but it ended in a river of tears 5 minutes after we showed up. Fail.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

Slow Hands has done an awesome edit of Auld Lang Syne that’s perfect for the ball drop.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

No more feeding Gizmo after 10pm. He really turns into a gremlin.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

Well most immediately is escaping back to Miami after two gigs up north (where it’s mental) in the UK on New Year’s day. Then we have our first official mix cd dropping on No.19 in February followed by a DJ Kicks, which we’ve done with Wolf + Lamb. We also have remixes of DJ Harvey and Robert Owens coming next spring and we’re working on our album.

simon baker

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

sydney 2008/9 without a doubt, don’t usually care for fireworks but the show they put on there is an unbelievable sight , afterwards i played on the “spice afloat” boat party with radioslave around sydney harbour with the sun rising, the boat rocking, doesn’t get much better.

and least favourite?

hmm, never had a really bad one that i can remember, usually too leathered to care anyway!?

favourite tune to play at midnight?

played various tracks over the years, but westbam – oldschool baby (piano mix) is a good old school classic, never fails to go off and have a stream of people asking, what the fuck is that track with the piano. good happy vibes for nye.

have you any new year’s resolutions, what are they and why?

to look after my ears and protect them more. i had a recent scare with a perforated ear drum. i have the monitors far too loud, and need to start been careful

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

my debut album called traces due out on 2020 vision in feb. remixes by radioslave (out now) and art department to come soon.

rob james

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

my fav new year would of been in leeds a couple of years ago, i went to back to basics vs dirty disco at my house. it was all about the afterhours though.

and least favourite?

my worst was in blackpool where i’m from. i was still in the queue at 12 and when i managed to get in there was a power cut and so we were sent back outside where it started raining. it was horrible.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

you’ll have to wait and see…

have you any new year’s resolutions?
yeah to finish a lot of tracks that i need to finish, i like starting new tracks when i get a new idea. so i’ve got loads that need finishing. also to get back to the gym, i used to be really into my fitness when i was in the army and now i’ve let it slip massively.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?i

want to experiment with different types of electronic music from disco, house, new edits and techno. so not sticking to the same sound.

subb-an

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

below 2008, it seemed like the courtyard in birmingham was going to explode!!!

and least favourite?

when i was too young to go out and had to listen to the raves on the radio whilst in a sulk!

favourite tune to play at midnight?

there’s sooooo many… but this year it will probably be a special sas edit that we’ve done just for the night.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

to take things up another gear with more music, more gigging and more parties!

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

i’m just finishing up a release for crosstown, sorting out the years releases on my label one records and some projects for some exciting labels

jet project

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

destroying shine in belfast by dropping plastikman, spastik to a packed main room is def gonna be hard to beat.

and least favourite?

we’ve been really luck and not had a bad one in over 10 yrs…

favourite tune to play at midnight?

can often depend on event’s that year, past midnight tunes have included tracks by james brown, prince, the beastie boys, and various house and techno classics..

have you any new year’s resolutions?

launching another label as extended play is getting into its stride now and fairly stacked with releases but we are getting so much great music sent our way.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

start work on our new single and album project for riva starr’s snatch! records, dj tours in oz, asia and the states

russ yallop

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

probably the millennium, gatecrasher did a party in the don valley stadium and it was 25,000 people all in front of the same stage so atmosphere was really special.

and least favourite?

got hazy memories of one in particular where me and a mate in a bid to save money got raucously drunk before going out, then of course couldn’t get in anywhere. not sure where we spent the countdown but the night ended with me walking the 2 hour walk home, pushing my ko’d mate along in a shopping trolley. bad times.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i suppose it’s compulsory to play something anthemic, i’d probably choose something like deniz kurtel mix of fables & fairytales for this year.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

just the standard ones really, ie doing less of something ‘bad’ and doing more of something ‘good’.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

i’m on the case with various musical projects, though next year i’m looking forward to starting using real vocals. not my voice you’ll be glad to hear, i need to track down a good female vocalist with a lot of patience!

tony rohr

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

one of the great ones that come to mind was in sicily (2007?) with alexi delano and josh wink. we were all playing different parties, but somehow i met alexi for an amazing 3 hour dinner. then i went to go drink about 5 litres of wine with both him and josh. i think i ended up losing about 200 euro in bets with alexi about abba of all things. haha… classic! the party itself was pretty amazing…. i think. it’s a little cloudy there.

and least favourite?

same one… we realized the promoter had fucked over both the club and the booking agents for fees and flights the day after.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i actually only djed once at a party on nye when it turned midnight. it was a house party thrown by my friend in his loft, and it was going into 2000. so of course i played prince’s 1999. you really can never go wrong with prince at a house party.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

this year is to finally learn more german. i’ve been going to germany for close to 10 years now… enough is enough!

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

include the much anticipated double pack oddmatik on clink recordings in addition to my album oddlantik avenue for cari lekebusch’s h-production label. oh! and we are re-releasing my classic track slowburn on weave digitally with some killer remixes in 2011 too!

joseph capriati

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

the best for me is playing in a big techno party or festival together with lots of friends. since i started to play every new year eve i can’t imagine a 31 december without gigs, i love to start the new year on the decks!

and least favourite?

the worst new years eve i think is to stay sick at home!

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i could start the year with a big pad intro or something like that 2 minutes before the midnight, and then after the countdown at midnight, insert a killer kick and bass!!

have you any new year’s resolutions?

for next year i hope to do better and better with my job, make good records and play a lot. that’s what i really want to do first!

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

for 2011 i’m going to work hard for drumcode, i will release a new ep for adam beyer in the first half and another in the second half of the new year. also i planned some new important remixes for strong labels like soma, tronic, bush etc.

interview ~ the art of production with paul woolford

this summer i wrote a feature on dj schools old and new for dj mag. as part of it, i was asked to speak to someone who really knows their shit when it comes to making electronic music. of course, my first thought was paul woolford – you only need listen to one of his records to see that he is a man with an acute ear for production.  rich textures, deft flourishes and subtle sound designs all replace any painfully du jour motifs in his work for planet e, cocoon and of course his own label, intimacy, and as such the man has a lot of knowledge to impart. 

and he kindly did, so much so i thought it a shame not to share our full exchange, so here it comes…

initially, what are your thoughts on the rise of djing/producing as an educational discipline? is production something that can and should be taught on courses and at university do you think?

as an educational discipline, i think it’s great that people now have a structured way of learning how to produce and engineer music. furthermore, most of these learning environments at schools, colleges and places such as s.a.e. are very practical, hands-on studios and this kind of direct experience is key to the development of any participant’s skills. overall this is a fantastic thing that, by and large, democratizes the process of learning, where once you had to slowly work your way up from the bottom by finding a job as a tea-boy at some large studio complex, spending 2 years doing that before they upgrade you to a tape-op.

these kind of positions were very hard to find, and although today’s music production courses have liberated the availability to learn, the irony is that the skill-sets of each approach are very different due to technological advancements. for example, you wouldn’t necessarily learn how to operate a studer 1/4″ tape machine on a standard music production course today, however there was a time where everything was recorded on to tape. likewise, back in the day you wouldn’t have learnt how to make a full production in a piece of software such as ableton so in the words of lcd soundsystem “there’s advantages to both”.

i understand you are self taught… what benefits do you think that has over one of these courses?

yes i am self-taught, and for me this has been of optimum importance because my sole motivating factor has been how things sound, the spirit of the production, and not wether they are sonically “correct”. this is something that makes a huge difference to dance music, although in other forms of music it is less useful – so for example it would be hard to make a modern country & western record that sounds great by badly recording the vocal, whereas in so many dance records these kind of quality issues can often be the things that give us a raw vibe, something that draws us in and charms us by way of the d.i.y ethos that pervades dance music.

increasingly we are seeing that the march of students graduating from production courses has meant that the general standard of production has improved over the years across dance music, but with this it would appear that in the rush to release music and to make a career, there are so many records emerging that are sonically “correct” (for want of a better expression), but redundant in terms of ideas, that the flooding of the market means the genuinely good ideas are getting missed.

recently i read a very harsh review on a website of a talented young up-and-coming uk producer’s new 12″. the record is a great example of being very well-engineered, everything was in the right place, an abundance of sonic detail and plenty of musicality. the reviewer basically said that it was all good, in fact, better than good, but that it felt bland. there was an outcry on the comments underneath from the public, with nearly all in support of the producer and saying what a great record this was. now, after repeatedly swallowing the information in the review, i realised that the absence of something raw somewhere within the production was probably the deciding factor in the reviewer finding the material bland. i know as a dj that when i spend 8 hours going through new promo material, nearly everything sonically is coming from a very similar place. the records i buy are sometimes alarmingly lo-fi – for example the works of theo parrish, moodyman, (and especially in their early days) can be so raw sounding, but the point of all this is that the balance of spirit and production is the common factor in all the best records. they charm you. some of today’s producers are regularly making their records with deliberate murky elements within the mixes, in techno look at the work of ben klock and especially belgium’s peter van hoesen who creates works of art from surface noise. the power of these records and the way they sound is simply not something that can be taught, it is about spirit.

would you agree the technology/software aspect has made production into a teachable science, as it were? has the technical aspect of the art meant that there is more to teach and learn within an educational structure? i imagine such courses were much less popular before logic, ableton and so on…

i agree that the software aspect has definitely made production a teachable science, and i would also say that the ease of these programs to learn has also been a key factor in the popularity of the courses and the uptake in them. of course there have always been sound engineering degrees, but many years ago before today’s courses, you could only do them at certain locations. one such example of a producer who studied at salford school of sound recording is brian dougans, one half of future sound of london, and these days, amorphous androgynous. this was the old-school approach i spoke of earlier so it is very different to what you would learn today. the sheer sonic richness in his music speaks for itself.

do you think it makes sense degree-level production courses are now in operation at places like leeds met? i’m no producer but it seems cynical; seems to bastardise the art a little…

- this isn’t paul’s but i saw it in berlin and have been looking for an excuse to post -

i think that it’s definitely a positive thing that you can easily study for a degree in music production. i am all for music being a universal thing, my view is of inclusive, i am certainly no elitist, although i am very specific and particular about what i seek personally in music. the view of some that this could be a cynical approach is quite a reductive argument i feel, in that for many, yes it is cynical, and here i am talking of those who purely want to make money from music with that as the primary motivation, but for others, the skills you would aquire on such a degree course are a springboard to unlocking further potential and furthermore for a still smaller number, with the eventual aim of becoming a recording artist in the true sense of the word.

where do you stand on the argument that production is about an artist expressing themselves vs it being a teachable science? isn’t the latter taking something out of the process? if you go on a course you can sidestep years of loving music, being involved, being influenced and just get taught how to make a track-by-numbers, then bam… unleash it to beatport et voila

personally i feel that production is actually a process, you are speaking of artistry when you mention an artist expressing themselves. production to me is the actual process as well as the management of the process. the expression comes from the artist inside an individual. so for example, when rick rubin produces a band or artist, he spends so much time observing, listening, and understanding the artist, without even sitting at the console – he has a very comfortable chair and basically lays down in the studio – this is still production, but on a wider scale. his intention is to bring out the very best in the artist psychologically so that when it does come to the actual recording stage, the recordings will be at their optimum level-best. this is where the language has become skewed over the years because many people who come from studying may be able to make a track with the bass, mids, vocals, highs in the right place, but this is basically modern enginering

i feel that the point being made in your question is that there is a lack of true artistry within dance music in the light of things becoming wholly generic. modern technology has opened so many doors but it’s also true that it has made things very samey in some aspects depending on the inquisitiveness of the user. i think as you say, if you take one of these courses and then sidestep all the years of developing your own relationship with music then that is definitely taking something out, and it will show in the end result, there is no substitute for experience and everything you absorb over the years as well as your background and life experience influences your music sometimes subtly, at other times transparently. for those with little imagination and who are stepping in to dance music to make money or for lifestyle reasons, they are contributing to the rise of the generic. one of the problems in dance music is that people spend too much time looking at what others are doing and take the cues there rather than questioning if the way they proceed is really correct for themselves. this is particularly true in the dj world but this is another subject.

do you think production can actually be taught at university level? isn’t that intellectualising it too much and missing the point? are there hard and fast rules everyone can benefit from or should producing be more about your own journey?

i think there are definitely some hard and fast rules, but these are very specific engineering things, about bass placement and not muddying the lower and lower-mid frequencies. learning this stuff academically is a very definitive way of absorbing it. you learn in different ways by being self-taught. as much as i prefer to listen to music made from people at the vanguard of scenes and movements, most people do not, and it would be selfish for me to think everything should be done the way that i like it to be done. and of course, what you are saying is true in that for most of the people who’s music i admire, you just cannot teach it, it comes from the artist. i think there are good elements of both learning your own way and taking things from the “proper channels” shall we say (another expression that doesn’t quite sit comfortably).

now, going onto something that has been a corner-stone of dance music’s creative development over the years; the mistake. going back to the time when phuture and pierre’s batteries were running down on their 303 leading them to make ‘acid trax’, the mistake has been something that has repeatedly changed dance music time and time again. these mistakes are statistically far less-likely to happen if you have studied strictly by the book, so there is a huge case for treading your own path.

do you think there are any common floors in productions today? anything specific which seems lacking/not up to scratch across the board in the music you listen to/get sent?

from the perspective of somebody who is sent a stack of fresh music daily, i’d say the most common flaw is the derivative/generic sound of things. this is why when somebody who has a genuinely original take on things rapidly emerges – good examples from recent times would be joy orbison, floating points and james blake. all three of these artists have a different and very musical contribution to make and have shown that there are always new directions for those with the desire to take them. and artists is exactly what they are. naming no names, you can clearly make the distinction between those that are firing out fodder to drive a dj career and those who are more interesting and relevant and i think we need more artists and less button pushers.

review ~ zev, betta days ep, supernature

zev eisenberg is the lesser spotted dj of the two wolf & lamb confreres (if you don’t know why, find out genuinely inspirationally by reading this), with his productions, too, less numerous than those of his partner. his (i think) last outing, ‘don’t break it’, was a beautifully deconstructed effort which gurgled in house music’s seedy underbelly, where the betta days ep is more lightfooted, with both being standout in their field.

opener ‘alright’ has fractious, snappy snares hustling radiant, rippling synths to go faster, but they won’t… instead the track hangs in a state of perpetual awakening, allowing you to get lost in amongst it as your body slowly gets into a groove . as soon as ‘that’s all’ starts, though, both mind and heart melt into the lofty, ethereal sounds which wash out of the speakers and into your soul. a kick drum drops in but the vibe is already set and you float along on top of it rather than dance along with it. a sparse but throbbing bassline cocoons you yet further in zev’s pure, uncluttered world.

and so to the title track, betta days, which is still pure and unfussy, but one which trundles along with a much heavier heart and loose, aloof drums which scuff along with heavy heels. muted, tinkling keys and soft focus synths swirl in a starry night sky up-top, as the depths below swell with increasing dolour. though there’s a sense of end-of-the-world-doom, the minor key optimism signals we needn’t worry, for (well look at that, the title’s perfect) betta days are ahead… like all his records, it’s enchanting stuff that occupies a space which seems a million miles detached from the impetuous struggle that, generally, is the real world.

supernature regular ali nasser remixes first ‘alright’ (into a simple, warm house bubbler) and then ‘that’s all’ into a more structured, propulsive and slightly less blissed-out version, but never steals the limelight from betta days, a cut which has, at least me, wishing the man behind it would release more often.

plat du jour ~ cosmin trg

today’s mix comes from romanian producer cosmin trg. since adding the cosmin to his trg moniker, cosmin nicolae has ventured into a world of dubby house atmospheres and skippy garage rhythms on labels like the rejuvenated rush hour. it’s certainly tickled my fancy, as does his tidy and wide reaching track selection (surely showcasing his influences, old and new) for the zero” blog which includes everything from basic channel to shed via stl and john roberts, with one of many highlights being roman flugel’s latest delicious offering for dial, ‘how to spread lies’.


zero” // podcast #023- cosmin trg

plat du jour ~ nico jaar

i’m very excited. tonight i’m off to see nico jaar for the first time. it’s been 18 months since i first fell in love with his sounds, and today’s mix is where it all began – a wolf & lamb label showcase recorded live at the bunker. it’s a wondrously evocative mix which has your mind in a million different worlds throughout its course, and one which moves at varying tempos through warm and chunky grooves, charismatic samples and all sorts of culture spanning inflections making it one of my favourite mixes ever. and it’s only 37 minutes long.

wolflambmusic.com/mp3/WLP087-nico-bunker-showcase.mp3

label spotlight ~ no 19 music

in line with planning to post on here more often, one of the new features i intend to peddle your way is this one, label spotlight

it kicks off with no 19 music, the canadian label run by jonny white which, to date, has released slightly off the wall house and tech (just look at he ghoulsih artwork, below, for pointers) by shaun reeves, jimmy edgar, james teej, the boss himself and a few select others.

read the rest of label spotlight ~ no (…)

win tickets to secretsundaze on nye

i have come into the possession (quite legally and legitimately) of a pair of tickets to secretsundaze’s new year’s eve party at the red gallery, london. after another top 12 months of underground house sessions, they return one more time in 2010 with a couple of the stars of the year.

the first is 20 year old irish talent space dimension controller who’s house-y, space-y, electro-y tunes for the likes of r&s and clone have seen his star rise in the latter part of the year, whilst his club shows have also won him plenty of fans, including the podcast people over at ra.

joining the young gun is a much more experienced hand but someone who was still responsible for one of the biggest records of the year courtesy of his re-rub of the gathering’s house anthem, in my system, namely chez damier. playing alongside the resurgent chicago producer will be the the secretsundaze residents plus, of course, the men behind it all for the last 9 years, giles smith and james priestley.

to be in with a chance of wining the tickets, all you have to do is become a fan of teshno on facebook, then pop an email to dearteshno@gmail.com and I’ll pick a winner at random.

albums of the year ~ 2010

does what it says on the tin… (not convinced necessarily of the order of these – it’s too hard to sort – but between them they’re my favourites from the last 12 months, all of which are still on repeat.)

1. actress, splazsh, honest jon’s
this man fucked with rules on his debut album, and not only the orthographical rules… across the course of its 14 tracks he doodles with sound so freely, genre names simply do not apply. amongst a sea of such rigidly structured music elsewhere, be it house, techno or even dubstep, his loose and languid forms draw you into a dark, subdued and alluringly depraved underworld quicker than would a toot on the ol’ glass pipe. from the ketty and twisted to the dusty and degraded via the purple and prince-like, these sounds don’t make any gratuitous grab for your attention, but loiter long enough in their company and you’ll get dragged along for the ride, whether you like it or not.

2. john roberts, glass eigths, dial
we knew roberts was good off the back of some strong singles for dial, but this good? his debut album is imbued with such an inward sense of melancholia that I can’t listen to it without imaging someone stooped over a writing desk in the corner of a dark attic room, writing to a distant love one by the light of a flickering candle. robert’s brand of house is rich with a vinyl crackle; sings with sadness and, with a heavy heart plods, through rubbery, woody sounds on a leafy autumnal eve. when it does drive faster, warm, fulsome beats throb, pregnant with woe. glass eigths sounds aged but contemporary, and operates in a such a palpably real world that, shit, it moooves you.

3. efdemin, chicago, dial
this, phillip sollmann’s second full length, is so devilishly – and subtly – intricate that it requires many listens to reveal itself. woozy percussion, found sounds and layered rhythms of the sort you’ve never heard before all require patience (and attention), but also result in an album you can play over and over and never tire of. each re-visit unveils a new niche; another sonic pocket, all hidden amongst chunky, woody house grooves at times drenched in soul, at times suppressing a techno drive or at times shattered into micro clicks and kicks. these are detailed, nuanced records heading in a million and one directions rather than all pulling the same way, but getting lost in the hustle is a lot of fun.

4. flying lotus, cosmogramma, warp
this 45 minute oeuvre is concise, complex and more challenging than steven ellison’s last (which was his second, not first, album, as many think) but is ultimately more rewarding. peer between the mature, complex squiggles of sound, screeching cellos, plucked, slide-y guitar and frenzied breakbeats and you’ll see little hints that fly lo is a product of the computer game generation. for example the noises first edition space raider games made as you spray bullets up the screen, or the ‘game over’ type, clipped and crystalline melody which features eelsewhere. then there’s stunningly sunny, swinging house; heart wrenching moments of introspection and jazz recollections all in there, too… heady shit.

5. four tet, there is love in you, domino
the most dancefloor of his albums to date, there is love in you is made up of tracks hebden is said to have road tested at london’s plastic people, with one of the best even named after the club. doused in a saccharine, twinkling angel dust, there’s everything from intense melancholia to ricocheting 2-step via optimistic house and groovy night music all put together with hebden’s trademark mosaic-style construction. in continuing to operate wholly from his own unique sonic palette, he has made one of the most beautiful albums of the year.

6. trentemoller, into the great wide yonder, in my room
trentemoller’s second studio album was like the organic yin to the last resort’s yang. as the title suggests, the shackles were off and into the great wide yonder saw the dane stride onwards towards new, more compositional territory. from plump, slow bouncing dub to high tension and pounding guitar riffs, delicate string melodies and licks of things as diverse as the fall, the prodigy and jeff buckley – it’s all hidden in there somewhere. that it was written at his home in the dark, cold, frosty territories of denmark will come as no surprise as you listen to this album, but the man’s leaning away from club friendly dance stuff toward more involved and complex instrumental fare, might.

7. mount kimbie, crooks & lovers, hot flush
another short but incredibly sweet album, this, and one which dealt in guitar licked, static infused, crackling and bubbling live-sounding dubstep like no other. lurching from frenzied bleeps to muffled crowd noises via future steppers, it was said to be approximating the effects of a semi asleep, semi-awake state called, hypnogogia. whatever the thinking behind it, the rawness and… aliveness of the organic sounds never fail to infect your brain. crooks & lovers was another hit for hot flush, and one which, if you listen hard enough, bares all the veiled hallmarks of everything great about the label to date.

8. caribou, swim, city slang
i hadn’t heard of dan snaith aka caribou before this, despite it being his fifth album. apparently close to james holden, it’s a relationship which shows in the headiness of snaith’s synth-y, pop-y, techno-y sounds. the watery, aqueous finish which he aimed for with the album has been fully achieved courtesy of the liquid synths which ripple like thin strips of tin foil, blowing in a stormy wind. it makes for an almost abrasive – certainly tumultuous – listen, but one with some fine songcraft, beautifully colliding melodies and plenty of emotional curveballs to keep you as intrigued as it does entertained.

9. matthew dear, black city, ghostly
if you ask me, dear’s last album, asa breed, still sounds avant-guarde, 3 years after release. black city is similarly of-the-future in its depiction of a dark, dystopian metropolis, but is a much slower one. his own brooding vocals feature heavily (musing on love, life, losses and… monkeys) and rumble in the bowels of pained beats, yearning synths, prickly instruments and other such debauched night sounds. a reflection of the dark wave, 80s emo stuff he was listening to at the time, black city’s bristling atmospheres, bright neon lights and underlying tension make for a troubled but tasty listen.

10. scuba, triangulations, hot flush
hot flush had another great year in 2010, with the boss leading from the front. a whole range of flavours and textures were on offer on his compelling second album, from soundsystem inspired calypso beats, to weightless ambient via straight up house jams. throughout, light was balanced with dark; weight with weightlessness and it made for one of the most complete dubstep – or thereabouts – listens of the year. more recently came the ‘interpreted’ version of the album, with plenty of killer tracks from the likes of deadbeat, falty dl, will saul and more into the bargain: it sounded just as good.

11. the black dog, music for real airports, soma

a conceptual masterpiece in response to eno’s 1978 work, music for airports, the black dog’s music for real airports is the most submersive listen of the year. the ambient techno swells laced with real world snippets of pa systems, doors closing and feet shuffling (and bits from another couple of hundred hours of recordings) which make it up, make for at times paranoid, at times imposing, at times hopeful listening, but whatever the mood, it’s always thoroughly engaging.

12. shed, the traveller, ostgut ton

whilst shedding the past certainly wasn’t techno as most people know it, this album was cast even further away from any contemporary analogies and instead peers back to a 90s breakbeat heyday before surging on though dubstep and occasional acid influences. it’s techno, but not as we know it.

13. asc, nothing is certain, non plus

instra:mental’s nonplus+ records continued to re-define d&b this year, stripping it back to ever darker cores of pulsing, bleeping basslines and deep space melodies. asc, with this beautifully wide-reaching album in particular, was at the heart of the revolution.

14. gil scott heron, i’m new here, xl recordings

he’s a poet, a writer, a musician, recently got nominated as best newcomer at the brits (despite having a career spanning back 30 odd years) and on his 16th studio album fuses blues, jazz, soul and spoken word into a raw and gloomy world, swollen with a life’s worth of experiences.

15. altered natives, tenement yard, eye 4 eye

this was one of the most wide reaching house albums of the year, infused as much by uk funky as it was hardcore, rave and techno. warbling sub bass, wonky synths, carnival drums all rub against each other with swing, jack and sleazy analogue fizz making it a tumultuous ride into the future.

16. pantha du prince, black noise, rough trade

the glassy and tinkling melodies of hendrik weber’s colourful, bubbling minimal made for some of the most heartfelt music of the year. black noise is a wintry scene looked up from a warm and cosy retreat, alive with the sounds of diy percussive flecks which float around your brain and have you lost in their wonder.

17. seuil, chamaeleonidae, welcome to masomenos

a debut from one of paris’s new guard of exciting producers, this subtly shifting affair dealt in feathered percussion, lush bass undercurrents and intricate layers of soft techno and house. mind melting.

18. jules chaz, toppings, wagon repair

the first in a reported busy schedule of album releases for wagon repair, this sample heavy, instrumental hip-hop affair from the little known chaz dealt in brilliantly diy and expertly crafted samples with beguiling results.

19. dop, greatest hits, circus company

every bit as fun as one of their live shows, their album titles or their press shots, dop’s debut took house into inebriated and salubrious back street parisian haunts of the sort i’ve never heard before.

20. pulshar, inside, desolat

deep, dulcet, organic and just about everything you want in a vocal infused dub album, this serene, late night smoking experience is exactly the sort of record everyone needs in their collection for those hazy sunday afternoons.

.

old school, new school, dj schools

this summer i was asked to write a feature on production schools and acadamies for dj mag. it involved a trip to the quite excellent akg / scholarship of sound as well as chats to plenty of other people… read on to find out about various sorts of dj courses; the scholarship itself and for some top tips from key industry people….

in the early days of our still young scene, music making and music mixing was the preserve of professionals and diehards – a wholly different beast than it is in today’s democratic world. aspiring djs necessarily wiled away their youth hunched over a pair of decks re-enacting that epic nine minute mix digweed pulled off last weekend, but that’s where it ended. dj schools were very basic, church hall affairs and, if you wanted to make music, you either had to rob a bank to buy the kit, or else you had to slowly work your way up from the bottom, starting out as a tea-boy at some large studio complex before, two years later, getting upgraded only to… tape-op. even then, those sorts of positions were rarer than a drizzle free day in sunny manchester and were certainly not for the faint hearted.

in 2010, though, you no longer need to save for years to buy a pair of decks then endure months of frustrating trial and error self tuition before you can even loosely claim to be a dj. instead, courtesy in large part to the rise in popularity of electronic music; the ensuing hoards of careerists, as well as the improvements in djing and production technologies, there are affordable courses available to all… from the established dj who wants to write a record, to the middle aged saturday hobbyist who has some disposable income and a few free evenings via the already well equipped producer who craves a wider, deeper understanding of sound, there is something – from a week to a year in length – for everyone. that includes, of course, courses for the wholly uninitiated (from all musical backgrounds, too, not just electronic) like ‘how to dj’ run by dr alinka greasley at leeds met as a module option for music technology students looking to broaden their horizons.

“there’s an important distinction between careerist people and those wanting to just get a little insight. we don’t have industry pros per se, this course is more of a taster” admits alinka. “i focus mainly on vinyl teaching (although we do teach cdj mixing later on) as i think it’s important to learn how to mix with actual records so the foundations are there for things like scratching later on. i think people go away from the course understanding djing more, understanding how much work and practice goes into the art and often they go off wanting to pursue what they have learnt on a more in-depth level.”

“one of the biggest challenges with these sorts of courses is the individual nature of djing” worries alinka. “as my students are often totally new to it, teaching things like beat matching can take a lot of time and that’s why this course is more of a taster. more personal sessions and smaller groups at other courses in the country can then take things to the next level.”

one such course for those with some pre-existing skills is run by ministry of sound which, the club’s phoebe smith tells us, “aims to specialise in live, club based performance. the students are based in the club so are learning, first hand, on industry standard equipment and booths on one of the world’s best live sound systems” that important fact is what separates this course from university tuition which instead often relies heavily on theoretical teaching.

phoebe continues “our courses are not a golden ticket into the industry and we always make that clear, they are just a more industry focused alternative to the classroom lead or theory based courses that you may see at other dj schools.”

for those looking for something which combines theory with practice; djing instruction with more techninal aspects of production and sound, there is the point blank school in london. one of the oldest schools, it was started by rob cowan in 1994 and, in the early days, was only a basic djing course. but, as the school’s david reid tells us “technology developments mean the courses are much broader now – we have 8 studios in total teaching dj skills, music production and sound engineering. we try and introduce people to the building blocks of beats, bars and phrases before they even touch a deck to get them thinking like a dj – that way it makes it easier to understand where and when to mix and they better appreciate the role of a dj.”

“although we run an ableton course which takes in production, djing and recording (because there is so much to learn we split it into modules and teach it over 12 months) our most popular courses are still the hands on practicals taught by pro djs” offers david. it seems, then, that the romantic idea of mixing two 12”s together (at least for beginners) still curries as much favour as it ever has, despite technological advancements.

so, how else have things changed since the early days? we rang up hospital producer and ex-college tutor, danny byrd, for his take on things…

“15 years ago i was doing stuff at my local youth club but it was really basic. the technology and computer software has definitely made these courses much more viable – mainly because kids can now go home and practice what they learn and simply because there is more to teach you can go into as much granular details as you need to with things like cdjs and ableton.” danny points out that, whilst such courses are brilliant and advance you much quicker than would self tutelage, there are potential drawbacks…

“when i started making music it was purely out of a passion for it. you had to be super dedicated back then as it cost £2, 500 (even in those days) for an akai sampler to play with whilst these courses now can rather sell a false dream…’come and do our course as a career move and, hey presto, when you’ve finished it you’ll be a superstar dj/producer.”

there is, however, a new type of schooling which certainly doesn’t aim to sell a dream but rather builds on a strong, pre-existing skill set and already burning passion – the inaugural, weeklong scholarship of sound course in berlin as put on by high end and long running technology company akg. it offers a fully expenses paid trip to the german hot bed of electronic music for ten handpicked students from all around europe. when djmag flew out to observe the course for two days, organiser nick sabine was quick to point out the positioning of the course as against those already mentioned.

“we wanted this to be a really special, submersive and intense weeklong session which offers all round industry insights these students simply couldn’t get anywhere else.” important, too, is that with this course being a scholarship scheme, financial implications are removed from the equation so enthusiasts from any background can apply.

it’s clear as nick continues that this course is born from the genuine passion of a few key figures in the electronic music scene who simply want to share their knowledge and passion to those who appreciate it most; those who are already seriously involved in pursuing music careers…

“it means a lot to all of us involved to really get it right and make this a one-off experience. dixon, for example, broke off his honey moon to come and give his presentation on tuesday, whilst stefan betke [aka respected mastering technician, vinyl cutter and dub techno producer pole] spent time learning the names of the students before they arrived and prepped lots of music and blank vinyl for them to use in his session.”

said students range in age from late teens to mid twenties and all are either currently studying on music technology courses or are graduates working as composers, sound engineers and musicians of various types.

“the knowledge of the students has been really impressive – they know their stuff and are asking some really good, insightful questions of our panels” continues nick as we walk to the ableton studio where kompakt label manager jon berry is about to give a three hour talk. in it, he uses kompakt act the field as a case study and goes through – in compelling and minute detail – everything from signing the act, recording the album, mastering it, sorting artwork, accruing worldwide press teams, radio plays, booking a supporting live tour and a lot more.
over a beer afterwards, the students buzz with enthusiasm after what they have just learnt, particularly 24 year old dane matias “i really love kompakt so that was amazing – jon really went into an awful lot of detail with facts and figures i didn’t get on my course back home. i think i’d be able to run my own label easy after all that information – i wrote down every word!”

as the students disappear together for the evening, a representative from akg, ashely, tells us how this has been the norm all week. “they’ve hung out as a group, shared music in the hotel together, bounced off each other in the discussion sessions and generally shared their collective knowledge – that’s been nice to see and is what, we hope, makes this scholarship so worthwhile to them”

after sessions earlier in the week on mastering (both practice and theory) an ableton workshop, a discussion on ‘artistic development in times of information overload’ and, amongst other things, a morning working with microphones and headphones, the final day sees up close and personal vinyl cutting sessions with the aforementioned pole in his own private studio, before a 90 minute, hands on session in a boutique synth shop (as frequented, we’re told, by ricardo villalobos et al) playing with walls of modular synthesisers whilst receiving instruction from shop owner and super-enthusiast andreas schneider.

“that was my highlight of the week” bristol post-grad joshua tells us. “i love weird noises and even though a week’s drinking has caught up with me [joshua is in and out of the toilet all morning] there was no way i was missing that. had it been a normal uni class at home, though, i probably would have stayed in bed!”

for the students, one last thing remains on this final day – a trip to watergate hours before opening and the opportunity to spend time with the sound engineers and club promoters setting up the whole place before seth troxler headlines later in the evening. it’s the final impressive insight afforded to these students, and, along with the other incomparable edifications offered up throughout the week, is a final invaluable opportunity for these young sonic enthusiasts.

so what does a self taught producer make of all this? is production something that can inherently be taught? we asked intimacy label boss and respected producer paul woolford who points out that there have always been sound engineering degrees, but they were limited compared to today’s courses.

“the software aspect has definitely made production a more teachable science – there are definitely some hard and fast rules, but these are very specific engineering things, about bass placement and not muddying the lower and lower-mid frequencies for example.” as paul continues he is quick point out that such courses are not necessarily a fix all cure for everyone.
“skills you would acquire on such a course are a springboard to unlocking further potential.” paul points out, before going on to underline the sentiments of many of the tutors we have spoken to. “modern technology has opened so many doors, but it’s also true that it’s made things very same-y. learning aside, the ability to make good music all comes back to the inquisitiveness of the user. there are so many records emerging that are sonically ‘correct’ but that are redundant in terms of ideas.”

it seems, then, that whilst there is a wealth of courses available to anyone wanting to improve their djing and production skills, they aren’t there to lay down hard and fast dj or production rules. in the same way that a fine art degree doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll be the next david hockney, these courses aim to give students all the understanding they need to be able to go away and make their own art, without restraint, and to allow passions and idiosyncrasies to shine out as they always have. at the same time it’s also true that, given technological furtherments, the arts of djing and producing have been somewhat intellectualised. all that means, though, is that in 2010 there are no excuses for substandard productions; no get-out clauses for shoddy mixes and no reasons for those with a passion not to indulge themselves and their art as best they can.

top tips for djs/producers:

from pole: “if you have to use digital files to dj, make sure they are wavs as mp3s – even at 320kb – just don’t sound nice. seriously, they hurt my ears.”

from andreas schneider: “don’t just think you need to use moog because it’s the name everyone knows – effectively they are now mainstream machines which only use presets so don’t allow endless creative possibilities like modular synths do.”

from jon berry: “make sure you build yourself a good profile online, and make sure you work hard at getting yourself well known in your own local area. going to labels and telling them you have a solid local fan base is a good way to get in.”

from paul woolford: “something that has been a corner-stone of dance music’s creative development over the years is the mistake (for example when the batteries on phuture and pierre’s 303 were running down which lead to them making their classic ‘acid trax’). these mistakes are far less-likely to happen if you work strictly by the book, so there is still a huge case for doing things your own way in spite of the draw of all these new modern courses.”


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deniz kurtel ~ interview

it’s september 2009, late one saturday night (or early sunday morning) and i’m laying on the hard wooden floor of a friend’s house, a long way from reality. we’re listening to a mulletover podcast by simon baker and, suddenly, there’s a collective ‘ooof!’ as we hear what i later find out to be this - a deniz kurtel remix which is so good it stands out a mile from its pallid peers, and still does today.

read the rest of deniz kurtel ~ interview (…)

smooth operator – seth troxler

ok, it’s been a while since the last post on teshno (life kinda gets in the way, you know) but i’m back.  in the coming weeks i have a deniz kurtel interview for you but, in the meantime, enjoy (hopefully) this feature i wrote on seth.

it was originally published in last month’s dj mag but i reproduce it here, in full, so more people get to see it.  (incidentally, it was published with the same images, too, which i assume gave the piece its title in the mag. they are now part of my private collection.)