Posts Tagged ‘Vinyl’

Paul Woolford – Planet E at Berghain / Vinyl-only / 4.3.2011

Monday, March 28th, 2011

It’s often hard to judge a “club” mix on it’s merits without the boundaries of the dancefloor. Especially when said floor is the hallowed turbine hall of Berghain. Paul Woolford continued his techno excursion with Carl Craig’s 20 years of Planet E tour featuring in a recent show at the revered Berlin institution.

Picked from a large and carefully chosen crate of vinyl, it’s a fine and joyous journey through techno and bass music which works perfectly well beyond the club. Wooly’s decision to use only records (in our view the most appropriate medium for electronic music) certainly gives the mix a certain je ne sais quoi and great artistic moments are often borne from self imposed restriction.

Hit “play” and enjoy Paul’s warm-up of sorts, joining the dots between the genuine Detroit sound and the European progeny it continues to spawn.

Paul Woolford – Profile
Berghain
Planet E

Turntable Skeleton

Monday, January 31st, 2011

We love the simple functionality of this stripped down but beautiful Turnstyle Turntable. Reduced to its most basic elements of form and interface. Read more about it on the nightclubber.ro blog. Thanks to Thunder Disco for the tip-off.

Spinner

I Remember The First Time I Heard Your Voice

Friday, December 10th, 2010

Some detective work from The Dirty Soundsystem crew, a cinematic tale about ‘paranoia, inner voices, telekinesis, parallax experiences and sad clowns’. We like the idea of a vinyl only release, it gives an importance to the disc and also allows the listener to enjoy a beautiful cover in large format. Dirty are quickly moving from connoisseurs to real experts in the art of crafting the unusual. Essential late night listening, and that’s Joan Crawford on the cover incase you are wondering, answers on a post-card as to which film the still is from. Enough said, listen if you know how.

Crawford speeding

Bill Drummond – A History Of Music: Part 19, 4 of 4

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Here is the fourth and final part of a transcripted lecture Bill Drummond gave on the state of music to BBC Radio 3. You can find parts 1, 2 and 3 here.

The relationship that a listener might have with any piece of recorded music was always the same, be it a middle aged connoisseur listening to Herbert Von Carugen’s recording of Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde. Or a 13 year old girl in 1996 listening to the first Spice Girls album. We built and bought shelves to keep our collections of vinyl and CDs on. We took pride on what these growing collections that we had, invested our money in what it said about us, in the same way that the content of bookshelves did. There was no reason that this should ever stop. By the time the new century was dawning the iPod was being launched along with iTunes and numerous file sharing sites. This changed everything. This was the biggest development in the history of music in the past 100 years. We could now download from the internet with a few clicks from the mouse any piece of music from the entire history of recorded music we thought we might want and plenty more we didn’t want. All of this could be stored on the iPod in our pocket to be listened to whenever, wherever while doing almost whatever. The album as a format was now meaningless.

A graphical representation of a bit-torrent swarm

A graphical representation of a bit-torrent swarm


This thing that we had used to measure and judge the music makers of the last five decades no longer had any real purpose, other than historical. The music that we owned no long said anything about us as we could now own everything without investment from ourselves. The groaning shelves of vinyl and CDs were redundant. Music was just something that made the bus ride to work or the jog round the park more bearable. Something used to fill in the uncomfortable silences or block out the racket of real life. The breadth and depth of meanings that music once contained was fast draining from it. Art, like religion exists to give life meaning. When any art form loses its meaning it no long has any real worth. No long has a function other than something to gather dust in the museum. There are those that have thought of the iPod as little more than the modern equivalent to the wireless set. They are wrong. The wireless unwittingly promoted the sales of records. The iPod does away with ever having to buy music again.
A museum piece

A museum piece

There is another facet to my argument. Recording technology has so evolved that any kid doing a GCSE in music can record an album and stick it up on their Myspace for the whole world to listen to. The holy grail of the recording contract and all the validation that comes with it is a thing of the past. Every busker in every street has a CD to sell you. The democratisation that some so longed for has undone the whole thing. The business model that has sustained a world wide record industry is imploding faster than the cultural commentators can write their blog on the phenomenon. All of this is great news for the forward thinking music makers working in the next few years.

The flip side of all I have just gone on about in the last few minutes means music is now in the process of being liberated from the shackles of the recorded music genre. These forward thinking music makers will not want to make music that can be downloaded off the internet or listened to at any time, any place, while doing almost any thing on a future version of the iPod. They will want to make music that is about time, place and occasion. They will want their music to reach parts of the soul that words and images have always failed to do. Nothing can commune the unknowable like music. But most importantly they will want their music to have meaning beyond sometime to fill in the background while people get on with the drudgery of life.

KLF – Official Website

BBC – Radio 3

Asylum

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Christmas Cracker!

Christmas Cracker!


News has reached us that Leeds stalwart night Asylum is having a bit of a farewell party. Their concept is very simple – great music, in great surroundings with great people. For the special occasion Bonar and Tom of PBR Streetgang have invited their friends Crazy P to headline – anyone who’s ever seen them perform live will know, they never fail to impress.

Such is the popularity of PBR Streetgang in their native Leeds – when arriving to play their vinyl powered digital-disco in El Salon – the chic back room at We Love… Space in Ibiza, the promoters were left dumbstruck by the charter-plane load of revelers PBR Streetgang would have in tow. Rumour has it the lads have bought shares in Leeds-Bradford airport in order to capitalise on their growing international popularity.

2008 saw Crazy P drop their critically acclaimed album “Stop Space Return” on 2020Vision. They channeled the live energy they have built up from the considerable skills needed to perform to massive festival crowds into this superb fourth album. They are undeniably and unashamedly DISCO and have found themselves at the crux of the recent renaissance that has crossed from New York to North England and back again. The general uplifting mood of the record is tempered by lead singer Danielle Moore to give that bittersweet cosmic feeling.

It will all be going off in The Mustard Pot, a traditional ye olde stylee pub on Stainbeck Lane in Leeds on the 27th of December which should make for some proper yuletide spirit. We’ll be filming the event too so keep an eye out for that.

PBR Streetgang – DJ Profile

Asylum – Official Website

Crazy P – Stop Space Return on 2020Vision

Bumrocks Purple Brain

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Brain sleeve

Brain sleeve


There is a freak-folk revival occurring at the moment in the form of bands like Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective and Yeasayer – people are trying everything, stuff that wasn’t necessarily cool a few years ago. Andre Bumrocks and Jason Evans of Hey Convict! have linked to create a mix of spaced-out jams with an interstellar groove that harks back yet is essentially à la mode to a sound without scene or definable genre. Australians in former lives, the duo have called NYC home for several moons, respectively cultivating insane record collections shared through transcendental online archives (see bumrocks.com). Abstract themes of transgression, outsider art and the occult are used to create a cinematic feel throughout the mix. Moving through the pounding rock side of disco to loose afro-rock, metallic clang, desert dirge, synth overloads and accented by sound collages with spoken word mysteriousness – the mix is a meditative journey into the dark eye of the mind. Turn on, tune in and drop out to this – to be listened to loud and under the influence. The physical release comes with a 7″ record of custom re-edits from the mix and an original composition, 300 of which are pressed on purple vinyl and are randomly circulating throughout mail and retail orders. Needless to say – we can’t recommend it enough.

The next exciting phase and evolution of the Purple Brain life cycle is a hand crocheted case in three dimensional life size brain form, containing the 7″, CD and poster. There are only ten in existence.

I Get RVNG shop

Bumrocks

Mutant Sounds

Friday, November 27th, 2009
Tumor, Slow Beautiful Sex, Psycho

Tumor, Slow Beautiful Sex, Psycho

For those of you who still collect vinyl (or those with an interest in music released in this format), Mutant Sounds is a great place to start. Some damn rare and little known treasures from genres as idiosyncratic as quirktronica and astral jazz. The unconventional album descriptions both draw you in and explain perfectly what to expect from a download. The deliciously absurd and outlandish writing style is infectious, if you enjoy the music you will be back for more.

The author encourages users that the albums for download are for preview purposes only, delete after 24 hours and buy it if you like it.

45 RPM Adapters

Thursday, November 26th, 2009
Adapters through the ages

Adapters through the ages

Sticking with all things at 45 revolutions per minute. We’ve found some great industrial design in the form of the spindle adapters which would have to be inserted into the centre of older 45 records. The adapter could be a small solid circle that fits onto the bottom of the spindle or a larger adapter could fit over the entire spindle, allowing a stack of 45s to be played.

45 Spider

45 Spider

The RCA Corporation developed a plastic insert known as a “spider” which has become an iconic symbol for music enthusiasts. The snap-in inserts allowed 45 rpm records to be played on 33 1/3 rpm record player. Invented by Thomas Hutchinson on commission from RCA, its unclear how many were made but in the mid 1960s tens of millions were being sold every year.

White vinyl

White vinyl

The guys over at Claremont 56 (a label dedicated to creating beautiful music) have created a very special wooden record adapter which comes with its own 7″ (in case you don’t have any of your own to use it with). It’s an exclusive release from downtempo disco stalwarts Smith & Mudd and wont be available anywhere else. It’s housed in a drawstring linen bag and only 100 are being made – so move fast if you want one.

45 Spider

Claremont 56