Tuesday, September 16, 1997

Bullitnuts - Nut Roast (Pork)

Kicking in the with the fantastic hypno-therapy-inspired drum & space of 'A Sponge, Two Bricks and A Spring', this debut LP from Bullitnuts has an intimate, instantly familiar feel. In fact the title 'A Sponge, Two Bricks and A Spring' perfectly sums up the brick-busting, spring-charged, brain-mashing music which results from the drum & bass-meets-big beats fusion that has inspired so many lately.

This second album from Hull-based duo Bullitnuts is full of variation. 'Rockskool' is pure funk city streets bent-cop action thriller, 'Lizard Tooth Eye' on the other hand initially fools you with its sweet atmospheres (there's even a whistle in there!) before blowing over big with what sounds like a dark 90's take on Grace Jones' 'Pull Up To The Bumper' - all phat bass and fruity percussion. The whole project is topped off by what sounds more like a live instrument-based jam, 'Hell For Leather'. Coming a year after their acclaimed debut, 1st Of The Day (the successor to their original electronica adventures on Concrete records), Nut Roast is probably Rob Ellerby and Murray Clark's most human release to date. Certainly an album (and not forgetting the luxurious cover photography) that leaves you wanting more. 8/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Ronnie & Clyde - In Glorious Black And Blue (swim~)

Following tracks on Leaf's 'Invisible Soundtracks Volume II' compilation and appearances on Swim~ records' 'Last Hand' and 'Macro-Scopic' EPs, we finally get our hands on Ronnie & Clyde's debut CD. From spooky chilled-out basement eccentricities to glorious breakbeat and drum & bass, this is what I call a real album - not just a collection of ten tracks. It builds up, breaks down and burns with an underlying coherence throughout.

Ronnie & Clyde (a/k/a John Ross and Rob Fitzpatrick) are in a world of their own with the wooba wooba bass and dub atmospheres of 'Natural One' though to the near-junglist beats of 'Macro-Scopic'. But when the pace calms for beatless chill out sessions, the duo are on thin ice. 'Twice Removed', for example lacks the soul of highly-studied ambience, or the depth of their bass- and beat-oriented tracks. But when the drums return and are mixed up with these more atmospheric leanings, Ronnie & Clyde create a perfect harmony. And this chemical reaction makes for one of the albums highlights, 'Last Hand'.

As this album is only being released on CD, the most important tracks here are 'Natural One', 'From A Great Height' (probably the most accomplished, frontier-embracing drum & bass cut on the album) and 'Theme From A Lazy Life' (awesome science-lab jazz jungle), which are all set to appear on DJ-friendly vinyl. 7/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Wednesday, August 20, 1997

Akotcha - Sound Burger (Pork)

Continuing Pork's (uninterrupted?) run of pure quality, Akotcha release Sound Burger. This debut LP from the Brighton/London fusion of Jude Alfred and Russ Jones is minimal in presentation, so about them I can tell you little. What I can say is that their album merges funky bass, eerie atmospheres, trippy drum loops and laid back guitar and pours it onto the vinyl with a smooth lacquer of production.

'Sound Burger', the title track, combines all these elements and if the title sounds familiar, cast your mind back to pre-CD times when there were some weird and wonderful ways to play records. Like the little van that drove itself around the grooves and the 'Sound Burger', a hand-held wheel clamp that looked a lot better than it sounded!

But enough hi-fi trainspotting. Buy this album and skip directly to 'So Far So Good', which is the smoothest tripped-out version of trip-hop known to man. Saucy French vocals and ruffed-up beats, anyone? 'We Have The Technology' is also worth checking out. Full of subliminal melodies and perfect for either rainy Sunday afternoon listening or late night radio play. 'Gosub' and 'Entirely Synthesised' are the tracks I'll probably keep going back to. They hint at an affinity with early eighties technology (also found on Fridge's 'Ceefax' back in the spring) which thankfully doesn't carry into the actual music. 'Gosub' is actually an epic drum & breakdown finale that would fit with either a dark DJ set of electronica or stella transmissions into the unknown. Certainly an accomplished debut. 8/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Tuesday, July 22, 1997

Art of Noise - State Of The Art box set (China)

Six years ago Art of Noise main-man JJ Jeczalik told me that his eyes popped the first time he heard the techno tribute album The Fon Mixes. But he had to admit that some takes did offer some interesting new perspectives and one - Graham Massey (of 808 State)'s version of 'Legs' - was even true to the band's original experimental direction. A couple of years later I found myself giving Massey a lift to an 808 gig and passed on this vote of confidence. He was plainly thrilled and it occurred to me just how much mutual, unspoken respect the contemporary dance scene has for the Art of Noise. Three studio space cadets who - 15 years ago - unwittingly pioneered much of the music we groove to today.

With this release taking the count of Art of Noise compilations to double that of LPs of original material, China Records could well be accused of overkill. It's a surprise to see State Of The Art appear, with last summer's Drum & Bass Collection still warm-off-the-press. But there is a method in the madness. The three disc State Of The Art combines all three AoN remix collections (all of which will now be deleted) in one tastefully designed package - and for just the price of a single CD! Combining 1990's Youth-mixed The Ambient Collection, the 1991 techno/rave remixes The Fon Mixes and last year's Drum & Bass collection pulls together an overpowering 38 remixes. Comprehensive this box set may be, but it's certainly not complete. The 1995 12"-only Ollie J/Arkana mixes of 'Yebo!' are strangely omitted, especially as they are some of the few AoN re-interpretations to gain sizeable club exposure in recent years.

Seven years on, Youth's Ambient Collection (Disc 1) is almost a museum piece. Released at a time when chill out rooms were a fascinating novelty, it served its purpose of proving that Art of Noise were the original ambient house/art house electronica crew. As if being DJ'd into legendary nights at Shoom and Spectrum hadn't done that already. But Youth added nothing that any bedroom mixer couldn't have done with a pile of original AoN CDs and some samplers. Listening back to Disc 2 - The Fon Mixes six years on is a hilarious and sometimes dreadful task. Alongside ambience, Art of Noise also predated the techno revolution with tracks like 'Close (To The Edit)', 'Beatbox', 'Legs' and 'One Earth'. So in 1991 the rave stars of the day came up with The Fon Mixes, something that was sincerely meant as a true homage to the third most sampled act of all time (just behind Kraftwerk and James Brown!). Hidden away here is probably the best track the Prodigy have ever recorded - certainly my favourite - their interpretation of 'Instruments of Darkness'. If you've never heard this track, you have at least one good reason to buy this box set. The brilliance of the Prodigy track is balanced by probably the crudest, poorest piece of music ever released under the name of Carl Cox - his homage to the single 'Paranoimia', 'Shades of Paranoimia'.

You don't need to look back through many copies of DJ to find a review of the Drum & Bass Collection, which is in State Of The Art as Disc 3. It features remixes by Doc Scott, Dom & Roland and Lemon D. The one thing that State Of The Art and the continual reinterpretations of Art of Noise material throughout this decade proves beyond doubt is just how influential they have been on all forms of dance music. And how much respect many of today's dance artists still have for them. 8/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Sandoz - God Bless The Conspiracy (Alphaphone)

From the first few seconds of track one, you can sense that God Bless The Conspiracy is important. The sounds, the production. This is not self-indulgent or overly serious, but an album of ominous, weighty consequence. But what else would you expect from Richard H. Kirk (for it is he!), the man behind the mask of Sandoz and a million other pseudonyms and labels?

This is Kirk's fifth album as Sandoz and appears on his own label, Alphaphone. It continues a career that started off as a founding half of the highly-influential Cabaret Voltaire back in 1974 and later spanned dozens of albums (released under at least five different solo monikers!). Along the way he has worked with the likes of Marshall Jefferson, Francois Kevorkian and Ministry and in recent months even found time to turn in a blindin' remix of Sneaker Pimps' '6 Underground'.

This new album is a real mixture of styles - but is so obviously conceived from one highly focused mind, that all tracks blend into one powerful blast. From the industrial film soundtrack of 'Lights In The Sky' to the chemical funk-meets-Starsky & Hutch themes of 'Demonology' to the patter of garage beats on 'Louisiana'. One of the most interesting cuts is 'Blow (This Mother Up)', a ruffed-up drive through a '90s urban jungle of archived jazz samples and breaks. The album seems to build up throughout every track to the grand finale - 'The Moon Rises'. If Chris Carter directed the next James Bond film and they needed a street active soundtrack, this would be a match made in heaven. And as if to perfectly illustrate the conspiracy theme of the album's title, found sounds and samples are sprinkled throughout each track like suggestive subliminal messages. Amazing. 9/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Various - Virtual DJ: Underground Garage (Breakdown)

The second in the series of Virtual DJ compilations offers exactly the same interface as before, but this time the content is pure garage. "Speed garage" tracks are included to either listen to on a standard CD-player or to plug into your computer to mix, scratch and edit to your heart's content. But the quality of the compilation has not been compromised with the inclusion of the CD-Rom element - all twelve tracks are well worth checking out. Stand-outs come from Gant - 'All Night Long', A Baffled Republic - 'Bad Boys' and Federation X - 'Odyssey One'. In fact the best thing about these compilations is that they are from an established English label. So many similar CD-Rom releases have come straight out of US computer corporations who put little emphasis on quality music and over-hype the interactive content. The virtual DJ decks are just as fun as before, even if I found garage a little harder to mix than the more dynamically varied drum & bass set. But, hey, that's what these CDs are for - they let you play around as a DJ (in an impressively life-like way), without the expense of buying a dozen 12"s, the decks and all the hardware.

But viewing the other interactive elements a second time began to drag. Elsewhere in the 'virtual bedroom', things are less interesting. The 'Interactive TV' is merely a high-tech way to entice you into watching full-screen video of adverts for other Breakdown compilations and the merchandise cupboard is an equally cheeky sales attempt for their range of clothes. There's a daft (but probably cool) hoop-shooting basketball game in one corner that I didn't have the patience to figure out and the quality of the interactive discography is poor - featuring only low-definition scans of other album covers.

In recent years CD-Rom content has been largely overtaken by the World Wide Web. Cool interactive music software that you used to have to buy and install from CD is now increasing plentiful - and free - on the Internet. But it will be some time until there's the Java skills and bandwidth to replicate Virtual DJ on the WWW. Until then, this is probably the best reason for any bedroom DJ to get hold of a CD-Rom-equipped computer. album: 6/10 interaction: 9/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Various - Virtual DJ: Drum N' Bass (Breakdown)

This is no ordinary compilation! Virtual DJ is a new series from Breakdown Records that includes an interactive CD-Rom element as well as the standard audio tracks. But the album is still open to anyone - you can play it on a standard hi-fi or, if you have a CD-Rom-equipped computer (Apple Mac or PC), then you can plug in and interact. On the music side, there are 12 tracks of above-average drum & bass. Notable appearances coming from DJ Red, Aphrodite and Swift. But when you plug this album into your computer you get a whole new dimension. The screen fills with a the view of one wall of a 'virtual bedroom'. Scroll left, right, up and down to look around. You'll find little animations, games and - tucked away in the corner - a pair of decks. It's this Virtual DJ booth that's the star of the show. Although a little daunting at first (there's no on-screen instructions), the virtual mixing process couldn't be more intuitive. Click the record box to browse the tracks on the album. Find one you like and drag it onto the first turntable. Do the same with the other deck and then set them both spinning. Mix between the two and - with some nifty mouse action - you can even even start scratching!

It may sound like a gimmick, and at this stage of it's development it is, but I'd like to see this interactive element becoming standard across most dance compilations. The mixing is surprisingly lifelike, having an easy-to-adjust BPM control helps a lot. In fact Virtual DJ is almost as addictive as real life - it's far too easy to lose an hour or two perfecting a mix on the screen! But it's the quality of the tracks on the compilation, and the sheer brilliance of the added bonus of the Virtual DJ session that makes this stand out. More than any other compilation, you know that the tracks have been chosen with the DJ in mind. Aphrodite's 'Dub Moods' is a brilliant laid back, pulse-driven track. Shy FX's 'Mad Apache' is full of mixable breaks and fills and Dream Team's 'Star Wars' has to be heard to be believed. In other words, plenty of variation for the first stars of the virtual DJ arena to play with. album: 7/10 interaction: 10/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Sunday, June 22, 1997

Baby Mammoth - One...Two...Freak (Pork)

If Baby Mammoth are one thing for sure - then they're prolific. Having signed to Pork in 1996, this is their third album - and second to be released this year! The duo of Mark Blissenden and Andrew Burdall have already cooked up phat beats, spun drum & bass off into new directions and got everyone thinking about what they're listening to. So what next?

Anything is possible. Each track here is a superbly polished example of it how dance music really can straddle both sitting down and standing up-type activities, if it's done right. Take track 3, 'Additive', for example. This has massive club potential. And at the same time would get your lounge jumpin' on a Monday night. Elsewhere there's 'Luna Park', an aptly titled sound-scape that pits soothing chorused guitar chords and harp-like synth pads against a scat industrial backbeat. This mixes into 'For Dear Life', which takes a club friendly almost-garage beat, soothing atmospheric washes and overlays a woman recounting an O.O.B.E, or out-of-body experience. A cathartic track if every there was one.

Other tracks continue the journey of drum & bass beats into vast oceans of relatively uncharted territory. How can drum beats be fast and furious, but soft and warm at the same time? Answer - Baby Mammoth pieces like 'Zen Butchers' and 'Sound in your Mouth'.

Baby Mammoth is the most apt name for this band; at the moment friendly, cute and compact, but inevitably destined to become ominously, overpoweringly huge. 7/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Sunday, June 08, 1997

Y-Ton-G - Klangspiegel (Raum 312)

In the midnight hour in the sound laboratories of Hamburg, you'll hear the strains of Raum 312. Their fourth release is by Y-Ton-G, what seems to be a one-man performance art spectacle that takes natural found sounds and sources and pushes them through a production process in search of the next level of ambient music. How can you not be even slightly curious of an album that states on the cover: "The music on this CD is made with stones, metal and wood. When these natural materials are touched they begin to vibrate immediately."... And you know he's not joking when you hear the finished result. Even more so when - believe it or not - you begin to recognise the musical feel of the stone, metal and wood vibrations. Yes, this album could sound very familiar to anyone that's visited crypts, wandered cathedral cloisters or - I would imagine - pot-holed through vast underground lakes and caverns! Y-Ton-G takes the natural atmospherics of the very life around us and places them on disc in away that field recordings never could. But what has all this got to do with dance music? Or should I really have to ask and answer that question? Truth is, if it hadn't been for the acid/house explosion ten years ago and all the splintered art-forms that emerged thereafter, an album as innovative as this could probably never have been released. 7/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

Thursday, May 08, 1997

Mouse On Mars – Autoditacker (Too Pure)

Bouncy and poppy, but with a full quota of weirdness always on hand, this is the first Mouse On Mars album since 1995's acclaimed 'Laora Tahiti'. But since their last LP there has been collaborations with Wolfgang Flur from Kraftwerk and Stereolab, both of which have bought a summer freshness to their sound. Mouse On Mars provide perfect chilled sounds for the moment, unbeatable in pure trippy melodies and with a refreshing timbre that is missing from the harsher, darker side of techno and dreamed-up house. 'Sui Shop' and 'Juju' take quirky to new heights and it's not long before a funky Mouse On Mars-style spin on drum & bass is introduced in 'Twift Shoeblade'. But nothing's heavy going about this album - any or all of the tracks could easily be used as the soundtrack to a French cosmetics advert of your choice. They may be German, but this is almost certainly the sort of music that Jean Michel Jarre would be making, if he hadn't lost the plot after his original 1970s debut. Stand-out tracks include 'Scat', 'Schnick Schnack Melt Made' and 'X-Files' (this title being probably the only herd-following element on the album). Forget DJ Dado, Mouse On Mars' 'X-Files' rivets a wicked, tiny beat-up drum & bass loop onto some liquid keyboard pads. When the melodies drop (in tracks such as 'Radio' and 'Maggots Hell Wings') it leaves a confusing set of beats and pulses - all set to disorientate the listener and leave them wanting more. And as a result, Autoditacker is definitely one of the freshest and most original albums of this year. 9/10

Tuesday, April 29, 1997

Zion Train - Singled Out/Alive (China)

This is a must for anyone that's been fascinated, tempted or even just a little intrigued by Zion Train's much-publicised adventures in multimedia and '90s dubscapes. Zion Train's sixth album release is a double, CD-only set pairing a singles-so-far compilation (Single Minded) with their debut live set (Alive). Rather than dub or earth-rooted dance, Single Minded swerves dangerously into Europop territory thanks to production from the Rapino Brothers. Original Zion classics like 'Dance of Life' are given a new clarity, or are commercial dance O.D., depending on how you look at it.

But Single Minded does gather - for the first time on CD - underground classics such as 'Follow Like Wolves' and 'Hovercraft', both thought to have been lost to promo obscurity some years ago. Also included is 'Stand Up And Fight', one of the tracks which landed them on the Radio 1 play list for the first time last year, and the new single, 'Do Anything You Want To'. Alive on the other hand, was taped at Zion Train's Bass Odyssey event at The Rocket last December, as trailed on DJ's internet page back in issue 180. This is a sweaty mix of pounding dub and - compared to the sweetness of Single Minded - all traces of chill have been removed for heads-down hedonism. In the live setting the band give every track their all, even last years smooth and soulful single 'Rise' is given the full-on gabba treatment!

Combining both sides of the Zion Train coin is a great "all you ever wanted to know but were afraid to ask" introduction to the band and their story so far, even if presenting snapshots of their way-of-life underground live shows with the some sugary sweet Europop singles does leave you with more questions than answers... 8/10

Saturday, February 01, 1997

The Cranberries - Doors and Windows (Island)

The much heralded "Doors And Windows" album by the Cranberries is the first release on the new mixed-media format Rainbow CD. In an effort to combine the benefits of all the different computer and multimedia formats, Philips Media (in conjunction with M/B Interactive of New York) and Island Records have produced a disc that will play on Macintosh and PC CD-Rom drives, CD-i players as well as normal audio CD players. Unlike other multimedia formats, a computer or CD-i player can read the mixed data tracks separately from audio tracks so you can choose whether you want to just listen to the Cranberries songs or experience an interactive investigation into their world. The audio here is very collectable indeed and features three different versions of "Zombie" (including an edit of the original demo), a live version of "Dreams", three other tracks, background loops of seven tracks and a further 40 minutes of conversation and Irish blarney. The multi-media includes 10 minutes of Quicktime video boxes, 5 minutes of full screen video, 90 pictures, lyric sheets and vox pops. All this is accessible though a Cranberries-style settee interface, not a million miles away from the cover of their first album, "Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?". You can click you mouse on different members of the band to hear anything from stories behind the songs or more important day-to-day facts ("I like Guinness!" says one if continually probed!). One of the most important and collectable interactive discs of the year. Although the interactive element could wear thin on repeated plays, thanks to Rainbow CD, the disc can be played on a conventional Hi-Fi for more long-term enjoyment.


This review also published in: Record Collector

Janet Jackson - Design of a Decade (Virgin)

Following Record Collector's complete history of Janet Jackson's career to date (back in April '95's issue), A&M Records and Janet herself took a retrospective look last autumn which resulted in "Design Of A Decade". A thorough and well-packaged project, "Design Of A Decade" covered a 'Best Of...' compilation album, video, limited edition CD of rare tracks and a clutch of important new remixes. But how can a 'Best Of...' omit three of her most recent singles? Why were tracks remixed only for the UK? And just how important are those "Rare" tracks anyway?

The story of "Design Of A Decade" dates back to when Janet signed with Virgin Records in 1990. Having spent the previous ten years recording for A&M, it was a natural assumption that her ex-label would do as any other, issue a compilation album to capitalise on the music they still owned the rights to. However rumour has it that, in an unprecedented move, Janet had a clause written into her contract with Virgin stating that when A&M decided to release a compilation album she could go back to them and record two last tracks. That's how even though Janet Jackson is a Virgin Records artist, her past two singles "Runaway" and "Twenty Foreplay" have been releases on A&M.

Given that Janet Jackson's first two long-players for A&M, her eponymously titled debut back in 1980 and 1981's "Dream Street", were only medium sellers this left "Design Of A Decade" only two albums and two new songs for a 'Best Of'. But in another unprecedented move they licensed two singles from Virgin's "janet." album and again won a coup. The first track licensed was the 1991 hit "That's The Way Love Goes" (the biggest single from the "janet." album), the second was the 1994's "Whoops Now". Being that the latter had been "hidden" on the "janet." LP (Ms Jackson had never wanted the song released in its own right) and not mentioned on the track listing, it's glory came when released as a single to promote Virgin's 1994 compilation "janet.remixed". Released that is, but not actually included on the album. So when A&M got their hands on the rights to include "Whoops Now" on "Design Of A Decade", they must have been rubbing their hands in glee as due to ineptitude at Virgin Records, they were giving the song it's first proper album release!

Given the shear amount of singles lifted from Janet Jackson's "Control" and "Rhythm Nation" albums, there's no shortage of well-known songs on "Design Of A Decade". And her 1989 hit with Luther Vandross "The Best Things In Life Are Free" was also added (although without the rap from Ralph T which featured in the original - another contractual problem?). Sixteen tracks in all, although these paled into insignificance with the release of a second CD of rare tracks and mixes. The first of these, "Young Love (12" Dance Mix)", was the B-side of her second single back in 1993 (and was again used for a B-side with "What Have You Done For Me Lately" in 1986). "Diamonds (Cool Summer Mix Edit)", the Herb Alpert track of 1987 which featured Janet on backing vocals, also appears. Also worth investigating are a string of early tracks (such as Don't Stand Another Chance" and "French Blue") which can be re-assessed for the first time on CD.

Rounding off the disc of rare - but un-anotated - extra tracks is one of David Morales new remixes of "When I Think of You". Comparing this to Shep Pettibone's (the Morales of the mid-80s!) remix of the same track on the accompanying video shows just how far the art of remixing has come in ten short years. To say nothing of the art of DJing, as anyone who caught Pete Tong's Essential Selection mix-up of "The Best Things In Life Are Free" and "What Have You Done For Me Lately" on Radio 1 will agree! In fact UK DJ's were given some exclusive promos of "Runaway"/"When I Think Of You" to promote the compilation. The latter was remixed by both Morales and Farley & Heller and one month after the official release of the single, the dancefloor promotion kicked in again with another 12" double-pack featuring a remix of "Runaway" by Junior Vasquez and house versions especially for UK dancefloors of "When I Think Of You" by Deep Dish.

The home video for "Design Of A Decade" is worth mentioning for its inclusion of the colourised promo for "Love Will Never Do (Without You)" (directed by Herb Ritts), "Runaway" and "Whoops Now"; all three of which are seen for the first time on this compilation. Other tracks like "Lets Wait Awhile" also take on special significance having been used as back-drops played on on-stage video screens on Janet's last world tour. The 90 minute tape rounds off with a backstage 'making of' the "Runaway" video, featuring an up-to-date interview with Ms Jackson herself.

The problem with video compilations for the collector is that they are so often released to early in a projects lifetime. For instance the "janet." video album appeared before "Whoops Now" was released and could be included and so was one track short. Similarly the "Design Of A Decade" video did not hang on for the inclusion of "Twenty Foreplay". But then it always leaves the fans wanting more and despite this, "Design Of A Decade" has achieved its goal of being perhaps the world's first non-cash-in Greatest Hits LP! As Janet herself said, "I wanted to put out something very special for my fans. I wanted them to know how much I appreciate their loyalty; it's important for me to return their love. That's why I co-wrote two new songs - and why I wanted "Design Of A Decade" to have a unique presentation."

Monday, April 01, 1996

Kibu - No Nation EP (Rising High)


A quick turn-around from the Dave Campbell, former member of Ubik who here turns in a hard metallic industrial house 12", very much in the style of Die Krupps. This is banging in the true sense of the word, but the better tracks are Trembler and Solid Air which take on a more wierd air.


This review also published in: On magazine

Saturday, April 01, 1995

It's Thinking! (Prime Records)

Prime Records of Holland are turning out some of the most arty European house and techno music. Their latest bunch of releases are as varied as they are interesting. Parallel 9's 'Gnosis/Helix' sounds like a tranced-up instrumental version of Inner City. Trance Induction's 'Capita Selecta' is high on melody on tracks like 'Robogroove 4' and the upliftingly joyous 'Extra Terrestrial Welcome Song 2'. Trance Induction is Tjeerd Verbeek who also records for the Sabrettes label. Hyperion is another of Sensurreal's pseudonyms and their 'It's Thinking' 12" has much of their trademark string sound but with more of a club vibe. Wicked. 'Predator', Primes newest release by Children Of A New Generation is a zinging, knocking techno track that moves into more jazzy circles on the 11 minute b-side 'Prey'. Prime is a very prolific label and one to watch. So get down to your import store or - better still - get over to Holland and check them out!


This review also published in: On magazine

William Orbit - Strange Cargo Hinterland (N-Gram)

The fourth in Orbit's journey that has straddled the house boom and taken its own style off into new directions. Like some of System 7's happier moments and with funky bass and aireated vocal not a million miles away from Jah Wobble, this will be an instant crowd-pleaser for the laid back masses. Head music with house beats more suited to the beach than the post-club drive home. Save it for the summer!


This review also published in: On magazine