- Primitive music
- Leftfield
- Electro pop
- Tracker music
- Chiptune
- Experimental electro
- Glitch electro
5/29/2015
[Teaser of the day] Ryukau - ETU
[Teaser of the day] TheFloozies - Almost Morning feat. Gibbz
[Teaser of the day] Andrew Howes - Radar Trap 2
- Krautrock
- Psychedelic rock
- Acid rock
- Lo-fi
- Noise rock
- Psych-rock
- DIY
- Avant-rock
- Experimental rock
Piyama Party - Michael Esta Vivo (2010)
/Electro-rock, Alternative
rock, Hip-hop, Synth rock, Crossover, Country, Indietronica/
Comment: the Mexican project`s Piyama Party`s
issue reflects substantially to the nature of ideology of their home label
Delhotel Records (also from Mexico). Their music is a sort of crossover concept
where low toned guitars/garage-y hirsute electric guitars are tightly mixed up
with electronic rhythms, magniloquent synths and other stylistic side jumps (for
instance, Historias Feas is drawing
upon the country rhythm/guitar strumming, and Rapera (featuring Pipe Llorens) is a simplistic hip-hop bastard). There
are brought forth 7 tracks coming to the end at a length of 17 minutes only.
Ultimately it can be admitted it is a solid release with different shifts and
ingredients.
Teddy Bear –Euphoria (2013)
/House, Club dance,
Electronic pop/
Comment: indeed, Teddy
Bear`s 2-track issue deserves its title and resonates with the sensual cover
print because of swaying somewhere in between filter-heavy house music and
elements wafting out of the club dance room. More concretely, with regard to
filtered sounds it chimes truly in an oneiric way being counterbalanced with
thumping bass frequencies and deliberately repeated vocal sample bits which
soon will be distilled to emerge in a more chart-oriented way. However, this
issue can also be considered to be a part of the chillwave movement saturated
with sonorous breezes and mellifluous sound progressions. Excellent work by any
means. The issue is a part of the Japanese label Ceramic Records.
Pretty Lights - A Color Map of the Sun Disc 1 (2013)
/Sampledelic, Breaks, Downtempo,
Chill out, Urban music, Soul, Big beat, Mood music, Hip-hop, Electronic pop/
Comment: this is the first
disc of the album A Color Map of the Sun
which, however, fulfils your greatest expectations conjured up by Denver, USA
based producer Derek Vincent Smith`s previous outings. This is the first issue
of him which is mixed up from his own recorded sounds by the method of trying
to emulate different styles and different eras. More concretely, the first disc
includes 16 pieces made up of tectonic plate bass rhythms, cinematic soul
samples from the 60s/70s, and velvety sonic textures, drifting stylistically
somewhere in between funk, soul and hip-hop music. At times you can perceive
spaced-out feeling adding fairly otherworldly vibrations to the blend. On the
other side, it is not surprising at all because all these sources discerned
over there used to come out from the black music tradition which searching for
the redemption on Earth frequently focused upon the zenith and outer space
concepts (for instance, the afrofuturistic movement, and Sun Ra`s interstellar
metaphysics). By the way, one track features vocal delivery by Talib Kweli and
another by Eligh. Beautiful and beatific thought to energize your withered
soul. By kindred souls I recommend listen to such producers as Max Tannone, and
Chenard Walcker.
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