Ok, let’s call an on-repeat summer tune an on-repeat summer tune: other than music I’m no longer allowed to write about here and that you wouldn’t want to hear about anyway (a certain band that rhymes with “SnoldFlay” has a new album out that’s embarrassingly like U2, and I <3 it), I’ve been listening to nothing but Mystery Jets since I fell heart-first into the Twenty One album.
I recently crossed paths with an epic reconfiguration of “Two Doors Down”, which reinvents the song’s not-quite encounte, strips the Bowie-esque sax solo and turns various sonic facets of the song into a sunset ponderer.
Mystery Jets: Two Doors Down (Duke Dumont Reconstruction)
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If there was some sort of massive crossblending that created a cohesive, nearly-ten-minute track that allowed the muted endtones of the Duke Dumont mix to explode with the aforementioned saxophone from the original, only to have that lead into the full original version of the song…that would be heaven. Someone get started.



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