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Archive for the 'Dance' Category

Tonight at Bazaar: Primal Thursdays

Head on over to Bazaar tonight to check out the first edition of Primal Thursdays.

I’ll be deejaying from 10-11 on the night, so get there early and see if they throw me off the decks for spinning my electro-ish/krunk style @ Bazaar! I give it about a 50/50 shot right now = )

Also up on the night is RIck Sierra and DJ Hellfyre.. should prove to be quite interesting.

This is quite possibly my last Atlanta gig!
That means come on out tonight and say high! hacks@resonatormag.com for more info

LOOSE YOUR INHIBITIONS AT BAZZAAR ATLANTA, THIS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2007, STARTING @ 10 PM.

ENJOY SIGNATURE MARTINIS AND MIXED DRINKS FROM THE BAR, DELICIOUS APPETIZERS, MUSIC, MINGLING AND DANCING!!

ATLANTA RESIDENTS DJ HELLFYRE, CHOYCE/HACKS AND RICK SIERRA THROW DOWN THE LATEST PROGRESSIVE/ELECTRO/HOUSE TO MAKE YOUR BODY MOVE.

VISIT MYSPACE.COM/MODAATLANTA FOR MORE INFO.

THIS IS NOT A PARTY TO BE MISSED!!

XOXO
MODA ATLANTA

..





Hacks has some gigs this week.

Tonight: listen to me throw down some tunes for WREK’s The Mobius. Show goes from 7-9 and you can hear me from 7:30 till 9:00.

http://www.wrek.org
or 91.1 on your radio dial if you’re in Atlanta.
http://themobius.livejournal.com/

Also!

This Friday at Mid City Cafe, you can catch me tagging with some friends all night long.

Come check it out! I was gonna post up an mp3 or 2, but our server hates me right now = [





Super 13 Remix Friday!

It’s our 13th week doing the remix thing Hacks does for “shits and wiggles” (that is to get you shaking on the dance floor… not something grosser) and it’s also Friday the 13th! How awesome! Unfortunately, unlucky 13 hit our beloved Hacks earlier this week and his laptop was stolen so he asked me to helm this week. I hope that I can do half as good a job as he does bringing you the stuff to make you move (again, your butt, not your bowels).

Anyway…

Our boys The Presets have put out a little more than an EP, little less than an LP collection of remixes from the smashing Beams. It’s called, perhaps predictably but still cutely, Re-Sets. My favorite from it, probably unsurprisingly, is the Van She remix of “Are You the One?” It turns the relentless bassline of the original into an unexpected wall of feedback guitars.

Are You the One (Van She Remix) — The Presets

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Are you sick of Justice vs. Simian yet? Yeah? WELL TOUGH. DJ Hell has done a great version for Gigolo (now there are two names we haven’t heard in ages) that funks out the bassline, strips down the vocals, and sexes up the whole thing with a haunted house harpsichord line that makes me want to listen to this song all over again.

Never Be Alone (DJ Hell Remix) — Justice vs. Simian

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Speaking of Simian, the Mobile Disco’s “Beat” has gotten a pleasantly heavy on the highs treatment by a bunch of upstart kids… The Teenagers, to be exact. Take this one for the ride home from the club… Still upbeat, but pretty enough to chill you out for sleep.

It’s The Beat (The Teenagers Remix) — Simian Mobile Disco

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Next up is a match made in absolute heaven: Sebastian takes the wheel for a remix of Kavinsky’s “Testarossa Overdrive” that makes me wish I had a sleek black sportscar that would talk to me (or at least get up to 160 mph on a dark, winding highway). This one is just begging for a good car stereo and a heavy foot on the gas pedal.

Testarossa Overdrive (Sebastian Remix) — Kavinsky

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Next is Granny D reminding you that Sweden is still the best place on earth for music with the rushiest, blissed out trance tune I’ve heard in a long time… And it just happens to be a remix of our darling Justin Timberlake! I’d kill to hear this one with my eyes closed under flashing lights in a fog filled room (TAKE NOTE, Studio B DJs!). Granny D’s got a few more up on MySpace as well as the funniest MySpace name EVER.

My Love (Granny D Loves Steve and Sebastian Remix) — Justin Timberlake

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Here’s the Granny’s 30 minute full-length– mostly gems, with a couple of unfortunate cheese tracks at the end, but still a good time and worth a listen.

Granny D presents Nu Brinner Hela Skogen

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And with that… I’ll just remind everyone that the Klaxons will be at the B (as the cool kids are calling it) tonight– and here’s their damn convincing take on “My Love.” See you on the dance floor!

My Love (Live) — The Klaxons

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Trashscapes of the past, Invasion of the future

It got frustrating, nay, tiring, attempting to write any review whatsoever of Ellen Allien and Apparat’s amazing Orchestra Of Bubbles album last year-it seemed that the rock kids were climbing out of the woodworked rafters to heap praise upon “techno electronica”, or whatever name they deemed fitting at the moment that didn’t involve invoking Warp records, the word “grime” or the phrase “IDM”. The warm, melodic, vocal-heavy sound that Ellen has, via her Bpitch Control label, been creating, crafting and releasing, is a huge contradiction to what the Blood Brothers-and-vegan-tattoos beard-rock set had been conjuring in their heads as “rave-worthy electronic music”. As soon as they discovered last year’s Bubbles, Ellen’s collaboration with former beau and Shitkatapult honcho Sascha “Apparat” Ring, and one of the top 10 albums of 2006, as a highly listenable piece of work, suddenly everyone, from the dude at the Starbucks to plumber Bob, wants a piece of the Allien.

To reiterate and simplify, it became frustrating to, in a sense, lose the mystery and the magic of Ellen to the grabbing hands grabbing all they could (all for themselves, after all)-many of these were the verysame electronic nay-sayers who claimed the music had no life, had no breath, had no heart and soul. These rock kids jumping wholesale on the “tech train” were the ones who, as I’ve been quoted as saying in far too many drunken bitch (or is it bpitch?) fits now, claim their favorite song is “Daft Punk Is Playing At My House” but wouldn’t know if Daft Punk WAS playing at their house (and wouldn’t dance if Bangalter was there or not). Bpitch Control is the label that, a half-decade or more ago, brought me back to dance music when I wanted to abandon what had become a Tiesto-and-tapas genre. As such, it came hard, the ever-ubiquitous nature of the VeganForkGum Ellen Allien “we dunno what this is, but we know we may possibly like it we think” update in the music realm, having listened to and loved the cold, starkness of “Stadtkind” in a way that was near-lifesaving, and having had the transcendant moments of Ellen’s breakthrough “Berlinette” cascade into that split-second of time-stop that happened the first time I heard the end of Ellen’s remix of Covenant’s “Bullet”, when, after all bass and mids are cut, she slams 110% back into the song and orchestrates a death-defyin, heart-stopping climax and rides the song to the end. For a moment last year, I was even waiting for CocaineBlunts to start keeping track of every time she drank a beer. Thankfully for my soul, that didn’t happen.

Also thankfully for my soul, my need to escape being, at my base, an electronic music journalist (in a rock world that had suddenly decided to do a 180 spin and embrace anything that sounded like what I’d listened to at 16) wasn’t a detraction from the effect Orchestra Of Bubbles had on me; if anything, I took my love for Ellen underground. She’s only been booked in Atlanta once, on the ill-fated tour that found her trapped at the Canadian border of the U.S., unable to enter due to Bush regulations (I think he just had an extreme fear of her last name-he had just recently started watching the X-Files at the time), and so not getting to experience the BPC sound in a live environment left me with nothing but her sound, the last few notes of “Bubbles”, her voice “like an echo in the woods”, in my headphones.

However, as I tune myself back in to the mechanorganic machine of hype that is the daily music blog grind, I’m finding a lack of anyone talking about Ellen’s recent projects, or what she’s doing with Bpitch Control. She’s slipped off the hype-dar, and thus irrevelant.

Fuck that. It’s time to turn this over to someone with an emotion invested in this stuff, with a love for the sound.

Consider this my own personal coming-from-a-place-of-adoration Catching Up With Ellen Allien.

Bpitch IS, hands down, the greatest electronic label in existence today-it sounds immediately familiar and yet like nothing else-with a warmth and accessability lost on stuff like Traum, M_nus and other labels that fit the “German Techno” stereotype (and stereo boredom) and yet without the dumbed-down crap-for-the-kids watertripe of, say, the current output of ‘Ed Banger. Ellen never jumped on the dance rock scene-nor did she have a need, as her dance shit just flat-out rocks, and harder than anything Justice can do. (Just check the video for Trashscapes)

To show what’s been going on in her little corner of Berlin, Ellen recently did a mix for XLR8R Magazine with a handful of top-grade BPC tunes and a few exclusives.

Ellen Allien: No Snow In Berlin-A BPC label mix

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(Tracklist available at XLR8R)
Even in promotional “no one’s gonna hear this, really” mix-form, Ellen gives it her all-I really adore the way “No Snow In Brooklyn” starts off in a melancholy, somber mood and slowly picks up steam, but never really leaves a grey, bleak, wintery level.


To give a visual to the sound, Ellen’s also been tapped to host the latest issue of DVD-Mag Time Out, as a guide through Berlin.

Watch for more on this when it hits the Resonator Mag office-we’re anxiously awaiting.

Late last year, Ellen teamed up with Matt Dear, under his technofuckery guise of Audion, for a split 12’. Entitled “Just A Man/Just A Woman”, each took a side to craft a track of their own and remix the other’s work.

Ellen Allien: Just A Woman

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Ellen’s own “Just A Woman” is a subdued, highly intellectual piece of mood-tech, the sort of dark piece of overcast machine rattle that she perfected on Thrills.

Audion: Just A Man(Ellen Allien remix)

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It’s her reworking of the Audion track that’s the standout of the entire record. Showing off those ghetto leanings that we last heard in the Chronic-esque string workings throughout her last solo album (why, oh why, can’t we get her to do an album with T.I. and therefore take up a few-month residency in the ATL?), she chops and screws Dear Matthew’s piece of floor funk into a slow-and-low cruising jam. Germans on Gin and Juice, this one is.

Also out late last year was the long-overdue album of reworkings of tracks by Paul Kalkbrenner, whose “Der Berserker” will long stand as one of the most standout tracks ever to be released on BPC.

Paul Kalkbrenner: Queer Fellow (Ellen Allien & Apparat remix)

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Ellen and SaschApparat turned Kalkbrenner’s “Queer Fellow” into an reverberated echo, the sound of a stormy morning’s heavy clouds-there’s a hard and held hand on the bass here, and it makes the song all the better for it.

And, finally, the proof of the true conquering, genre-busting and wall-breaking Ellen’s sound has done. As a part of the re-release of Beck’s “The Information”, Ellen’s been tapped to remix “Cellphone’s Dead”.

Beck: Cellphone’s Dead (Ellen Allien remix)

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Full disclosure: I know it’s completely taboo to participate in the music industry circus and not lavish praise on every single move Beck makes, but I don’t- for the simple reason that I feel he just makes too many. I barely had time to get over “Midnight Vultures” when I had to pay attention to “Sea Change” and was caught unawares with “Guero”, and so I didn’t hear a single thing from “The Information”.

With that being said, four words on Ellen’s Beck re-rub:

This. Is. Just. Awesome.

Gorgeous, lush, a bit hallucinogenic, with a droning bassline that has a hypnotic pull down and under. There’s the bare minimum use of Beck’s voice, but what is there is used to perfection, and the few breaks of hollow, tinny snare behind him add a feel of emptiness, loss and confusion.

If I had to pinpoint, to press a label to, to define, Ellen’s true genius, the reason why her stuff from Braincandy sounds so utterly, astoundingly different from anything on Orchestra Of Bubbles, and yet has strinkingly common threads, it would be this imbuing of Rock songwriting emotive aesthetic with a powerful, ass-and-heart shaking electronic wizardry (not to mention a sheen of cool). She did it on the “Bullet” remix, she does it with her own stuff, she did it on the tour with Apparat, and she’s doing it again here-bringing the rockers and the ravers together.

In a way, it’s a true testament to my music snobbery and elitism-my inability to be glad the kids who like the Foo Fighters are now listening to German Techno. At the same time, though, Ellen’s been sowing the seeds of a common ground since the very beginng-her early 12” “Breakfast On Rocks” goes from a low-end tonepoem to a flat-out Metal jam depending upon the speed at which it’s played, and she’s always carried herself with an air of (cult of) personality shirked by other dance producers. It’s as much her music as her persona that makes her so damn addictive.

The sheer amount of work she’s done, tracks she’s given the magic breath of life to, makes it vital, exciting, and not a little daunting to keep on top of her sound-a sound that keeps ringing as achingly, impossibly fresh and amazingly powerful, and a sound that continues to be the textbook definition of what IS good electronic music. To ignore even a breath from Ellen is a mistake.





Dance Till You Drop (So You Don’t Drop Out)

Hey, kids! Trixie here, for the first time on the new site. As many of you know, I’m finishing up my Master’s Degree at Rave School (as my roommate calls it), so this semester is already driving me to want nothing more than a good release. While shaking it on the floor to some dance punk is good for half of what ails me, I’m really missing my undergrad days when I would hop in the car, drive to the nearest (or not so nearest) party and lose it to some boshing, hard progressive house or drum and bass. As such, I’m sharing with you what I have been caning while programming microchips and writing lit reviews:

FC Shuttle have put out a lovely little double A-Side called Smaul02. “Zzzipper” is a humming slow burner, a perfect track for an opening DJ to warm a crowd up without knocking them out to early. “Hippozaun” starts out bubbly before finding a groove that effortlessly straddles anticipation and dread, two feelings ravers know go hand in hand more often than not. It’s perfect for opening the main set.

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Zzzipper — FC Shuttle

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Hippozaun — FC Shuttle

Both of these are available via eMusic– I’m not going to hand these out, since it’s both sides of a single, and I’d like to see someone supporting dance music artists again.

Next up is Hokkaido & Newman with “Sushi Room.” The release has three versions– Main, Dub, and Original, and they’re all good (and really distinct, unusual for progressive trance). I haven’t the SLIGHTEST idea who these guys are. All I know is that on the dub mix of this driving, 4 am and no where near close to going home gem, they bang harder than anything I’ve heard in a long time while still keeping a melody.

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Sushi Room (Dub) — Hokkaido and Newman

The rest of this EP is also available via eMusic.

If four on the floor isn’t really your speed, CLS & Wax have put out two slices of great drum and bass. “Full of Strange” is not so intelligent as to be only appropriate for cocktail parties (and everyone knows you can’t dance with a martini in your hand) but still manages to be pretty, late 90’s space sparkles threaded through rat-a-tat machine gun fire high hats. The flip is a little deeper, with a pinch of nu-jazz funk rendered pretentiousless with a synth arpeggio that calls to mind Zelda games on the Super Nintendo.

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Full of Strange — CLS and Wax

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Race is On — CLS and Wax

(Again, these are from a single– you can find these on eMusic.)

Finally, if you just can’t dance to anything that doesn’t have indie rock cred and you’d rather be seen out without pants than phat ones, Sufjan collaborater and long-time friend of Resonator (through Shaun) My Brightest Diamond has a remix album on the way. While most of it is unlikely to have glowstick wavers shove their heads in bassbins, the Gold Chains Panique Mix of “Freak Out” makes me crave a wide open, sweaty, dark dance floor like an overheated raver craves free bottled water.

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Freak Out (Gold Chains Panique Mix) — My Brightest Diamond

Given the thesis crunch, the last might be the most appropriate one for me to lose my mind to these days… If you’re freaking out in your cubicle or classroom, give these a chance and make people jealous that you’re so cool that you can shake it in your desk chair like there’s nothing at all on your mind.