Friday 30 July 2021


BEATS OF LOVE

12. Dreamcoast by Moy


I'M SO glad I've never been on a mailing list, sifting through promo's all fucking day. I'd be hopelessly prejudiced depending on whether someone seems sorted or not and probably plug records that in truth I'm not too keen on. Or worse, confide in the wrong people that I don't actually like it.

When Damo B's new label, 
Emotec came to my attention. my first thoughts were recalling the time I went into his local and recklessly bought a strip of some guy's MS medication. I was paralyzed down my left side for hours and endured a facial tic for fucking days. What's worse is that I gave my friend's brother some, and he panicked and made his way to A & E. She didn't speak to me for months.



Damo B has always been one of Shaw's live wires and one of the few people I could sit on a GM Bus with in 1996 and discuss Photek. Despite his local being far more insane back then. Because his label was brought to my attention, I was prejudiced in wanting to like it out of sheer nostalgia, but was a little apprehensive. Juno, the distributor, is a little work-a-day and the art-work was pretty non-existent. 

Utilitarianism, precise, and clear, are words I find synonymous with my limited experience of today's Manchester underground, and this sleeve. Luckily, I can forgive the lack of psychedelic buffoonery and still listen to this with an open mind. Thankfully, Moy's music is the trip. Three of the four tracks are a little route one, but no doubt sound top drawer during a spangled evening out. This opener, however, properly sucks you in for a far more rewarding at home listen. 


Thanks to the 90s influences springing today's Australian break beat driven house (some of which is really exciting) into shape, there is something already familiar about this. Before the ethereal vocals kick in and the squelchy acid lines and the devastating bass-line knock me completely out of my comfort zone. Played twice it starts to make more sense as I start to feel the dripping warehouse sweat again and after the third spin I'm digging out Hawtin's remix of Do Da Doo before settling into one of those nights until the missus finally shouts in exasperation 'Enough!'  

I really hope Damo B's label goes from strength to strength coz he's off to a fucking flyer. 

https://www.juno.co.uk/junodaily/2021/07/21/juno-daily-in-the-mix-with-emotec-records/




Friday 23 July 2021


BEATS OF LOVE 

11. Together (Illegal Version) by Barry Mason

OF THE handful of DJ's I know commanding large audiences and travelling around the world, I'd say they possibly encounter a dozen really special moments a year. Most DJ's I know who may travel twice a year, probably one or two. Then there are others who could say five in their lifetime. I'm safely going to say that they all live for a large part of their lives in their own imaginations.


It's what separates music obsessives from record obsessives like me. Music obsessives always have about ten gigs on the go and buy into the bands they love and are seeped in the reality of it all, whereas record obsessives can't generally afford gigs, and don't stay loyal to anyone in particular. 



Both egocentric and idealist, we pursue different utopian musical landscapes, simultaneously where everyone is deliriously wasted, fucking cool, and totally subsumed by our records, in our imagination. Special moments occur when this actually happens and not when singing back songs with beer foaming around your mouth. So hardly ever.  

2 great style books that saw light of day, DJH's Raving'89 that collected the photos and words of Neville and Gavin Watson, and Dave Swindell's Ibiza'89, feed the imagery. As do the faces that leave an indelible impression on my own memory bank. It's little coincidence that the folk who make it in my book are the folk who could easily grace such pages and impressions. Not me then.

Imaginary parties don't pay and you never get any praise, but the punters never age either, which means not everything you play has to have a sunset in mind. Admittedly, it's childish and futile trying to control the soundtrack and these imaginary parties, but this track really wouldn't exist in any other time and space for me. 1984 could easily be 2034. 


Italo-disco is often at the more rough-and-ready end of the cosmic spectrum and tends to drive along rather than chug. They tend to take you into deep space on a few synth lines and overwork the drum machines. This track is seemingly simple, yet manages to do both. It's only when it finishes that you realize how bloody good it is and how far you've travelled. 

The sleeve is intriguing, if a little garish, as is Venice's Superadio records. Great name for a label and yummy dark blue vinyl too. The vocals sit on the wrong side of cheese and sound similar to his other disappointing twelves, but this mix is a revelation. Not too kitsch and not too high-minded, it traverses a fine line between delirium, cool, and crisp, brilliantly.

Nobody I know in real life would lose themselves in its elasticity, and nobody I know in real life would see the worth of pounding it out for the full seven minutes. But at least my imaginary happening is going fucking nuts.   

 http://www.gavinwatsonarchive.com/raving89 

  https://www.creativereview.co.uk/dave-swindell-ibiza-89-photography-book/




Friday 16 July 2021

BEATS OF LOVE

10. Heavenly Trax (Jonny Nash remix) by Cos/Mes

FIRST WEEK I've not bought anything in absolute aeons, so grabbed the first necessary tune at hand, which is this. Jonny Nash was an entry point into more calming musical waters. 



Thanks to DJH, Lovefinger's ESP Institute label was on my radar, and his sometimes act with Tako Reyenga, Sombrero Galaxy, made the most happening music on it, until I heard this wow of a remix. 



One of my favourite shows ever was the Aficionado promoted Land of Light, his wonderful collaboration with Kyle Martin, on a snowy late March evening in 2013. Well, snowy until I arrived in town dressed like an Eskimo in a sauna. Everyone not from Shaw, (everyone) was dressed in more fitting spring attire. It redefined what entertainment could and should be and definitely inspired SFH, as did his label Melody As Truth that surfaced the following year. 

He contributed a 'victorious, anthemic, rooftop dance' to the abstruse Snaker series. He has produced quite possibly my favourite Music From Memory record, from many, with his Make A Wilderness LP, which is a work of pure genius. He's also the only remixer to have added something of value to the majestic Tommy AwardsBasically, I've followed the guy's upward trajectory. However, let's rewind back to this. An early effort that still sounds seriously masterful and more than highly accomplished. In 2010, the world was getting really loud and sounding like a shitty early 90s hoover-remix, the type the mighty Reese would snap into tiny shards. Whilst also looking like a desperate, down on its luck celeb, swapping the crack-den for the magic bus.

Now, it's far worse, with folk bypassing fear altogether during a global pandemic and sounding much more angry, berserk even. And looking like they've used up all the world's ink to spell 'mum' gruffly on their necks. Basically, a collective and unisex, dunderhead macho-ism, is now shouting off its own furrowed eyebrows. And it sounds and looks horrible. Little wonder soothing horizontal musical-mind pinball is still the proper way to escape it. Deflecting one soothing yummy beat straight off another. And nothing screams soothing horizontal musical-mind pinball more than this track. 

He pretty much started from scratch by changing its rhythmic pulse by adding instrumentation to create fresh tropical layers and a toned down vocoder to add a depth that makes this remix the archetypal soothing horizontal musical-mind pinball tune. It pre-dates a lot of lazily labelled new-age house music by a few months at least, although someone will no doubt correct me and point out many early 90s B-sides which don't really count.

I'm talking analogue obsessed disco diverging new-age house music of the highest order. The type now given over to a whole genre of house music in stores. It's fucking ground-breaking, yet surprisingly, still sounds incredible. Add the word ground-breaking to most things and you usually have a sure-fire anti-climax.

If you're bypassing the fear and not giving a fuck about anyone but yourself, do it because you are alone on a hammock on your own island, with this playing loud, and for no other reason.

LISTEN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3MmWWfSbyg




Friday 9 July 2021


BEATS OF LOVE

9. Sałatka z Bananów by Wojciech Jagielski


LIKE A lot of folk, I fell in love with The Very Polish Cut Outs early edit series featuring Ptaki and Maciek Sienkiewicz, but it was Basso's infectious enthusiasm that turned me onto this gem of a track. Nothing new there then. A well-presented gatefold album whose sleeve-notes tell an intriguing story is already sounding a bit familiar. Yes, it owes a debt to Finders Keepers, but who doesn't? 

Synthesizers were in the rain and shine in 80s Britain and sound-tracked just about everything, but what is shocking to know is how they were rendered invisible through economic inequality behind the iron curtain. The Western financial equivalent would be a modest state-of-the-art studio set up. 


These stark inequalities mean we're listening to folk affluent enough to travel out of Poland to buy synthesizers. Has anyone ever been in an audio shop and not seen a Sting LP lying around? Has anyone ever been in one and not seen a middle-aged guy in a band tee-shirt? Has anyone not seen a £20,000 speaker lying around? No, I thought not. Safe to say we can stereotype Wojciech Jagielski a little then. 


This languid but entrancing track is unsurprisingly the foreground for a background meditative lector/narrative for relieving stress via Isometric training, as Discogs inform me, and on a cassette released by Polish telly. Top digging skills on this one then. 

Translating into Banana Salad, this instrumental genius has never been more needed as we face a barrage of absolute fucking nonsense from all sides in our insane daily lives. With so many online data leaks, so many freshly enlightened folk and so many far saner folk on waiting lists for mental health services, self-help is the best way forward. 

Just press play and a calmness and serenity becomes the order of the day. With just the right amount of strangeness thrown in for good measure. The synthesizer, popularized in the West and a weak component of its telly music, sounds as exotic as it does bonkers. Crazy good, on this breezy composition. Somewhat richer in sound than Western counterparts that speak more about the composer than the instrument, I guess.

In fact, the whole double LP is a highly memorable listening experience. I want to gauge on a lot of 80s Polish telly now to hear more subversive musical interludes.  




Friday 2 July 2021



 BEATS OF LOVE

8. Changing Factors by Claude Young 

THIS TRACK has been on a journey with me as a totally neglected, un-played B-side, in the main. I was totally hooked instead on Shake's March Into Darkness off the same release that segued nicely into LFO's Loop Fuse mix and had me sonic stomping for at least 6 months.  

I vividly recall walking into Vinyl Exchange after a sleepless night and day spent with Baldie who was still with me long after the Lionrock show/after-show had ended, while I stood nervously watching Marc rifle through this and some Spacemen 3 LP's on his counter. In my sleep deprived stupor I was semi-convinced they were mine and asked to inspect them further. 'As if I would be daft enough to sell these,' I argued, until realizing that the pile of records was not mine. Unfathomably, about 6 years later, I sold my copy. The regret wasn't immediate, but not far off.  

I love the internet coz I can consume at my own pace in my own idiosyncratic manner. I love the fact that most of the tunes I buy new are sealed, as I no longer have to listen to the fake excuses for them being the last copy. I love the internet coz there's no big sell, although I do miss Moonboots and Steve Yates behind the counter, who both turned me onto some proper treasured goodies. I love the internet because of Nuron.  I love the internet coz I can fall in love with records again, or discover new records. Or, as is the case here, fall in love with a track you never knew existed despite once owning it. 

I hate the internet because of Mamacita. I hate the internet coz you can't put a face to people when things go wrong.  After sitting in my wants list for an age, I finally decided to dive in on payday and buy this. The seller I had dealt with many times before, so I paid him promptly.

No word after 4 days, so I politely enquired about the shipping time. A week, and still no word, so clicked on the site's not responding link. 3 days later and still no reply but was heartened to see so much belated negative feedback from sellers who also had to wait an age before receiving their tunes. Then to my surprise I got an e-mail saying 'seller suspended.' Shit, that wasn't supposed to happen. I hate the internet. Thankfully, I finally received a message from the seller to apologize, explaining that his health has been poor and that he will post my record out despite taking a break. 4 days later, the postie dropped it off, and it was in better nick than described. I love the internet almost as much as this tune right now. 

I also feel as bit silly as I should've been locked into this 26 years ago. The 909 programming is masterful and it just effortlessly teases some of Detroit's finest beats in a truly incessant yet fluttering groove that is perfectly paced for both the head and hips. This era's finest tracks haven't really been surpassed, which makes them far more important sound documents than mere nostalgia triggers. As valid as any new releases.

This track is living, magical music, from one of many techno pioneers, and thankfully I'm finally locked into it, eyes shut tight, dancing in a state of time suspension, and it feels good. Fuck yeah, it feels brilliant, in fact.