Liked on YouTube: Solomun live from Nordstern in Basel

Three hours of live stream from the Solomun set at Nordstern Basel.

In the night from Saturday (4th) to Sunday (5th of July):
Local Time: 1 AM – 4 AM (Sunday)
Mexico City: 6 PM – 9 PM (Saturday)
New York: 7 PM – 10 PM (Saturday)
Buenos Aires: 8 PM – 11 PM (Saturday)
London: 12 AM – 3 AM (Sunday)
Moscow: 2 AM – 5 AM (Sunday)
Tokio: 8 AM – 11 AM (Sunday)

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Hi peeps

Please note: At the beginning of our broadcast we had an overload in the recording.
Unfortunately we could not edit or repair the file. But from minute 18 all was fixed and the sound is crystal clear. We ask for your apologies and your understanding.

best your
Team Solomun

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Liked on YouTube: ZHU at Hakuba Iwatake in Nagano, Japan for Cercle

ZHU playing an exclusive Blacklizt DJ set at Hakuba mountains in Japan for Cercle.
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☞ ZHU
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Video credits:

Artists: ZHU
Venue: Hakuba mountains – Japan
Produced by Cercle
Executive producers: Philippe Tuchmann & Derek Barbolla
Film directed by: Pol Souchier & Derek Barbolla
Directors of photography: Houssam Omar & Haytham Omar
Drone pilot: Alexis Olas
Sound mastering: Laurent de Boisgisson
Post-production: Mathieu Glissant / Saison Unique Production


Special thanks to:
Chris Murray & Snow Machine for this partnership.

This artistic performance has been recorded live.

______

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Liked on YouTube: Cosmic Gate: Best Of 2020 Set (Miami Beach 18. DEC 20)

Join us for a 2 hour “Best Of 2020 set”, recorded in Miami Beach, Florida!

Tracklisting
01.) Fatum – Kensho
02.) Artbat & Sailor & I – Best Of Me
03.) Nora En Pure – Bartok
04.) Avira & Diana Miro – The Worship
05.) Aalson & Minorah – Last One
06.) Andy Duguid – Be
07.) Camelphat & Yannis Foals – Hypercolour (Artbat Remix)
08.) Tinlicker & Robert Miles – Children
09.) Mode Apart – Voyage
10.) York – On The Beach (Kryder Remix)
11.) Kolonie – Inception
12.) Above & Beyond – Blue Monday
13.) Cosmic Gate – Your Mind
14.) Andrew Rayel & Olivia Sebastianelli – Everything Everything (Cosmic Gate Remix)
15.) Camelphat & Artbat feat Rhodes – For A Feeling (Layton Giordani Remix)
16.) Joe Smooth – Promised Land (Cosmic Gate’s No Gravity Remix)
17.) Cosmic Gate – Universal Love
18.) Arkham Knights – Closing In
19.) Jerome Isma-Ae – Hold That Sucker Down (Charlotte De Witte Trance Remix)
20.) Cosmic Gate & Andrew Bayer – The Launch
21.) Armin Van Buuren & Avian Grays feat. Jordan Shaw – Something Real (Cosmic Gate Remix)

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Liked on YouTube: Recondite | SpringFestival Graz Dachstein Glacier (Austria)

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The German star producer Recondite performs an exclusive live set in perfect synch with the natural beauty of Dachstein Glacier hosting SpringFestival Graz 2020 livestream edition.

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Chris Wayfarer – Chroma EP

Chris Wayfarer is back on Colour in Music with an EP that once again shows his versatility and musicality. The Chroma EP features three original cuts as well as remixes by Nick Neimann and Mike Novatt.

The title track “Chroma” takes us on a more mystic journey with dubbed out stabs, ghostly pads and strings and a gently evolving lead that wraps itself nicely around the pounding, percussion heavy beat.

Nick Neimanns remix strips “Chroma” down to its bare essence, taking a few original chords and the lead while adding heavily modulated pads and a minimalistic house groove to boot.

The Mike Novatt remix of “Chroma” turns the moody original into a more uplifting chugger, with prominent afro percussion and a heavy clap at the centre of the groove, and an array of swirling synth flourishes that set the mood for the peak of the track.

On “Together”, Chris Wayfarer Teams up with Sebastian Klein to create a deep and sensual broken beat track that pairs jazzy drums with playful Keyboard melodies and lush brass stabs.

“Hello Little One” takes on an almost ethereal approach, with a broken 4-to-the-floor beat, wide-eyed piano chords, eerie leads and a filtered synth arpeggio that rises and falls like ocean waves.

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DJ Hell – House Music Box

Listen up! In the midst of the reawakening club scene DJ Hell returns with the album House Music Box (Past, Present, No Future). Unlike its predecessor Zukunftsmusik (2017), with his new work, Hell looks back to the glorious early days of House and Techno in Chicago, Detroit and New York City. Obvious points of references are the heroes that vibrated the dancefloor from the late 80s, i.e. luminaries like Ron Hardy, Frankie Knuckles and Lil’ Louis from the Chicago house scene, or the legendary radio shows of The Electrifying Mojo from Detroit. Not forgetting, of course, the NYC House of Larry Levan or the Nu Groove records from the early 90s – all of them serving as musical godfathers for Hell’s House Music Box.

Back to the roots. Accordingly, Hell’s Opus number six has become a classic album: House Music Box simply contains eight gripping new bangers from the groove manufacturer that is the super gigolo Hell. The record is not only a concept album about the beginnings of electronic DJ and club music, but also a danceable history lesson. This is already shown in the superb first single: ‘Out of Control’. A mighty stomping dancefloor monster where a killer bassline and an infectious synth riff meet. A vocal sample rightly demands ‘Don’t stop!’, because the magic that Hell has created with his controllers leaves one in a state of pure ecstasy.

The songs ‘Freakshow’ and ‘Haus Musik’ are musical bows to the innovative originators of house music in the windy city. On ‘Freakshow’, the vocoder vocals ‘Ron Hardy is the true creator of house music’ remembers the prematurely deceased DJ who was best known for his eclectic sets and radical edits. His influence even stretches to the album’s title, Music Box, whose namesake club Hardy often deejayed in. On ‘House Music’, nomen est omen naturally applies: over the flawless house from the quality Hell brand, he loops various samples, fragments of sentences such as ‘Acid comes from house music’, ‘Techno comes from house’, ‘Foundation of house music is’, or ‘Chicago house music’. The persistent repetition plus grooving beats, achieves an almost hypnotic effect allowing the music – thanks to the magic production of Hell – to speak for itself.

On ‘The Electrifying Mojo’, on the other hand, Hell honours the visionary and enigmatic Charles Johnson a.k.a. The Electrifying Mojo, whose radio show (airing from 1977 until the mid 80s) had a substantial influence on the development of techno in Detroit. As he frequently played Kraftwerk, for instance, the publicly shy Electrifying Mojo emerged as a key facilitator of future electronic music in the spirit of the Detroit-Dusseldorf axis.

It goes without saying that Kraftwerk – the prestige of German electronic music – shaped the background of Hell’s new record too, via the usage of vocoder vocals as a rhythmic element or the bass frequencies as the carrying foundation for each track. Clearly recognizable is the influence of Kraftwerk’s 1986 work Electric Café (now: Techno Pop) on the groovy track ‘Technicolor’. Fans of the ‘industrial folk music’ will hardly be surprised, as this was Kraftwerk’s working title for the record. Along with sound poetic vocals, Hell tickles a cool funk from the warm machine sounds over nimble bass lines, as on House Music Box he uses – not only for this track – the same analogue synths from the seventies as Kraftwerk once did.

The oeuvre of DJ Hell is famously characterised by his artistic desire to have a different approach to each album, while at the same time constantly providing an inner viscidity and cross references. One example is the theme of automobiles, influenced by Kraftwerk’s ‘Autobahn’: just think of songs like ‘Hellracer’ or ‘Car Car Car’. The car motive is again present on House Music Box, with the ambitious track ‘GPS’. Conceptually speaking, it is a highlight of the record: over sparse Roland drum machine beats, we can hear the female computer voice of a navigation device devising the fastest route to ‘destination Berlin nightlife’. This almost has a double meaning, as once inside the club, the music will guide the dancers.

There would be no DJ Hell album, without cover versions. Or, better called his idiosyncratic electronic editions of established hits new originals – referring to a term that Laibach coined. This definitely holds true for ‘The Revolution Will Not Be Televised’: his update of Gil Scott Heron’s soul classic turned into a veritable 4-on-the-floor version. The slogan, which originally came from the Black Power movement, carved out a remarkable career, not only thanks to several new versions, but equally used as an advertising slogan for bar chains. The fact that Hell takes up this track in the days of YouTube, Instagram and Facebook illustrates to us today that the idea of a political revolution is long gone. For that reason, all he keeps from the wordy original is its headline while the impulsive beats prove all the more, that at least the revolution of the dancefloor is nowhere near over.

Past, Present, No Future – even if Hell’s deep bow to the trailblazers and pioneers of electronic club music was already completed when the corona pandemic broke out, the subtitle of House Music Box proved apt even in the light of the circumstances. Especially as the club scene is so seriously affected by the coercive measures of the crisis. It is therefore quite prophetic that on ‘Jimi Hendrix’ you can hear pieces of the last interview that the guitarist gave shortly before his controversial death. “I can’t build anything right now, you know, because of the things that are happening right now. I just have to lay back and think about it all.” House Music Box is, in many ways, the right record at the right time. Because as DJ Hell speaks about his album: ‘House Music for me has always been a spiritual experience, a higher, different form of communication, so to speak’. So, let’s listen carefully to what he brings forth about his musical excursions in the Past, Present and Future of House.

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Max Cooper – Surge

Max Cooper returns to the core of his art with Earth – a four track EP including latest singles, ‘Reflect’ and ‘Swarm’.

Earth is a collection of beautiful, intricately scored electronic pieces accompanied with short films visualising epic scale earthly processes, human growth, storm surges, evolving ice formations and ballooning cityscapes.

Full of humanity, playfulness and powerful emerging intensity, the tracklist features layer after layer of otherworldly synthesis, harmony, clicks, fuzz and micro-rhythm. It’s music for those seeking emotional connection, as much as audiophiles and late night dark rooms, full of 3-dimensional binaural sound whizzing past your ears and around your head as constant low end harmonies wrap you inside a warm audio bath.

Max said of the final single, ‘Surge’:

“I don’t often sing on my tracks, but this one began as a vocal experiment which I built the rest of the synthesis around. Every time I added a layer I had to add another, the feeling in there pushed me to extremes of contrast, which I tried to let breathe with some half time broken beats leaving lots of space in the mix for the harmonic elements.

In parallel I had also started chatting to the storm chaser Kelly Delay, who captures the evolution of huge weather systems in Texas. The feelings and surging elements of the music seemed to go hand in hand with the feelings I associated with Kelly’s work, so I pushed that aspect of the music as much as I could.”

Following from recent contemporary classical album ‘Glassforms’ of reinterpreting Philip Glass scores with acclaimed pianist Bruce Brubaker, and his drum and bass remix of Henry Green, this EP exhibits the breadth of Cooper’s musical range.

For the first time in his career, Max has pushed the boundaries of his DIY-approach to making and releasing his work by creating the artwork for this EP, which features high-definition photographs of complex leaf vein structures. This series of images adorn the vinyl package, and are available as a series of limited edition giclée prints, printed on 300gsm minuet cotton rag using archival inks.

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Ella Minus – Acts Of Rebellion

Colombian musician Ela Minus announces her debut album, acts of rebellion, out October 23rd on Domino. Performed, produced and recorded entirely by herself, acts of rebellion is a complex manifesto on simplicity, a call to fight, to live, to be present. It’s a collection about the personal as political and embracing the beauty of tiny acts of revolution in our everyday lives.

Having worked extensively as a “synthesizer assembler”, Ela Minus has a vast breadth of knowledge associated with these electronic devices; which is why the album has been solely created using synthesizers she has designed and built herself. Recorded at her home studio, Minus’ appreciation for a variety of diverse genres allows her to put a unique spin on the exhausted electronic genre to create 10 distinct pathways on acts of rebellion.

Minus hints at a luxurious melody with just a handful of elements and bottles the feeling of a wild night out. Even when it goes hard, there’s a certain dreaminess to acts of rebellion, and the mix of softness and edges in Minus‘ music makes it all the more fascinating. On the fragile character sketch “dominique,” confessions like “last night I went to bed at seven a.m.” give the impression of glowing brightly in a darkened room, while Helado Negro’s Roberto Carlos Lange adds extra coziness to the unguarded sweetness of “close.” The album’s instrumentals are just as vital to its message as the ones with vocals; the radiant warmth of “let them have the internet” conveys the idea that real life is much better than any virtual experience wordlessly and perfectly. On every track, Minus gives listeners a clear sense of her worldview and balances all the elements of her music with an organic sophistication remarkable for a debut album. As she puts it at one point on the album, “We always know in the first minute or so if something’s worth staying for.” In that amount of time, she proves that she’s a force to be reckoned with, and acts of rebellion is just the start.

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