April, 2010

The Gap Band — You’re So Cute (1988)

April 27th, 2010

the gap band

The Gap Band — You’re So Cute (320k)

Shoulda have posted this already last sum­mer like I was plan­ning to. Oh well and what­ever. Life goes in cycles they say. Is that meant to be under­stood so that some­times you’ll lose some good things, and some­times you’ll find some good things? Oh so obvi­ous, phew? Any­ways, I’ll be repeat­ing myself from last autumn: “Hmmm. Am I going out this week­end, and if so, am I going to drink alco or cof­fee — and should I also try to pick up on women?” Ain’t got no thing any­more so it should be quite obvi­ous. It’ll be two days of play­ing records for pos­si­bly the most drunken stu­dent crowds of the year. It’s the few days before 1st of May that are times of heavy cel­e­bra­tion for finnish students.

Me being such a lazy boy some­times and not forc­ing myself to check if this is a fact or not — but any­ways — I do think this cut is an exclu­sive for orig­i­nal sound­track album “I’m Gonna Git You Sucka”. Movie’s Directed by Keenan Ivory Wayans.

So the com­ing week­end… On thurs­day I’ll be play­ing some nu-discoish/house/techno/something in between of those — here (flyer for the event):

On fri­day (and of course thurs­day also) hope­fully like this. On fri­day I might be slip­ping towards electro-house and dub­step, basicly what­ever “rocks the party”, “bangs”, “slams” and so on. 4x4 ftw, though.

Laid Back… With KynyNasty

April 22nd, 2010


Laid Back… With Kyny­Nasty
by Beat Jockey Dzei

With a cou­ple of rar­i­ties (Kerim Khan, Phil Steele), exclu­sive track (Top­less), essen­tials (Holy Ghost!, Ali Love) and all-time per­sonal favorites (Laid Back, Sey­mour Bits, Roy Davis Jr) I’m quite com­fort­able with this new live dj mix. Elec­tro soul sat­is­fac­tion guaranteed.

DOWNLOAD

(320 kbps)

Track­list
01. Laid Back — Bak­er­man
02. Toe­cut­ter — Best Party Ever (Fight Facil­i­ties Edit)
03. Roy Davis Jr. — Dance Shake
04. George Clin­ton – Erotic City (Sasso Re-Edit)
05. Mud­dy­loop — We Play, You Move
06. Sey­mour Bits — All Alone
07. 50 & 50 Broth­ers — Red­man
08. Top­less — Vamos A Bailar
09. Ali Love — Dimin­ish­ing Returns (Extended Ver­sion)
10. Kerim Khan – Sea­side Ren­dezvous (Seaside-Dub)
11. Holy Ghost! — I Will Come Back
12. Phil Steele — Video Love (12″ Remix)

Mix of the Week #15

Posten Top 6 March 2010 + Villa Nah freebies

April 18th, 2010

poooosteeeeeen

Top 6 Kyny­Nasty kinda tunes by Posten — March 2010

Omar — Feel­ing You (Hen­rik Schwarz Remix)youtube — buy digi: what­peo­ple­play
Ten­snake — Coma Catyoutube — buy digi: what­peo­ple­play
Four Tet — Angel Echoesyoutube — buy digi: what­peo­ple­play
Villa Nah — Rain­makeryoutube — buy digi: what­peo­ple­play
Krys­tal Klear – Anteateryoutube
Atlantic Starr — One Lover At A Time (12″ Vocal Remix)youtube

March was the last proper win­ter month so accord­ingly it’s slightly more on the deep and intro­vert moods with these songs. Bit delayed list­ing, I know I know. But yeah, this what I also have to say: really do pre­fer what­peo­ple­play over beat­port when buy­ing dig­i­tal releases. Heard some con­vinc­ing words from some reli­able source about this… some shady things appar­ently. I do reserve the right to change my mind about this, though.

And then some free­bies: Get Jori Hulkko­nen Extended Mix & Jori Hulkko­nen Extended Dub Mix of Villa Nah’s “Rain­maker” as wave files, for free, from here. Promo stuff. Grab em! Really do. I ‘ve been jam­ming seri­ously to these since the end of last year. Still do. Check also: http://www.myspace.com/villanah.

Thanks to Antti for the photo. It’s me there.

Savage — Only You (1984)

April 16th, 2010



Sav­age — Only You
12″ (320 kbps)

It took  a while because I didn’t know where to look, but now it’s clear: Ural 13 Dik­ta­tors used Savage’s Only You for their song What’s Name of the Game. Ural 13 Dik­ta­tors were kinda inter­est­ing duo from Fin­land. A mix of techno, elec­tro, italo, hi-nrg and bits of trance. After world­wide suc­cess in the begin­ning of the 00s they left the music busi­ness for good and nowa­days they don’t exist as a band or in the inter­nets. 2nd it is then.


Marcel King — Reach For Love (1984)

April 14th, 2010

Marcel King

Mar­cel King — Reach For Love (320k)

This is what hap­pened yes­ter­day. I was walk­ing home, mi belly full after late lunch, my thoughts deeply on dif­fi­cul­ties of life. And there it was, near the side­walk, down this lit­tle bank. Some­thing round and black stick­ing out of the snow. Had to get down imme­di­ately, and within few steps there I was: kneedeep in snow with this 12″ in my hands. Quickly to home and some trusty ole AM Record Cleaner con­sumed. So here we go.

This song appears to have been a def­i­nite floor­filler at the leg­endary Hacienda club in Man­ches­ter, Great Britain — hence — a party banger? I’m start­ing to get fix­ated on extend­ing the mean­ing of this bit point­less term. Cur­rent view seems to be too lim­ited. Any­ways few of the pro­duc­ers involved with this song would be some dudes called Don­ald John­son (known from A Cer­tain Ratio) and Bernard Sum­ner (of New Order). Below some juicy details on how this song came onto being.

Rumour has it that New Order’s man­ager, Rob Gret­ton (a huge north­ern soul fan him­self), found his hero Mar­cel sleep­ing home­less in the back of a car. Enthu­si­as­ti­cally, Mar­cel was asked to make the record which was pro­duced by the Bernard Sumner/ Don­ald John­son, Be Music/ Dojo music axis, giv­ing it an elec­tronic based pow­er­ful rhythm and bass line riff pos­si­bly influ­enced by Gior­gio Moroder with its repet­i­tive and demand­ing sequenc­ing. The song is cer­tainly a pre­cur­sor to the rock/dance crossover genre.

The vocal range and con­trol on ‘Reach For Love’ was excep­tion­ally high level, both from a tech­ni­cal and emo­tional stand. The record was per­haps too intense for day­time air­play but was cer­tainly one of the great lost hits of the 1980s. It’s incred­i­bly baf­fling how nobody has ever cov­ered the song since.
http://www.headheritage.co.uk/unsung/review/1851

The b-side Dub Ver­sion is also nice. No kick drum at all, some syn­th­bass flour­ishes, gui­tar and synth licks here and there. Snare and claps plus conga/bongo per­cus­sion run­ning through the whole 7 min­utes and 39 sec­onds. And the vocals of course, in style of dub mixes famil­iar from lots of 80s songs, cut up from time to time, delayed and reverbed. Def­i­nitely a Dj tool — to be so worked out like a m*****f***ker.

Who­ever it was, being maybe bit frus­trated, maybe even a frus­trated dj, think­ing: “F**k it, to hell with this 12″, NOBODY LISTENS TO THIS 80S SHIT!” — my sin­cere thanks go there. Made my day, espe­cially as Mar­cel King’s advice is mostly the sorta every­one likes to hear from fam­ily & friends some­times. Or from a vinyl record.