Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Mulatu Astatke Interview - Exclusively for StinkInc

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“Lets talk fast because it can disconnect with these phones.”
The first words from Mulatu Astatke, the 66 year old don of Ethiojazz, prove to be sadly prophetic. Perhaps a bit of prophecy is appropriate for a man who is talking, on some very iffy phone lines, from the cradle of civilization, Ethiopia. The last few years have seen a massive jump in greater public awareness of Mulatu’s music with Jim Jarmusch’s extensive use in the ‘Broken Flowers’ OST, readily available vinyl and the continued celebration of his 'Volume 4' of the Ethiopiques CD series getting long overdue credit and sales. However 2009 has been a veritable bonanza for Astatke - a show with Malcolm Catto’s frequently stunning outfit The Heliocentrics last year evolved into a 10 day recording session that yielded the ‘Inspiration Information’ album, and Strut finally managed to do what Soundway had attempted a couple of years ago, and released a quality retrospective - ‘New York- London- Addis The Story Of Ethiojazz 1965-75’ (though Soundway gaffer Miles Cleret did write the sleevnotes).
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My first encounter with Mulatu was on a tape from 80's (possibly emanating from the Small Town Thunderers/Jackdaw With Crowbar axis) though at the time I didn’t know who it was because it was simply called ‘Ethiopian track’, or something similarly generic. It was a solitary clue that there was something different there to all the African music I had heard. That was followed by a few, probably slurred, enquiries on late night taxi rides over the years and locales with Ethiopian drivers about what on earth they were playing, leaving hazy memories of some great tunes but not many names the next morning, that problem remains.


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The next proper connection was made when I guested on the Hotpot Radio show with my pal, the venerable Trevor Whatevea, and his co-pilot Mnsr Scruff in Manchester in 2003. Scruff had the Worthy Records, 'Mulatu Of Ethiopia' album (surprise, surprise…he has just about everything) and played a track, on one of the several shows they were recording that day. My interest was severely piqued, thinking this sounds like that track I used to have on tape, and sure enough there was ‘Netsanet’, the very song that had hooked and absorbed me a decade or two previous.
That day looked a bit like this.
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A fruitless and frustrating search for the vinyl in the record shops of Manchester, Birmingham and London followed, before I discovered it in the unlikeliest of locales on my way back to NZ at the house mecca, Dancetracks in the glorious old L.E.S. of Manhattan. I'm pretty sure it's the re-issue, but even they were scarce on the ground then. One of only a fistful of doof-free discs in that entire legendary shop, I was made up, and naturally it lit a fire underneath my proverbial record searching ass - for Mulatu and more music and knowledge about Ethiopia, which continues to this day.
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I had tried to make contact for an interview with Mulatu a few years ago, and put my hand up when the Heliocentrics album dropped (even though I was initially a tad disappointed by that one, possibly down to unreachable expectations of that pairing) but this time the circuits connected, and a time and date was set. I’ve been on the interviewing game for some time now, and like DJing, it takes something fairly monumental to get me clammy handed. Talking to Mulatu ranked up there.
With a monstrous delay, and sufficient crackle to make the next Burial album, as an obstacle to free conversation, plus enough failed connections to require a bionic dialing finger, the Ethiopian telephone service did its' level best to not let this happen. We both persevered and got very frustrated by that along the way, but there was actually a lot more salvageable dialogue than I first thought. Below is the un-edited conversation, his words are exactly as he said 'em, and I understood 'em, only minus a couple of bits that were impossible to decipher above the tele-noise. There may well be a part 2 to this, and soon, but for the meantime read on.

I began by thanking him for his music, like the groveling fanboy I truly am.
“You get the last one, the compilation records?”

Indeed I have and I think it may be the one to introduce a lot more people to your music
“I think so too, I’m very happy. Which music are you thanking me for

Well all of it really, though I can’t go beyond the Golden Era classic Ethiojazz stuff, like the the Budha comp and L’Arome Productions vinyl albums, and of course the re-issued Worthy album. (I think I may have struck a nerve here by not simply bigging up the recent releases, not an ideal start, he sounded kind of understandably potentially grumpy at this point)
“Well I don’t follow that very much seriously. I have only recordings on the Ethiopiques, number 4, that’s my collection but the rest I don’t know very much about that. Budha records are producing those music, and I don’t follow the other ones”

Righto. Having lived through the Emperor Selassie’s reign and a brace of successive dictatorships with martial law and all the rest, I wonder how much of a presence his music currently has in Ethiopia media?
“I’m a prominent composer, arranger and I had radio programmes I also had before, a television programme, I wrote for a play, I’m in different... you know bands, I release CDs and I travel.”

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Why is Ethiojazz, and in fact most Ethio music, so different to other African forms, is it just the isolation?
Well now with Ethiojazz it has been 40 years I have been creating it you know. Why its different, why we are different to most is we have one mode which is called Anche Hoye, which is not found in any other part of the world at all. And also we use five tones to compose our music, five tone scales. What I did was I use also twelve tone music, so this is five tone against twelve, that’s how Ethiojazz is. The area I’m talking about is when you have three or four cultures, trying to put them together you really have to be very careful that one doesn’t dominate another one, and you must have a feel. My feel is Ethiopian mode, Ethiopian scales. So what I did was, I combined with twelve tone but I have to collect my own progressions, I sort of like have to create my own voicings, so that it doesn’t really disappear the Ethiopian modes at all. So you know it’s been very interesting but hard work, but now it's very big in the world.”

How was working with the Heliocentrics, obviously you have been working with Either/Orchestra in Boston for some time, was this a considerably different bag?
“Well you know it’s just what I've been doing, that’s actually just Ethiojazz music, what we’ve been doing now together but its only the orchestration is a bit different. We use more electronic now, I use a lot of acoustic before, but it sounded really nice. I think it’s a beautiful combination, and actually when am I doing the arrangement for different bands I do it different ways. When I do the Heliocentrics now we are really very much together. I write so it could suit the Heliocentrics.”
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Is your project adapting traditional, pentatonic Ethiopian instruments to play the twelve tone scale ongoing?
“Yes that’s a very interesting project, which I’ve actually got about 70% now, because you know, I’ve been touring, I’ve been doing something else so I just let it go for awhile. We managed to play ‘Mercy Mercy’, ‘Never On A Sunday’, you know ‘Summertime’, those kinds of things, playing with a krar, which is so interesting I tell you. It was on the television and the people loved it and it was really great.”
A krar
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You really are changing music by doing this.
“I’m trying my best my friend. And also there is one very interesting thing, actually its going to come out on my new CD (Mulatu Steps Ahead). I'm going to London next week, to complete my new CD you know. You see there is this tribe in the south of Ethiopia we call them Dirashe . This tribe they play a diminished scale, my friend. So they’ve been there for centuries and centuries. What I did was I bought them up to the city, to Addis, and I filled it with jazz and made a beautiful programme on television. So this has been so interesting, its going to come out on my new CD you know, and I’ve been doing that, and also I have done an opera. Very interesting opera , written when I was at Harvard. Its about the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, the whole story is about a conducting stick. We used to conduct music in 380AD, it's centuries ago, when there was no symphony orchestra in the world. So the whole idea is Ethiopian contribution to the development of the whole of music. So I used this stick, I took about forty or fifty minutes from the part where we used the conducting stick, with violins and cellos and everything, and the choirs as well, and that has been conducted with that stick which makes it so interesting. So I’m trying to finish my opera as well now.”



There was more here, but the Ethio telco was doing me no favours, I understand there is also an electronic component to the opera, and he has already presented a portion of it at Harvard. I did know enough to offer another slightly informed question when we had stopped yelling ‘Hellooooo’ at each other (I think I may have some Ethiopian cussing on tape, there was certainly a bit of blue from yours truly, as I ran through the best part of ten calls getting connected, and then having one side go down immediately… somewhat frustrating)
Is this the Yared Opera that you plan to perform in the Lalibela churches (said with some very hesitant, but apparently correct pronounciation, just don’t start me on some on the names of some of those singers!)
“Yeeeeesss, exactly, that’s what I’m really working to put it on at a Lalibela church. You know about them?”
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(As seen above the churches in the sacred city of Lalibela are literally hewn from the rock, rather than rock being broken down for construction, the rock is removed to reveal the structure. This is some architecturally awesome, devotional digging and stonemasonry on a stupefying level.)
A little, with buildings made entirely of stone the acoustics would be unlike anywhere else it would be incredible?
“I know, I know it will be something beautiful because the architects work on that is so interesting, and if we also show the mekwamia there – what you call this, the conducting mekwemia, that’s really an Ethiopian contribution to the world. The architects of the conducting.”

Saint Yared's foot stabbing incident (hit the Yared link below for the scoop on that!)
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I’m not entirely sure whether he means, the architects of the incredible churches in the sacred city of Lalibela, or as the architects as in modern music (in particular Saint Yared, who is believed to have been the first to write musical notes, centuries ahead of Western civilisation, and a great deal more. Don't start me on the rasta/reggae links here, I'm stopping myself from rambling on about everything from Bob's 'Three Little Birds' to Prince Fari's chants), as he references at the end. Never mind, he’s on a roll.
"Especially the Dirashe is so interesting. When we studied jazz at Berkeley, they were telling us how Charlie Parker created the diminished key to create modern jazz, and the great composers Debussy, Bach and all this, been using a diminished scale for composing you know. So what is really very interesting is this tribe have been there for centuries and centuries, so what I wanted to know is, is it Charlie Parker? or is it these tribes, or who? what? Creating the diminished scale, so that is one thing I am working on in the future, answering that.”
And then the line went dead, time was well past done, boohoo sob sob.

You can buy the new Strut compilation and much more Mulatu from Conch
NETSANET - MULATU ASTATKE

I hope I haven't taken liberties in writing this up, the line was wack and the connection was weak, the delay was insufferable.. transcribing was no barrel of laughs. The name of the tribe he refers to, and the YouTube clips are of, is an informed guess, as I cannot find a direct reference to them and their diminished chords online. I'm no expert on this stuff but I have learnt a little about Ethiopia over time, researching for the interview and this post has increased that and led me down some interesting web wormholes (it's also prepped me for round 2). Hope you enjoy it, and buy that crucial compile etc.
Big thanks to Marty @ Border.

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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Stinky Grooves 10.11.09 and rollin with all the Rrrrrrrrs

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Big Big Pollution - Barry Brown (Kingston Sounds)
Unfair - Peetah Morgan & Busy Signal (No Doubt)
Garrison - Alborosie ft The Tamlins (No Doubt)
Welcome - Nitty Kutchie (No Doubt)
Who Dat - Richie Spice (No Doubt)
Ghetto Riddim - Kemar McGregor (No Doubt)
Vurderas - Flow Dan ft Killa P (Eskibeat)
Rise The Larma - Flow Dan ft Badness (Eskibeat)
Just Being Me - Skream (Southside All Stars)
Coalition - Tricky/South Rakkas Crew (Domino)
Air & Lack Thereof - James Blake (Hemlock)
Sunflower (Eero Johannes Rmx) - Reason Or Romanza (Civil Music)
Hardcore - Thavius Beck (Big Dada)
Iodine Poison - Freddie Gibbs
And The Beat Goes On - Thavius Beck (Big Dada)
Black Glory - Scalper
Grown Simba - J Cole
Fogged Spacesuit - The Clonious (Ubiquity)
Turn Me Ill (Marcwithasee Remix) - Micachu (Rough Trade)
My New Flumes (Instr) - James Duncan (Round Trip Mars)
Simple Headphone Mind - Stereolab & Nurse With Wound (United Dairies)
Blackwell - Beak> (Invada)
Heavy - Jonny Trunk (Trunk)
Decompression Introduction - Kelpe (DC Recordings)
7 Inch - Shawn Lee & Clutchy Hopkins (Ubiquity)
Cumbia Bichera (Tremor Rmx) - El Remolon (Pueblo Nuevo)
Kuff Cumbia - Sabo & Casady (Bersa Discos)
Soundboy Cumbia - Sabo (Bersa Discos)
So Krispy (Kinky Electric Noise Cumbia Nativo Rmx) - Kinfolk Kiashine
Gotta Be Fresh (GRC Electro Cumbia Rmx) - Kidkanevil (First Word)
Sniper Sniper - A Cutty Ranks Tale (Markus Kienzl Rmx) - Talen (Mouthwatering Records)
Streetlife - Terry Lynn (Phree)
Wow (Modeselektor Rmx) - Siriusmo (Exploited)
O Dela - Kidid
Sweet - Unitone HiFi (incoming!)
Dub Appeal - Force Quit (Zungzeng)
Sometimes In Autumn (Shackleton Rmx) - Harmonia & Eno 76 (Gronland Records)
Aidy's Girl's A Computer - Darkstar (Hyperdub)
Purple Smoke - Black Chow (Hyperdub)
Megadrive Generation - Martyn (Hyperdub)
All Of This (James Duncan Remix) - The Naked And Famous (Round Trip Mars)
The Beach Era (Djef Rmx) - El Remolon (Pueblo Nuevo)
IK+ - Disrupt (Jahtari)
Bootie Beat - Shawn Lee & Clutchy Hopkins (Ubiquity)
Mascaram Setaba - Mulatu Astatke with Ethiopian Quintet (Strut)

I had hoped to have my 100th post excitement up by now but it has been a week of it, and then some. I can however reveal that, while it may end up being post 101 or 102, it will be worth the wait and it's an interview with his mightyness Mulata Astatke, the father of Ethiojazz. It's actually all transcribed and just needs a little bit of work to be ready for your consumption and hopefully enjoyment (well it blew me away, man is dealing in concepts, big fucking concepts!). All being well it's only Part 1, with another bash at talking to the man coming up, there were some very testing circumstances with this one but I actually ended up with more than I suspected at the time, and it's downright fascinating.
Hanyways, a mixed grill as ever tonight, good to have some quality hip hop to play that isn't from the same old faces or rapildy familiar more recent ones, and great to have the right atmos to chuck in a track from Scalper, his album is going to blow some circuits next year, expect to hear more.
Tonight I'm going to slang you a couple without too much palaveration.
First up from Argentina and the much stinkrinsed ZZK camp El Remolon. I copped on this free digi-EP of his on Sunday when I was theoretically working but was actually too tired from the magnificent RTM trifecta of live gigs last week, and a stupidly early start on whopping the whinging Welsh (respect to their players, Prattland & the rest deserve to lose for another 50 years... and just might). So tooling around the internets instead of writing up a frothing review of the ridonkulously wide-screen and supremely selected '5 Years Of Hyperdub' for a leading national magazine, I ended up at the Pueblo Nuevo site. Mainly dealing in Chilean electronic gear I have to confess I sniffed around, skipped all that, and headed straight for the digital cumbia goodness. This EP is a good couple of years old and a bit patchy but the gooduns are awful good.

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CUMBIA BICHERA - EL REMOLON


Eero Johannes Pitkanen is a ferociously talented feller from Finland. His 'We Could Be Skweeroes' track is one of my favourites of this year, even though it came out in late '08. I foolishly slept on it, because I hadn't heard a single skwee track that had provoked much more than mild amusent. Well thank the JoeFish's say I, for it is that elongaterated squire of Kingsland who tipped me in Eero's direction, and what a nod that was. Can't believe I haven't written about this wondrous sinewave-waif from Helsinki before, but I will undoubtedly be addressing that in the Top 100 tracks of the year, which is imminent and a tad scary, frankly. His 'We Could Be Skweeroes' album for Planet Mu is a riot, and positively ivy-like in it's growability.... it has slowly enveloped me, from the title track in.
I thought I would be swooping on the Blue Daisy remix from this release on Civil Music, but that wasn't really crisping my bacon. This however was musical marination that landed right at my station. As ever it's 192 biz and a week only, don't be a bore - you know the score, there's links below crying out for a little mouse movement to initiate some action of the buying and supporting kind....
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This is the Planet Mu album...buy heem and revel in it.
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SUNFLOWER (EERO JOHANNES RMX) - REASON OR ROMANZA

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Hudson Mohawke Interview - Jock Shocking Beats

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The business of phone interviews is fraught at the best of the times. It’s a disconnected affair, invariably at odd times when you’re not in work mode/or alarmingly just awake - and then there’s shitty lines and mobiles, interviewees wandering the noisy streets, total no shows and all the rest. For the second time in a month since my trusty, old school, cabled 70’s beige phone passed on, I’ve had to write notes rather than record, as the flimsy and frankly fecal, gleaming white modern phone I bought to replace it, has played up. Naturally it didn’t when I dutifully tested it hours earlier, nope, fine then, however… just before I’m about to hit record - on comes the mother of all earth hums. So if any of the local readers know where to get their hands on one of these
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or even these
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or something similar (ie not brand new) please hail me up, because not being able to get a decent recording from home base is causing some severe frustration.

It nearly did my nut in when talking Rowland S. Howard (Boys Next Door, Birthday Party, Crime & The City Solution and These Immortal Souls etc) a few weeks ago too, fortunately Mr Howard (who transported me to instant idiot teenage Birthday Party fanboy status, not an easy task on a curmudgeonly veteran!) is a slow speaker, suiting my hesitant note takery. Even more fortunately so was Ross Birchard, the Glaswegian from the Lucky Me camp, better known as Hudson Mohawke, who dropped his debut LP ‘Butter’ for Warp in the UK last week. Stress was then subsequently increased by watching the slim timeframe of 15 minutes erode, only to find out that he’d been in the shower, for the first few times I’d called his number, bang on schedule. Bah! Below is what I could accurately salvage from my decidedly shabby note taking, and getting that written up and remembered as soon as I put the phone down.

I see you’re going to Australia and not coming to NZ, that’s a bit rude isnt it?
“Well it would be, but actually I am coming to New Zealand, it’s just not confirmed yet. I’m coming to Wellington and maybe another city, maybe Auckland. I have been to Auckland before, but that was an odd one." (A private Serato party where there were apparently, rather embarrassingly one might suggest, major problems with the decks!)

You mentioned a lot to live up to with Warp, how do you feel you've done?
“I’m not checking in everyday to see how it’s going, but I think it’s doing alright, had some good reviews and that.”

I actually meant within yourself rather than sales, it is quite a legacy to become part of.
“Well as I always say in interviews when people ask me this question (uh oh) I don’t think it’s like any of the Warp artists sat back and said I’ve just made a classic album. You just try and do as good a job as you can, and so I wouldn’t say I’m totally happy with it but I wouldn’t say I’m unhappy either. But it is a big legacy, you’re right about that.”


What is it with the two and a half minute songs? I’m not being funny, but everyone making abstract/wonky/whatever you want to call it hip hop tempo instrumental gear, seems incapable of writing anything longer? (he can and occasionally does btw)
“(Laughs) Well I don’t think it’s the length of the songs... or not just the length of the songs, (laughs)! There is a lot of very similar sounding stuff around, and I don’t really see myself as part of that..... hopefully. I think you can do a lot, and say enough, in two and a half minutes. It doesn’t have to be five or six minutes to justify itself as a song. I don’t believe that. I get bored listening to long records that just loop, so I guess I just try and avoid that.

Which is fair enough if you can come up with svelte shock-outs like 'ZOo00OOm', 'Polkadot Blues' and 'Spotted', which all tell a full tale, and feel in fine physical fettle, without taking more than 180 seconds. Regrettably, as I was rambling on round these parts last week, there’s an awful lot of derivative drivel, that is merely aping the templates and palletes of the clutch of genuinely unique maneuverers and shakerators, like Mr Mohawke, his pal Rustie, Flying Lotus and a few others. I wonder if his background in the turntabilism game (a former Scottish DMC champ as a youthful DJ Itchy) has contributed to his musical short attention span and A.D.D. cut-up dynamics.
“Oh definitely yes. When you’re thinking in terms of 90 second sets or doing a whole routine in six minutes it definitely has influenced me, and that’s definitely also affected how I make my music.”


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Another touchstone of what has rapidly become the Hudson Mohawke aesthetic, that has had the likes of Rihanna, Bloc Party’s Kele and Erykah Badu getting their people in touch with his for some deep-fried Scottish beat heat, is a definite ravey influence. Right down to the use of some sounds that otherwise might have been left in the dusty cupboard alongside Vicks vapourub, smiley faces, Altern-8 records and mobs of white boys with whistles.
“Well growing up there was always tapes of rave stuff, hardcore and jungle and I think that’s obviously rubbed off in the music that I make. But I agree a lot of it is in sounds and feels, rather than actually trying to make music that is influenced by that. That’s not really what I’m about.”

I find your music very animated, as if you can almost see the parts moving.
“Yeah that’s exactly it. When I’m writing it is almost as if I can see what I want the drums to do, not actually visually, but if I close my eyes. I definitely do have an image in my head of where everything should sit in a song. I try to do that, not to get sucked into staring at the computer screen for too long, because it’s not really conducive to creativity. I’ll sit in the dark listening with headphones on over and over again, to try and achieve the point of view of a listener, or I’ll take a pen and paper and write things down, just to get away from being stuck in front of the computer and having that affect how you make music. So animated is probably a good description.”

With Fruity Loops you’re using a relatively simple program that should help that process then?
“It does, definitely. Because if you don’t think of music as just being moving blocks of sound around, then it’s going to be a lot more interesting. I’m not really interested in trying to make records like anyone else but I am interested in making sounds that people might not have heard before.”

And just as it was getting good, and we were beginning to talk about the music in some depth, I had to halt the conversation and let the next interviewer have their shot. Damn your shower Mr Mohawke, don’t you know you can do a phone interview without being clean and pristine (and sounding like you’re still half way through your morning ablutions for the first couple of parries). I mean I never even reached the really big questions - like Rangers or Celtic? Whether he grew up reading Oor Wullie and The Broons? Or an in-depth discussion of the majesty of Scottish baking. etc etc. Where’s the justice?
As it goes I’ve been pleasantly and gently stunned by 'Butter' (I suspect that gentle is a word that wouldn't come up too often around HM's gear). It’s time and a place music for me, not something I want to stick on every day, but whenever I do, I repeatedly find new layers of complexity emerging, and am constantly struck by the fact that for all the noise and tricky editing, the Glaswegian geez has got a really strong melodic sensibility. I know he's got a bit of a prog thing going on in his listening habits, but I had been keen to find out how far he'd delved into Steve Reich/Philip Glass/John Adams kind of axis, as I can definitely detect similarities with some of his treatments, though of course his are tiny shards in relatively truncated pieces, the kind of things that ambient trio could work into an hour long piece, at the very least.
I look forward to seeing how his music develops, and there’s plenty to suggest that he’ll be still standing when the wonky-wagon has trundled out of focus to be replaced by whatever journalistic conceit (nueva cumbient…anyone? thought not) comes next.
'Butter' is spreaderizing in a store near you right now, or next week if you’re of the Southern Hemispherical persuasion, I don’t think I need to clarify that this is some gregariously grove-laden ghee. Hey come on, I got through the whole thing with nary a slightly past its sell-by date buttery reference, so I'm entitled to at least three at the end!

It’s on Warp so it’s incredibly easily accessible hence no buy link needed this time around
Up till next weekend Hudson Mohawke on Benji B’s show Some cracking gear on this.
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You expect some music here right? Follow this link to XLR8R and a 192 of the stunning 'Rising 5' which has been terrorizing the b-Nets of late.


The Naked And Famous - All Of This ..brand new clip

As promised, and with as little pre-amble and prevarication as possible here is the brand new video from The Naked And Famous.
Once again Special Problems have gone above and beyond, not to mention below and several other places, to come up with this visual stunner. A large hug and a pat on the back to New Zealand On Air for yet again coming to the party and bringing the cake, and the cheddar.
Tell a friend, tell several, this is virgin video with viewing figures that are all curvalicious and stuffed full of zeroes right now (but not for long) because it only went up overnight. It will be appearing on the idiots lantern later this week, but I have to say it's looking pretty damn swivey in HD (highly recommended Mr Selassie). Later this week we'll have a post up to tell you how you can get your hands on this track, it's incredeeeble spambient remix by James Duncan, and the magic manic minute of Pace..hold thyself tightly.

The Naked And Famous - All Of This (Round Trip Mars 2009)


Oh and this is post #99 on StinkInc, it looks like the Hudson Mohawke interview will be taking the #100 spot, but we do have some specialness a-brewing for the year anniversary of this here blog which is less than a fortnight away..can i say woop? and woop! Indeed I can.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Stinky Grooves 03.11.09 including.... you can't be Siriusmo

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Find A Way - Natijah (Peckings)
Have Some Mercy - Assassin
Done Wid War (09 Rmx) - Busy Signal
Yuh Love - Vybz Kartel (Dre Skull)
IMF - Terry Lynn (Phree Music/Last Gang)
Tougher Love - High Stakes Crew (High Stakes)
Herb Tree (Rmx) - Collie Buddz (Sony)
Sniper Sniper - A Cutty Ranks Tale (Markus Kienzl Rmx) - Talen (Mouthwatering Records)
Streetlife - Terry Lynn (Phree Music/Last Gang)
International Roots (LD Rmx) - Mungos HiFi ft Earl Sixteen (Dub Police)
The King Of Kong - LD (Dub Police)
Coffee & Tea - Marcus Visionary & Liondub ft Johnny Osbourne (Liondub)
Shanti Riddim - Gemmy (Planet Mu)
Aesaunic - Scuba (Hot Flush)
Codsall Juniors - Mark E (Endless Flight)
Night Hunter - Air (Virgin)
SR - Jonny Trunk (Trunk)
That's Right - Lord Newborn & The Magic Skulls (Ubiquity)
Horario De Verano - Sonido Del Principe
Camina - Universildo (Hipi Duki Muzik)
Zorzal (Ft Sol De Oliveira) - Chancha Via Circuito (ZZK)
Do Ya Think Im Cumbia - Juan Pna (DJ Vampiros)
Mini Cumbia On LSD - Black Mandingo
I Know - BEAK> (Invada)
Busy Busy - Jonny Trunk (Trunk)
All Of This (James Duncan Rmx) - The Naked And Famous (Round Trip Mars)
Terms & Conditions - Mordant Music (Mordant)
Nights Off - Siriusmo (Monkey Town)
Wunderbar - Reichmann (Bureau B)
O O I A H - OOIOO (Thrill Jockey)
Pace - The Naked And Famous (Round Trip Mars)
Bikinis Y Rock - Chico Sonido (Kin Kon)
En Mis Suenos - Chico Sonido (Kin Kon)
Danza Danza - Fantasma (Soot)
Major Heavy - Shafiq Husayn ft Sonny Coates & Count Bass D (Plug Research)
(I Know A Girl Called) Jonny - Rowland S. Howard (Passport)
Chapter 2 - Shawn Lee & Clutchy Hopkins (Ubiquity)
Algerain Rock - ?/Dom Thomas (Finders Keepers)
Asiyo Belema ft Frank Holder - Mulatu Astatke (Strut)
Girl From Addis Ababa - Mulatu Astatke ft Ethiopian Quintet (Strut)
Amber Eyes - Lloyd Miller (Jazzman)
Count Ossie Warika Hill Hero - Calvin Bubbles Cameron (Uhuru Jamaica)
Lambs Bread - Calvin Bubbles Cameron (Uhuru Jamaica)
Frenz - Matumbi (Extinguish)


The Shaolin monks and the Wu have their 36 Chambers, and I reckon I've got at least a good 10 Chambers of Stench to go through to set myself up for having a decent chance of broadcasterating a half decent show on the regular. Tonight pre-show I was up to about Chamber 7, which is amassing the freshness in Traktor (and wherever else it might be) before getting my head round it, flinging in at least a couple of hours of extra listening, adding and pruning the mini-Mt Cook of possibles, potentials and really, really should plays. Then I maybe head up the road with not so much a plan, as a few vague possible routes, that I'll probably ignore as the show falls together or disintegrates, both of which (like a rammed dancefloor or an empty one) are alright in my book.
I really respect those DJs who have a show planned to a meticulous level (Duncan Campbell was the ultimate professional like that, and it showed) and we did do that a lot more with Tranquillity Bass and things like the Thursday 'Bass' Special, but with the reality that I might be hearing and downloading a tune at 8pm on a Tuesday night... and it just might be an utter killer, plus the insane access to music through blogs and the Juno's and Boomkats of the DL world, means that SG is always on the fly, and sly and potentially in the sty.
So what that little late night dribble was intending to say was tonight was an ad hoc shock, a bunch of stuff that I really wanted to play (the first Chamber is all listening from round about now till the next Tuesday thinking...must play that/ remember that one etc etc) didn't end up dropping, and a number of tunes that are going to be ending up in my year's 100 selection poked their head up again for another stenchworthy serving.
One such animal is the little gem below from Siriusmo 'Nights Off'. This is the first release on Modeselektor's new label Monkeytown and anything them Berlin electronic emperors have a hand in is worth a shufty in my book. I'm feeling a fair, unmistakable dose of the Modeselektor flavour in this track, or is there possibly a little factory down some cobbled strasse bunging out a bunch of like-minded, synth centered, decidedly-on musicians with a shared bent?
I've got with a few Siriusmo tracks here and there before, but it's all been a bit hit and miss for me. Likewise on this EP, I'm not sure if I'm down with the 3 little piggies fairytale angle, but this track and the Jean Jacques Perrey sampling (have used a slice of the same intro myself, but not nearly as cleverly) 'High Together' are absolutely stone cold blinding. Dunno what it is, but him and his Modeselektor mates have definitely got access to it.
Investigate, percolate and then make your pennies proliferate in the Monkeytown direction.
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NIGHTS OFF - SIRIUSMO


Had hoped to be also posting the new video for 'All Of This' from The Naked And Famous tonight but da youtubes and vimeos are getting their turtle on in the upload stakes as I type, and my original cunning plan to have 'em up this evening was over ambitious.
So tomorrow then... Also on the way in the next couple of days is an interview with Hudson Mohawke I did last night, just for the blog. Nice and decent feller, had a couple of interesting things to say, but it was very short unfortunately. Got some more interview action on the way, a couple of which I'm excess excited about.... don't want to jinx by saying though.
righto, as you were..

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Joe Fish On The Podium & Wonderfulness From Parallel Dance Ensemble

And in news not just in. Well, just in to me anyway, as I've only just found out but our man Joe Fish, a director so elongated I'm surprised that they don't require him to wear a flashing light hat to avoid aviation imperilment, WON the Best Editing category in this year's Handle The Jandal Awards down in Wellytown. The video in question is of course the stunning 'A Obvious' from James Duncan's impossibly wonderful 'Hello-Fi' album. If you haven't already, you can check it here without even having to put your internet coat on, and leave the StinkInc web premises. Suitably mentally unhinged props to Joe and of course Mr Duncan, without whom etc.
Almost as monstrously massive news, and a very deserved winner of the goldenest and grandest of all Jandals is our mucker Coco Solid (look for her guesting on an RTM release next year) who took out the top a top spot with her Parallel Dance Ensemble scorcher Weight Watchers. Parallel Dance Ensemble is her collabo with Robin Hannibal of Owusu & Hannibal fame, their first release 'Turtle Pizza Cadillac' was good but now I'm just fiending for more.
This song has been on serious rotate round our gaff (and I will be playing it tomorrow night fer sure) but the video is just brilliant too, Lisa Dunn has done an amazing job and it's great to see it getting justifiably recognised.

You can buy the 12" from Juno, and actually I must. Whole 5 track EP downloadable too from them too here. Don't really feel the Yam Who remixes add much though.
ParallelDanceSpace

Last Minute Larrikinification - Playing at the Pons Social Club tomorrow night

This is truly last minute biz, it only cropped up last night at The Turnaround, where the ladies were positively on fire (especially MHK of course), and a rocking evening was had by one and all. Tomorrow evening I will be joining my fellow Club Sandwichees, Geezer Guy & Cian, from 5.30-11.30ish at the Ponsonby Social Club for a spot of sonic clarification and a sunday power-tune purge. Guy will be heading off to do his Greatest Show On Earth for a couple of hours across the road but I'm sure Cian and myself will be able to manage.
Not only will it be a certifiable treat for the lugs, the mince pies will also be well accounted for as the fine folk of Cut Collective will be showing some of their wonderful works, that's kicking off at 3.30pm. I rate this mob highly, and strongly suggest your check out their web action if you're not familiar.
Spy them out right here
or on the old murdoKKKspace
and maybe/hopefully see some of yous Aucklandites (amongst the cosmopolitan readers of StinkInc) there hopefully.
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And having written this in the interminable breaks during the regulation dismantlement of the Deanis's Wobblys (am the only one missing the speedy crucial games of the ELVs compared to the dull penalty fest that the game has returned to?) That will definitely do as a warm-up for the Northern tour, and delightful to see a bench-warming George Smith getting the don't argue he always deserves, in the final minute.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Stinky Grooves 27.10.09 - Sensacional Sonido & Undulating Universildo

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Uniform Bad Bwoy - Busy Signal (Maximum Sound)
Good Meditation - Fantan Mojah & Zareb (Maximum Sound)
Help Me Praise Jahovia - Mr Vegas & Konshens (Maximum Sound)
Dem Mad - Busy Signal (Lifeline)
Columbian Drop Version - Columbian (Lifeline)
Coffee & Tea (ft Johnny Osbourne) - Marcus Visionary & Liondub (Liondub)
Shanti Riddim - Gemmy (Planet Mu)
King Of Kong - LD (Dub Police)
Plimsoul - Fantastic Mr Fox & Richie Rich (Hemlock)
Untitled 2 - Aardvarck (Bloom 3)
Llave Materna - Universildo (Hipi Duki Muzik)
Dime Luna (Kinky Electric Noise Cumbia Nativo Remix) - Anciento Molina ft Ghostface Killer
So Krispy (Kinky Electric Noise Cumbia Nativo Remix) - Kinfolk Kiashine
Esperma Y Ron - Pedro Laza Y Sus Pelayeros (Discos Fuentes)
Cumbia del Caribe - Orquestra De Edmundo Arias (Discos Fuentes)
Gotta Be Fresh (GRC's Electro Cumbia Rmx) - Kidkanevil (First Word)
Danza Macabra - DJ Taz (Soot)
En Mis Suenos - Chico Sonido (Kin Kon)
Flight Of The Feathered Serpent - Fuck Buttons (ATP)
Test#10 Seed Bit - T++ (Monolake/Imblance Computer Music)
Himmelbau - Riechmann (Bureau B)
Shadazz - The Horrors (Blast First)
Children Of The Sun - The Time & Space Machine (Tirk)
Sniper Sniper - A Cutty Ranks Tale (Markus Kienzl Rmx) - Talen (Mouthwatering Records)
Spanish Fly (Noiz In Zion Rmx) - Sabbo ft MC Zulu (Botanika)
Radio Freedom - Mark Stewart (Crippled Dicks Hot Wax)
Untitled 1 - Aardvarck (Bloom 3)
International Roots (LD Rmx) - Mungos HiFi ft Earl Sixteen (Dub Police)
Wata Down Sound - Gemmy (Planet Mu)
Natty Goat Ride - Ealzee
Fat Bird Dub - Ealzee
Camina - Universildo (Hipi Duki Muzik)
Dansa Danza - Fantasma (Soot)
Los Duenos del Pabellon - Damas Gratis (Soot)
A La Onda - Chico Sonido (Kin Kon)
This Is How We Walk On The Moon (Bogdan Edit) - Arthur Russell
Privately Electrified - Andrew Weatherall (Rotters Golf Club)
Major Heavy - Shafiq Husayn ft Count Bass D & Sonny Coates (Plug Research)

Before I launch into the regular weekly (weakly?!) late-night ramble pre-amble can I introduce to you to something that will enrich your day and ignite your night?!
Thought so... While perambulating around the usual blog subscription conniption corral recently, I bucked upon the excellent Hipi Duki Muzik. I think I may have been directed there through the connection with the also excellentine Doma Tornadoes feller who has made a sizable SG impact with their sultry and stunning 'Borracho Y Despeinao' track this year, and/or the persistently perky Generation Bass blog. Hanyways a net label based in both my old haunt Barcelona, and the home of much of my favourite Latin direction over the last couple of years - Buenos Airies,... this was worth some hmmmming (with several m's) about I reckoned. Verifying the Doma Tornadoes link and several other dead cert signifiers, I got my Bloglines on and subbed in a jiffy. What a smart move, if I say so myself, because this week they unleashed the debut free 5 track EP by Universildo, which I'd already heard healthy whisper of. Not fussing with the words (come back later if the correct senses are suitably stimulated by the music is my general mode, otherwise I'd never get anything else done) I hit that link and added it to a seismic swag of fresh music for this weeks show that was already ridnkulously overstuffed.
Had I'd taken 30 seconds to read, I would have sussed it was a side project (and WHAT a side) of Pedro Canale, the genius geez behind Chancha Via Circuito (he is also Verda Kiri). Decidedly ambient but with enough cumbia laced hoo-ha to possibly make it .... 'cumbient' (oh stop me), at least on the two stunning tunes I played tonight - which are the beatiest of the bunch, and stupendous in a very subtle and minimal fashion. The other three tracks are also initial mellow magic that I suspect will become incrementally charming, and the sublime use of negative space suggests it will become an accompaniment to the album that has barely left the turntable/CD player & Traktor/iPod/iTunes playlists since our trip, that being The xx (which I've enthusiastically blathered on about in this week's The Listener).
In the words of Clay Davis 'sheeeeeeeeeeeeeit', this was supposed to be a quick word before the main event, done already - check him.

Cop 'Luces Del Air' by Universlido at Hipi Duki Muzik for nix
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Keeping on a not completely, dis-similar bent LA based, Mexican DJ Chico Sonides' name has popped up in a few places but he's throughly stuck his head above the parapet, and got his antenna out, with his self titled debut on Kin Kon. Call me a sentimental old buffoon (though possibly not to my face, if you know what's good for you) but I miss good quality, honest, made with a sampler and the fruits of some grown-man, dirty digging (ie. not an E-Bay spunking for a silver spooner) albums.
Perhaps it's a blessing that the rabble are all churning out 'wonky' two and a half minute, witless homages to Flying Lotus and deity Dilla, in a manner so sheepish that it's just a deluge of blabstract flock-knocking-beats (in my humble onion). In that sort of a climate - wonky wankyness to the extreme, and invariably the same usual suspects and just a fistful of others making the pace - a straight up and down, well executed, beats joint stands right out. And this is certainly such a beast, can't help but love it.

Buy the Download , CD I presume soon come
His website has the mixes for your fixes etc
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EN MIS SUENOS - CHICO SONIDO


And don't be forgetting this Friday it's the tres femme 'bewitched' Turnaround, check the flyer below (MIHK on at 12 btw..a-ok)

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Monday, October 26, 2009

Bank Holiday Business - Lazy Long Weekending

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It's a long weekend treatathon round here at StinkInc acres, with a coupla clips I've been meaning to postulate and some mixes and tracks that have been burning a hole in my ...err hard drive, I guess.

To kick off, I've been meaning to post the competition trouncing clip for James Duncan's 'The Cupboard's Bare' for a coupla weeks now, my procrastination knows no bounds. Without any assistance vid clip wise we have gone guerilla with his exceedingly excellent 'Hello-Fi' album enlisting talented, willing and frankly slightly susceptible folk to come up with eye magic beyond compare. For this track James suggested a step further, and we opened it up competition style and fashion. David O Gifford of Fielding, who came up with this brilliant interpretation, was a unanimous winner for his dusty, stop animation delight.


The best advice with me and Busy Signal is basically... don't start me. His duff tunes still rate higher than many of his contemps best, and as this video medley amply demonstrates he's not prepared to limit his talent stylewise. Seven cuts, several of which have featured up hear in the last year, flash past in record time and since the mark of VP is on this perhaps it means a follow up to 'Loaded' is imminent. Predictably the VP website reveals a fat load of fuck all, fingers crossed then. Enjoy.


In general I like to keep the nearest thing Stinky Grooves has to a vague rule type thing - if possible, why bother going through the same door as everyone else, when there are so many others to choose from - running on StinkInc. The exception is of course the exceptional, them things that shine so outrageously that to not play, post or draw attention to them would be downright foolish and self-defeating. So like the Busy vid above these next couple of bitses are well present elsewhere around the internets but more than worthy of a prod with the pongy pointer.

Some noise, in fact some riotously uproarious noise needs to be made about Sonido Martines's 'Nueva Cumbia Argentina' compilation for DJ/rupture's constantly probing Soot label. I first cropped up on this while searching for digital delights at Juno Downloads a few weeks ago, and having been fully primed by the utterly essential 12" that pre-empted it a few months ago, had no hesitation in snaffling all of the tracks that I hadn't already got my grubby mitts on, instantaneously. In fact you can find one of those already unleashed on wax, Mr Martines's own stunning retool of Los Destellos, on 'Stinkbombs 808 - Heavyweight Honking', which can still be absorbed and what have you via this post (couple of the DL links are dead but there's a few still standing).

Hanyways Sonido Martines has had quite an effect on Stinky Grooves over the last wee while, with gear like his incredible Chicha mixtape, and the crazy Cumbia Rebajadas mixtape that required something a little stronger than Robotussin, to fully appreciate. It's pretty fair to say that if you see his name involved, then you're in for a quality ride, and you're going to be unlocking some gear that would probably be impossible to access otherwise. This album has many gems that have wafted their way across the Stinky Grooves airwaves including one of the veritable plethora of standout's from El Hijo De Cumbia's 'Freestyle De Ritmo' album (also on Soot, purchase without prejudice..one of the best albums of the year period), all four tracks from the aforementioned 'lady's on the mic/gents on the mixing board' teaser 12", a non-album track from Chancha Via Circuito (ditto on his breathtaking mini-mellow-mal album 'Rodante') and some gear that hadn't reached me yet like DJ Taz's borderline brilliant/dreadful 'Danza Macabra' and finally something from the very very promising Fantasma (we've run their Jerry Dammers approved 'Ghost Town' cover on SG) that isn't un-usable 128kbps biz.

Basically it's a bobby dazzler, a crucial compile an exceptional excess essential item. They've accommodatingly made two tracks available for blogger type action and those are presented for you below. Then it is your duty to your own ears and sanity to follow the links, and support these marvelous machinations with some of your pristine pennies or pesos, ching chinging cents or durrty dollars..
Buy from Juno DL, available at plenty of other places too. CD on way I guess.
Mr Martines
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Los Destellos ... still going
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El Hijo De La Cumbia .... the don!
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Alika
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Not the usual DIV embedded malarkey, control click etc

Before we leave the cumbia circuit you simply HAVE to check this free mental mix from Zurita. The geezer got some well deserved shine here for his brave and brilliant nuevo cumbia transpant of Suicide's 'Ghost Rider' so no big rants but his new mix 'The Great Cumbia Swindle' is simply stunning. Anyone messing with the acapella of Screechy Dan's 'Give It To Me', one of the many Kenny Dope productions that is grafted into the heart of any and every worthwhile DJ who was dishing out the damage 15 or so years ago, is potentially doodling in the sacred texts in my metaphorical book - but dang if Zurita doesn't absolutely slay it. The whole mix is an insane chop shop of Sud Amerikan flavour getting a vigorous workout courtesy of everything from Primal Scream to Daddy Freddy and all points inbetween. It ends with a Boredoms track fer chrissakes, this is gold. DO NOT DELAY YOUR DL. (ay?!) Is free.
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320 here, 71 Megs you need in your life


It is to my perpetual chagrin, that we never managed to make it to the dance that Heatwave were holding after Sunday's Carnival exertions. However - DJ gigs the two nights before, jetlag and a most excellent and different day of Carnivalising with the fam, put paid to the kind of energy I'd need to get my senses properly singed by the Heatwave crew. I had hoped to find some more inroads into the appeal or hype of UK Funky at Carnival, but that didn't really happen and short of pinching Kode 9's record box (not a bad idea really, he had gear that was intergalactic dark funk(y) genuinely on another level ) I remain a slightly bewildered observer to the whole malarkey. This 'Funky Bashment' set (commissioned by the ultra checkworthy XLR8R site) goes straight to the heart of the matter, with the most raggacentric slant you could possibly wish to find. True to form it's put together blindingly, undoubtedly mixed to buggery but still giving the tracks enough room, a heap of of un-inspiring net DJ folk could learn a lot from Heatwave. Funkywise I remain on the fence at best, naturally there's some downright charming shit on the mix and a few real standouts, but those happy hardcore-esque riffs and sounds and the un-challenging nature of most of it just doesn't reach me. Make your own mind up, enough of my wibbling.
Tracklisting etc roight 'ere guvnor at the excellent Heatwave site
Heatwave mob on smile duty
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This was intended as a quick couple ootubes and a shifty song on a quiet Friday night, and I was also intending to big up James Duncan's first live appearance, with a group rather than a laptop, for company. Well, by now, that was last night, and what a treat it was to hear the songs from 'Hello-Fi' resplendent in on-stageness. It began brilliantly, if a touch tentatively, with an intoxicating take on 'A Obvious' and concluded with a blissblitzathon '...Of Everyone Around You' rendition, with the band getting well open, dolloping out shards of mesmeric massiveness with scant regard for public safety, and unustainable amounts of jaw-droppery and chin-strokery, from a crowd that really seemed to catch the JD vibes. Top props to James, Sean, Chris, Chelsea and Finn alongside SP Cartier, Nick Rough'un and Paul McK for making that event happen. Watch it grow.

Finally on a straight track tip here's a couple to keep the wolf from the door and hopefully initiate some power of suggestion type shop-alopping arrangement. I'm (marginally) forgoing the usual lengthy meaningless ramble and links (you can all Google better than me no doubt) in order to not turn this post into a Monday, or worse, affair and to avoid epic postulatory proportions.

The most agreeable entry into the world of Traktor, and the ongoing dilemmas of how much space music takes up, has led me into going through the shelves of CDs and identifying those that demand entry into the NI klub/those that have only one decent track that can be siphoned off and sold/those that will be ulitmate keepers. As a result I can forsee a few joyful re-discoveries popping up on StinkInc, and to begin with here's a smidgen of indubstrial inspiration from Coil in 1990. I'm so chuffed that I located the CD as my 12" seems to have disappeared amongst the rabble, this psych-dub bellathon is still so fresh, and has got me looking forward to dragging some more Coil bits out of the CD boxes. As far as I can make out this is no longer available and even the CD goes for a decent price (hmmmm) so it's up at 192 but if you want a 320 (the production is so good, every single sound is pristine and perfectly placed... you owe it to yourself) drop me a line or hail up in the much neglected comments and we'll get it sauteed.
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WINDOWPANE (ASTRAL PADDINGTON MIX ) - COIL


Expect more odd delights from the past in the weeks and months, to come, in fact expect a fair bit as we are about to hit post #100 and not long after that StinkInc will be 1 whole year old. Usual scenario... you get the presents - I'll be writing them posts and uploading that hooha. Next up one of the many Japanese DJ's who I have a lot of time for, DJ Baku. It was a right delight to play alongside him a couple of years back, and like his buddy Kentaro he is a man who is mercifully free of herd like behaviour, choosing to find his own angle. He also doesn't do the English but managed to express plenty with bows, grins and gestures (especially when presented with little local vegetable matter to see him through his trip.... his eyes were like the Blackpool Illuminations!) Baku's records are another thing again and alonsgide the heavy-hop d'n'b metalising that laces his DJ sets, there always seems to be out of place, but spot-on, stuff like 'Satya Dream' - the track that really sent me from his 'Dharma Dance' album. In fact letting that album run, while I've been writing and musing and whatnot, has me fiending for his new'un '12 Japs' which looks a bit mighty, expect more on that soon. This track is very Sunday arvo really, enjoy, and hinvestigate.
Buy Dharma Dance, it will make your brain delightfully soggy
Good Baku interview here
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SATYA DANCE - DJ BAKU

Turnaround this Friday with Maiden Hong Kong getting amongst it on the decks, flyer and fandangle soon come up here. Don't mess and don't miss.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Stinky Grooves 20.10.09 & The Weatherall Times pt 1

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Get Carter - Jah Wobble (Pressure Sounds)
Rhythm Collision (RSD Rmx) - Ruts DC (Echo Beach)
Natty Goat Rider - Ealzee
Fat Bird Dub - Ealzee
Freedom - Moody Boyz (Studio Rockers)
Kuff Kumbia - Sabo & Cassady (Bersa Discos)
Dime Luna (Kinky Electric Noise Cumbia Nativo Rmx) - Ancineto Molina ft Ghostface
Gota (El Hijo De La Cumbia Rmx) - Sekreto
La 3ra De Los Toquesitos - Sonido Kumbia
Colas-La - Claude Rolcin Et Le West Indian Combo (Soundway)
Oriza - King (Soundway)
Escape From Prism - Lord Newborn & The Magic Skulls (Ubiquity)
High Together - Siriusmo (Monkey Town)
Don't Block The Box - Runaway (Clone)
The Indian - Pollyester (Permanent Vacation)
Through The Strata - Etienne Jaumet (Versatile)
Least Favourite Rapper (Anti-Pop Consortium Rmx) - Busdriver (Epitaph)
Kiss The Ring - Raekwon ft Inspectah Deck (Koch)
KunteKinteTarDiss - Juice Aleem (Big Dada)
Hard Rain (Messengers Rmx) - J.Period & K'naan
Alive (Nightmare) - Kid Cudi (Universal Motown)
Volcano (Four Tet Rmx) - Anti-Pop Consortium (Big Dada)
Fall - Blue Daisy (Black Acre)
Tonewash - Eero Johannes (Planet Mu)
Sister James - Dompteur Mooner (Super Tahoe Edits)
Nights Off - Siriusmo (Monkey Town)
Direct Action - Radical Majik (Rotters Golf Club)
Direct Action (Andrew Weatherall Rmx) - Radical Majik (Rotters Golf Club)
Fail We May, Sail We Must - Andrew Weatherall (Rotters Golf Club)
Fail We May, Dub We Must - Andrew Weatherall (Rotters Golf Club)
Major Heavy -Shafiq Husayn (Plug Research)
Caution Site - Kelpe (DC Recordings)
This Is How We walk On The Moon (Bogdan Edit) - Johanna Billing vs Arthur Russell
The Creeping Tings Of The Earth - Jefferson Belt (Round Trip Mars)
Herb Tree (Remix) - Collie Buddz
Get Carter (Cliff Brumby Rmx) - Jah Wobble (Pressure Sounds)
Creation Dubwise - Itopia (Basic Replay/Wackies)
Whiskey Dub - Jahmiga (Jahtari)
Villa Crespo - Dale Duro (Soot)
Evil Man - Shafiq Husayn (Plug Research)
Come With Me - Jahdan Blakkamoore (Gold Dust)

I'm not entirely sure we have made enough of a fuss about the bountiful amounts of Weatherall that are flowering in abundance right now. Though I didn't manage to play a track from it this week, the new Fuck Buttons album 'Tarot Sport' is a total mindbender, and it's also something like only the second album (not his own) that he's produced in the last 14 years or something riddiculous. If I were a doctor I would suggest that you need to visit your local crucial chemist or online supplier of beaty baked goods and get yourself a dose of that right nowest, repeat daily for as long as it takes.
Then there's the 'Andrew Weatherall Vs The Boardroom Vol 2' compilation on the man himself's Rotters Golf Club label, which includes 'Brother Johnston's Travelling Disco Consultancy' (oh for a huge PA and open eared crowd to lay that on) and several other Slough-stained epistles, as well as some spineful technoid contributions from the various Boardroom banditos.
The really big one is 'A Pox On The Pioneers', the first album to appear under his own name, with a fair bit of vocal malarkey and lyrical largesse from Andrew (no longer Andy) himshelf. It's a change-up, and a far more succesful one than his last vocal forays, for my money. The whole thing has a ring of 'Sandanista' era-Clash about it amongst many other flavours, not in a slavish way, in a way that puts a huge grin on my boat when driving around to it. That is a good thing.
I'm not going to wibble on about it too much - it's a love it or can't be bothered it with it scenario I reckons, and I'm personally down with anyone releasing a record that pushes out the borderlines on a two decade plus career and which forces folks to make a decision. I won't lie, the music is so wickedly evocative and heartfelt that I'd dearly love to hear an instrumental version, but that is in no way demeaning the vocal content because I reckon he's found his right spot amongst it, and some of the lyrics are straight out blinding, none of them are wasted. So with that in mind I'm going to post one of the wordy tracks, my suggestion is give it a few plays and don't jump to quick conclusions. My other suggestion is buy all of the above and get in touch with your inner Rotter, your cerebral Swordsman and/or your pertinently placed Paradisical Sabre, You know it makes sense.
Keep this frequency open, I'm threatening a bit of inter-show posting, don't really have the time right now but I'm just going to make it..because it must be done.. blah de blah.

Buy zee album direct or digitalis from Juno , no wax yet - boo hiss
Rottersweb (good podcast up at the mo, check heem)
Sterling Weatherall piece in the uniformly excellent Fact

The tashtacular Andrew looking ready to start a revolution.. an industrial revolution. Hang on... someone already did that.
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FAIL WE MAY, SAIL WE MUST - ANDREW WEATHERALL


Think we may have to do posts on them other releases, so consider this a gentle engine starter.