Looking for something a little more upbeat to get me through the latter part of the week, I stumbled across Sharam Jey's 2018 single and video, Dangerous Game.
Sharam is easily found in my music collection, as one half of beat behemoths Deep Dish, though I have considerably less of his solo releases.
Dangerous Game features the voice of Kat Frankie, a Sydney-born, Berlin-based artist with 20-odd years in the business. It's also the fourth and final single from the album Invisible, released in September 2018.
The other three singles also spotlight guest musicians: :Little Boots on Fridaycity, Dirty Vegas on Ready Or Not and KLP on Lost.
All good stuff, with enjoyable, linked-theme videos (below), and enough to make me want to track down the album. But how do you find something that is Invisible?
My go-to, Bandcamp, didn't come up with the goods, though I did find another Sharam Jey 'bootleg' of interest, which you can find at the bottom of this post.
My fall back is Juno Download, a vast virtual warehouse of older releases and deep cuts with good prices and decent discounts. Except I should have typed 'was' not 'is' as Juno recently pulled the shutters on their digital branch, focusing instead solely on physical releases.
I avoid the other big streaming and download providers, but it's difficult to navigate the others to strike a balance between availability of downloads to buy and a decent return for the artists.
So, I finally found Invisible, and it's remix companion, available as two separate volumes, on Beatport at a penny under 12 quid a pop. I'm going to stick with the former and skip the latter (two) for now.
One of the cited influences and inspirations for Invisible is Depeche Mode, especially circa the 1980s. My search for Sharam Jey on Bandcamp threw up Hot Stuff, one of his 'bootleg' PImp My Booty releases.
Included within the mammoth 36 tracks are two mid-80s DM classics, one (surprisingly) an uptempo take on downtempo ballad A Question Of Lust. The other a standalone single to promote the first DM 'best of' and one of the songs that caused my friend Jayne to rechristen the band 'Depress Mode'.
With 36 songs, not everything is going to hit the spot but at two Euro for the whole thing (five and a half cents per track), it would be rude not to buy before you try.
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