Showing posts with label Hardway Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hardway Brothers. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 August 2024

We Can’t Deal With Culture We Don’t Understand

The news that there had been rioting, violence and looting following the tragedy in Southport was sadly not surprising. 
 
And when media outlets reported incidents "across the UK", in fact it appeared to be concentrated in England, with Belfast making the news but no mention of similar disturbances in Scotland and Wales, as far as I could see.

I was also sad to see Bristol named as one of the cities but then, given it's prominent anti-racist activity, it's often been a magnet for the far right. And goodness knows we have enough of the morons who were born and "bred" in the city. I grew up with, lived in the same street as and worked with a fair few of them. 

The Sky News screen grab above features a few of these fine examples of homo moronus in Bristol on Saturday, facing off against the police. Maybe you recognise some of them. If you happen to serve them at a cafe or takeaway any time soon, hawk a big flob into their food or drink with pleasure.
 
The mobs are described in the news reports as "protesters". That's far too kind a word for them. As a group gathered at a city centre hotel, I assume in the hope of forcing any immigrants within to go back where they came from, a larger group blocked them, chanting, "We are many, you are few. We are Bristol, who are you?"
 
There seems to have been some needless social media ripostes about how many of the counter group were in fact from Bristol, which I think is missing the point, or at the very least missing the scene from this classic film. On Saturday, those who turned up to challenge hate and violence were all Bristolian. 
 
I hadn't planned to write this when I started today's selection, it was supposed to be an fairly innocuous round up of some 2024 musical highlights that I haven't covered in previous posts. The post title is a line from one of the featured songs, Too Muchroom by David Holmes and Raven Violet. That, and a sense of horror at the TV news reports, seem to have guided my fingers at the keyboards as I started to type.
 
You may read some deeper meaning into some of the music choices today but I promise that any themes or connections are purely coincidental. What does link them however is that they represent what continues to be a great year, aurally speaking.
 
Fluke have been one of the comeback success stories of the year. Jack was released in May with another new song possibly titled Real Magnificent 'coming soon'. 

Jesse Fahnestock has never been away and here he is again, with two cracking collaborations, firstly with Emilia Harmony as Electric Blue Vision (and remixed by himself as 10:40). Then, Jesse returns to close the selection with his partner in crime Darren Bell as Jezebell, delivering the fruity tune Citric, freshly squeezed from their Weekend Machines EP.

Sean Johnston also makes a couple of appearances as Hardway Bros. Alessandro Sarsano aka DJALE remixes Functions For Machines from the excellent My Friends EP. Sean later reunites with Duncan Gray for another Hardway Bros Meet Monkton Uptown excursion, this time the aforementioned David Holmes and Raven Violet track.

Richard Norris released an exclusive 4-track EP (album?) in June, only available to subscribers, presenting music he'd created for a show at Paris Fashion Week. Each of the 4 mixes runs to nearly 14 minutes, so I've created a crude 8-minute edit of Mix 3 to include in this selection. 

I've been subscribing for a couple of years now. It's superb value for money and also raises funds for mental health charity MIND. I cannot recommend it enough.

Paris In The Summertime aside, Richard has a vast catalogue available on Bandcamp and in fact all of the music featured in today's selection is available to purchase there. If you like what you hear, go track them down, you will not be disappointed.

The penultimate song by Third Attempt samples from Louis Malle's 1981 film My Dinner With Andre

"You see, I keep thinking that what we need is a new language, 
 
The quoted lines are spoken by Andre Gregory, who appears opposite Wallace Shawn (if you don't know the latter's name, you will instantly recognise the face). The film is essentially two friends sharing anecdotes over a restaurant meal for the best part of two hours. They don't make 'em like that anymore. 

If you made it to the end of this post, many thanks for indulging me and I hope the music is sufficient compensation!
 
1) Jack: Fluke ft. Leah Cleaver (SW18 Sessions)
2) Trance Stance (1040s Haight Steppin Remix By Jesse Fahnestock): Electric Blue Vision (Trance Stance EP)
3) Hell Below: Acid Klaus ft. Lias Saoudi (P.T.S.D By Proxy EP)
4) Song Of Siraba (Mindbender Remix By Mårten Attling): A Space Age Freak Out (Shelter Me: In Crisis)
5) Paris In The Summertime (Mix 3 - Khayem's Olympic Edit): Richard Norris (Paris In The Summertime)
6) There’s Dust On It: Pye Corner Audio (There’s Dust On It EP)
7) Gold Rush (Dub): Break Mode ft. Nuri Orman (Boomarm Nation Family Album 2024)
8) Functions For Machines (DJALE Last Song Remix By Alessandro Sarsano): Hardway Bros (My Friends Remixes EP)
9) Waif Mentality: Orbury Common (Waif Mentality EP)
10) Too Muchroom (Hardway Bros Meet Monkton Uptown Remix By Sean Johnston & Duncan Gray): David Holmes ft. Raven Violet (Blind On A Galloping Horse (Remixes Vol. 2))
11) Language Of The Heart: Third Attempt (Offshore Sunsets EP)
12) Citric: Jezebell (Weekend Machines EP)

We Can’t Deal With Culture We Don’t Understand (1:09:56) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 29 April 2024

Just Trying To Do The Best That We Can Do

Fluke have returned.
 
Jon Fugler and Mike Tournier have reunited to release a new single, Insanely Beautiful, which I presume is a direct lift of the feedback that they received from the first person they played the song to. 
 
As a huge fan of Fluke throughout the 1990s, weathering the departure of Mike Tournier and the final releases as a duo of Jon Fugler and Mike Bryant in 2003, the prospect of new music from Fluke in the 2020s was an impossible dream.
 
And yet, here we are. Jon's voice may carry the weight of the passing years and the trademark bubbling beats may be replaced with strident steps. Otherwise, it's like they've never been away. Insanely Beautiful sounds very much in the present day but unmistakably Fluke.

The single's available on Bandcamp as four individual tracks. The original seven-minute monster, cinematic synth sweeps and stadium-sized rhythms, is presented in both vocal and instrumental versions. Leah's Mix by Fluke features Leah Cleaver on sole vocal duties. Finally, Sean Johnston and Duncan Gray deliver a Hardway Bros Meet Monkton Uptown mix that's every bit as good as you might expect from them, slowing down the pace, turning up the bass and creating a nine-minute beat-driven behemoth.
 
Comeback of the year.  

 
 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, 6 April 2024

A Gift

Celebrating what would have been Andrew Weatherall's 61st birthday today, with something very, very special.
 
If you've been following the Bagging Area blog - and, if not, get over there now! (but do come back, please) - then you'll have read of Swiss Adam's path to the release of the double vinyl compilation, Sounds From The Flightpath Estate
 
It's been an inspirational journey, all the more incredible with the relatively short time that's taken a group of friends with a idea to the realisation of that dream. From summer 2023 to this week, when my copy was delivered by the postman with what, in these times of vinyl production queues and delays alone, can only be described as incredibly on-the-nose timing.
 
It was worth waiting a couple more days to this morning. After all, for a record inspired by and infused with the spirit of Andrew Weatherall, it seemed only right to listen to it for the first time on his birthday.
 
I was up even earlier than usual this morning, pitch darkness outside, camomile tea brewing in the pot, headphones plugged in, armchair positioned just so, facing the window, the dawn light emerging gradually as I immersed myself in the album. I don't think I've enjoyed the ritual of playing a new vinyl album as much since I was a teen, rushing home from the shops with a purchase, eager to get into my room and giving the record a spin. This morning, I was right back there, with the heady rush of excitement and anticipation.
 
For starters, the whole package looks amazing; this is something that was designed to be held, pored over, enjoyed as a thing of beauty even before a single note of music has been heard. Sounds From The Flightpath Estate comes in a gatefold sleeve, beautifully designed by @personality___crisis, as the photos will attest.
 
From there, the experience of slipping out each 12" disc of black vinyl from it's paper sleeve, placing it on the turntable, gently brushing it, carefully lowering the needle onto the track in groove, then later flipping the side and doing it all over again. There's nothing quite like it. And then there's the pleasure of reading Adam's wonderfully heartfelt and articulate sleeve notes that provide the 'origin story' and also distill the essence of each contribution with vivid clarity. The passion is soaked into every letter, every typeface, every image, every groove.
 
Can the music possibly live up to this? 
 
No.
 
Somehow, it manages to be even better than I could imagine...and I can imagine, believe me.

All of the 10 tracks on Sounds From The Flightpath Estate are exclusive and unreleased, with the exception of the opener, courtesy of Two Lone Swordsmen aka Andrew Weatherall and Keith Tenniswood. However, the song in question appeared on an obscure 10-track CD credited to Andrew and Keith, called Still My World. The CD was apparently a promo for a clothing range by the Italian fashion house Zegna, and available only in Japan circa spring/summer 2003. 
 
Ironically, the title track and the one featured here - The Crescents - are the only two that I've heard before, via t'internet. But as Adam notes, The Crescent "has found a new home here, on vinyl for the first time" and it feels absolutely like the right place and right time. 
 
The Crescents is a delicate three minutes, strummed guitar loops, intermittent rumbling bass, sounds echoing and drifting between channels, beatless, beautiful. 
 
The Crescents lands somewhere between It's Not The Worst I've Looked ... Just The Most I've Ever Cared (from Tiny Reminders, 2000) and the beatless mix of Smokebelch II. Moments like this were used sparingly in the Weatherall ouevre, but always made an impact.
 
The gentle, ambient opening song segues nicely into the electro beats and bleeps of Red Machine by Sons Of Slough aka Ian Weatherall (Andrew's brother) and Duncan Gray. Describing the song as "like an 80s 12" dub remix" sounds like faint praise, but I mean it sincerely. 'Red Machine' in intoned on repeat over some lovely parps and squelches, the synth stabs and vocoder kicking in after a short while. Red Machine is labelled as a 'Golden Lion Soundcheck', a nod not just to the record label but the pub where they have played. Red Machine is the sound of two artists gearing up to have some fun; it must have been some night.

Taking the tempo right down into deep, dubby territory is Timothy J. Fairplay with Centurion Version. The Pablo-inspired melodica sounds are reminiscent of Weatherall's excursions to the far side be it with Timothy as The Asphodells or Two Lone Swordsmen or Sabres Of Paradise. It keeps the groove and simple structure going for nearly five minutes, but it's all that's needed really. A masterclass in minimalism.

Side 2 starts off with martial beats, dub undertow, funky bass, echo vox extracts and seemingly random phrases about UFOs in broken orbit, falling into happy valley green grass, roaring lions, spirit levels minute decay and police taking days. Yes, it's Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33's with Curtains Twitch on Peaks, the title repeated during the song. I've loved the slew of new and archive releases from Justin over the past 12 months or so and this track is every bit as good.

Four songs and one-and-a-half sides in and it's already patently clear that this album is not just a convenient repository for orphaned songs. It's a labour of love and a commitment to an inspiration and an ideal.

Before that thought has time to percolate, Richard Sen shakes me from my reverie with music that gets away from the window, out of the house, into town and onto the dancefloor. Tough On Chug, Tough On The Causes Of Chug (what a brilliant title) continues the trend of the 'deceptively simple'. On paper, a vocal sample, a repetitive chord sequence and synth washes. In Richard's expert hands, these ingredients combine and magic happens. A euphoric ending to the second side.

Side 3 steps off like a dub half, beats and bass dropping into the depths of sirenesque synths. And then the guitar kicks in, courtesy of Duncan Gray, strums, squalls and a scale that is epic without grandstanding.
 
This is Rude Audio aka Mark Ratcliff and also part of the Flightpath Estate collective, with Running Wild. If Richard Sen's contribution gets you out of the house and down the club, Running Wild is the one where you lose yourself on the floor. The aforementioned guitar is complemented with clattering dub drums and spaceflight bleeps and it is a monster of a tune.

Jesse Fahnestock knows a thing or two about music to get you moving, but he's also produced some sublimely soothing soundscapes as well as tunes that hit pretty much every mark between the two. A relative newcomer when you consider the roster as whole may have been a daunting prospect though none of this is apparent in Three Rings, his assured contribution as 10:40.

There's a great juxtaposition of frequent collaborator Emilia Harmony and a sampled preacher, both urging the listener to "join me please". As the song title subtly suggests, Three Rings contains a pleasing carousel swirl. In my mind, the sound evokes an image of a circus pitched up opposite a church, both parties in the entrance trying to persuade passers by to join their particular party. "I'd like to welcome you all inside my dreams, " breathes Emilia. I know which side I'm on...10:40 all the way. Brilliant stuff.

And in what seems like the blink of an eye and the twitch of an ear, the needle lifts and returns to it's carriage and I'm three quarters of the way through the album.
 
Side 4 begins with "helicopter rotor" synth stabs and padding percussion, chords sweeping in, sounds at times on the periphery of hearing, drawing you in, urging you to immerse yourself in the music. This is Sean Johnston aka Hardway Bros (all of them) with the Theme For Flightpath Estate.
 
Somewhere in the Flightpath Estate club hut (in my imagination, there's a club hut for Adam and co. to retreat and gather after hours when the Golden Lion is closed), there's a framed photo of Edward Woodward as The Equaliser. I can't think of a better tribute than your own theme tune and I think Sean has absolutely nailed it here.
 
The penultimate track is Human : Remains by The Light Brigade. Never heard of them? Well, it's a certain Belfast DJ apparently prevented from formally releasing the track under his own name due to his existing record deal though it's all over the credits and the music itself contains plenty of clues.
 
Human : Remains has been around for a few years, nearly but never quite finished until now. As such, the completed music simultaneously manages to sound right now whilst evoking memories of past work. There's a sheer joy in the gradual, layered build. I mean, it starts 'up' and just gets higher and higher until...you're seemingly floating on air, taking in the landscape below.
 
How do you come down from that?
 
How else?
 
The entire album has channeled the spirit of Andrew Weatherall and therefore it's inevitable that the journey ends with Smokebelch II, courtesy of Andy Bell.
 
The music gently takes hold of the listener, guides (and glides) you, pointing out the beauty that can still be found between the smokestacks and toxic belches of the city, heading to safer, cleaner, greener pastoral surroundings for the most wonderfully soft landing you can imagine. 
 
An hour on and I realise the music has stopped, the needle is resting and I'm welling up. What an emotionally charged journey and rush to the head.
 
I'll hope you'll excuse today's later-than-usual post, not only to listen to the album but to then type the words, unfettered by editing and spell checking. To be honest, the last task was the easiest. The thoughts and feelings flowed easily and naturally. 
 
I think repeat listens will unearth further delights and treasures, but what a first impression. I mean, as of itself, it's an incredible album. Knowing the inspiration for it and the courage of a bunch of music fans to dream big and to see it through is even more incredible.
 
There are no links today, as the music is licensed to vinyl (500 copies only) and not available digitally. The Golden Lion quickly sold out when pre-orders opened in February though Adam has noted the significance of suffixing the album title with 'Volume One'. In the meantime, Matt Hum has created a rather fine 22-min album taster, available on The Flightpath Estate Mixcloud page.

As a footnote, there is a dedication to Andrew Weatherall, who I can only think would be blown away by this stunning birthday present and the love that went into it's creation from everyone involved.
 
There's a second dedication to Isaac Robert Neville Turner, an inspiration for dad Adam who in turn has continued to be an inspiration to me and many others in the blogging and wider community. Isaac would be especially proud of his Dad right now, I think.

Thanks, Adam, that's another beer I owe you if we ever get to meet. If it's the Golden Lion, I can see that as an expensive round to include the Flightpath Estate as a whole!

Worth every penny, though, as was this work of art. Sounds From The Flightpath Estate is a perfect album. Thank you, everyone.

Wednesday, 7 February 2024

These Things That Stir Me Will Not Deter Me

Another highlight of last week's Bandcamp Friday purchases was a new song by Jo Bartlett
 
Drawing A Line (ghost tape no.2) is a lovely burbling, bass-heavy number replete with cassette hiss percussion, occasional jangly guitar and Jo's vocals floating and weaving through. As the sub-title suggests, it's a track from Jo's forthcoming album Ghost Tapes 1-9, due out on 26th April. 
 
Jo also has a band, Kodiak Island, who debuted with the Play To Your Strengths EP in 2022 and followed up with a new song, Innocence, late last year.

 
Back in December, I was 'introduced' to Jo's solo music via the Hardway Bros remix of her song Camden, released earlier in 2023 and a track which immediately secured a place in my end of year Imperfect List

 
Jo is no stranger to the remix, however. Polaris, a track by her former group The Yellow Moon Band got The Time & Space Machine treatment from Richard Norris way back in 2009.

It was a casual click onto Jo's music site Indie Through The Looking Glass and the 'About Jo B' page that provided the forehead slapping moment when I realised that Jo's been here all along and I hadn't made the connection. 
 
Case in point: It's Jo And Danny, whose folky pop I greatly enjoyed in the early 2000s.

Not afraid of the rework and reinvention even then, Let It Happen was remixed in 2003 by King Creosote.
 
Oh and Jo Bartlett and Danny Hagan also founded the Green Man Festival. Wow. And wow.
 
If you've got free time, I'd recommend a visit to Indie Through The Looking Glass, it's a fascinating - at times frustrating, at times heartbreaking - read of Jo's journey through music. Inspiring stuff.
 
And after you're done reading, then straight back to Bandcamp. A large chunk of Jo Bartlett's back catalogue, including It's Jo And Danny, The Yellow Moon Band and C86 contenders Bluetrain, is available. Absolutely make a beeline for her material from the last 18 months and work your way back.

Friday, 15 September 2023

D:Ream Time

D:Ream aka Peter Cunnah and Al Mackenzie released a mammoth collection, Broken Hearts & Messed Up Minds: The Remix Album, on 1st September. A companion to D:Ream's fourth album Open Hearts Open Minds, it's continuing their purple patch of quality tunes and top notch remixers.

There are 21 songs on the current compilation, the majority of which are new and exclusive to this release so I could easily have focused today's selection on that alone. However, I've gone down the same path as the previous Dubhed mix, with versions spanning 1993 to date. The previous selection was just over an hour; my challenge this time was to compile a C90 cassette-friendly side coming in at the three quarters of an hour mark. 

Half a dozen songs later, I think I cracked it. What do you think?

Happy Friday, everyone!
 
1) Gods In The Making (Brassneck Dub) (Remix By Al Mackenzie) (2011)
2) I Like it (Ramp New Game Dub) (Remix By Shem McCauley & Simon Rogers) (1993) 
3) Pedestal (Al Mackenzie's Pop Tart Remix) (2022)
4) I Used To Believe In Love (Pete Herbert Remix) (2023)
5) U R The Best Thing (Mo Bass Part II) (Remix By David Morales ft. D'Borah Asher) (1993)
6) Look At The Stars Now, Mama (Hardway Brothers Meet Monkton Uptown Deep Dive) (Remix By Sean Johnston & Duncan Gray) (2023) 
 
D:Ream Time (45:19) (KF) (Mega)
You can find my D:Ream Dubhed Selection from December 2022 here *
 
* I noticed that the KrakenFiles link isn't working and despite attempts to re-upload this morning, I'm still getting an "unknown error" response. Please bear with me and the link will be available at some point!

** KrakenFiles is having none of it as far as the 2022 D:Ream upload is concerned so I hope you'll be happy to make do with Mega for this one. Sorry!

*** KrakenFiles issue now resolved and the 2022 D:Ream selection is available again.

Friday, 18 August 2023

Fly Away

I probably say this every year but this year has been a really good year for top notch electronic music. To prove my point, here's an (almost) hour-long selection of absolute corkers that I have purchased since 2023 emerged blinking into the daylight through to the arse end of what's proved to be, in the UK at least, a washed-out summer.

Stick this on and fly away from it all for a while.
 
1) Facciamo L'Amore (Pete Blaker Remix): Rheinzand
2) The Girl With A Hole In Her Heart (Album Version): A Man Called Adam 
3) Brasiliana: Bárbara Boeing
4) Trinity (Original Version): Pim Secle & Orchid
5) Quiet Spillage (The Long Champs Remix By Lloyd Jones): StinkyJim
6) Synthetic Glory (MAN2.0 Remix By Mark Bailey): James Rod
7) Golden Dirt (Hereldeduke Remix By Linton Brown): Hello Cosmos
8) Look At The Stars Now, Mama (Hardway Brothers Meet Monkton Uptown Deep Dive) (Remix By Sean Johnston & Duncan Gray): D:Ream
9) Lack Of Sleep (Album Version): Maps
 
Bandcamp links below. Purchase of the full EP/album is strongly recommended for all.
 
 
Fly Away (57:38) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 26 July 2021

Cosmic Intervention

From goth to groove in 24 hours. Today, I was up early and not in the mood to move. Thankfully, Australia's Angus Gruzman aka Dreems has remedied that with the infectious Opium Tiger, Flying Again. It's a rework of a 2019 song and all the better for it, nearly 13 minutes of groove, that changes tack about halfway. There's also a very indie guitar snippet, which got me thinking of Pink Industry at one point. The remix EP, out today, includes further versions of Flying Tiger by Japan's Zongamin and two from Canada's The Mole, all worth your time and hard earned pennies.



Next up, and out earlier this month, is the UNKLE remix of Krust's Hegel Dialect from his 2020 album, The Edge Of Everything. In typical back-to-front fashion, I haven't heard the album yet, but this remix package (TEOE Remixes #3) is spot on. I think the last UNKLE remix I picked up was in 2015 so this is a welcome surprise.



What will come as no surprise is that Sean Johnson aka Hardway Bros delivers a killer groove on his remix of French producer Margee's Wrong Dream, from the In My Sleep EP released last Friday. 11 minutes of pulsing beats and shimmering synths that feels way too short. Both the Krust and Margee packages include essential remixes from Bristol legend and founding member of The Wild Bunch, Milo Johnson, in his DJ Nature guise. 

 
 
Dreems (Bandcamp)
Krust on Crosstown Rebels (Bandcamp)
The Edge Of Everything: Remixed (out 6th August on Bandcamp)
Margee (Soundcloud)
DJ Nature (Soundcloud)