Showing posts with label Martina Topley-Bird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martina Topley-Bird. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 December 2024

The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Terry)

 
Apologies for a typo in yesterday's post. When I wrote "be sure to drop by tomorrow for a Boxing Day special.", what I meant was "Boxing Day Specials". The Specials, that is, who top and tail today's selection.
 
More specifically, this is a nearly hour-long tribute to Terry Hall, who passed on 18th December 2022. It's hard to believe that two years have gone by.
 
Not that Terry's ever really away from my music playlists. Like the Imaginary Compilation Album that I created for The Vinyl Villain in 2021, this 13-song selection draws from Terry's rich history of bands, collaborations and solo releases, some that will be immediately familiar, other deeper cuts that you may not know. 
 
The common thread is Terry's wonderful voice, character and way with words. Every one a winner.

As an added Boxing Day treat, I've reactivated links to the aforementioned Imaginary Compilation Album, plus the companion ICA created by TVV mastermind JC following mine. I recreated the pair as four sides of faux vinyl and posted them as a tribute to Terry, on hearing the awful news of his death.

Terry, you are missed but never forgotten.
 
1) Stereotype: The Specials (1980)
2) Sugar Man (Album Version): Silent Poets ft. Terry Hall (1999)
3) Heart Of America: The Colourfield (1987)
4) Getting Over You (Album Version): Hiroshi Fujiwara ft. Terry Hall (1994)
5) Alone: Fun Boy Three ft. Bananarama (1982)
6) Love Will Keep Us Together: Terry, Blair & Anouchka (1990)
7) Sense (Album Version) (Cover of Lightning Seeds): Terry Hall (1994)
8) Problem Is (Album Version): Dub Pistols ft. Terry Hall (2001)
9) Why Should I?: Leila ft. Terry Hall & Martina Topley-Bird (2008)
10) Poems (Edit): Nearly God ft. Terry Hall & Martina Topley-Bird (1996)
11) Stand Together: Terry Hall & Mushtaq (2003)
12) Walk Into The Wind: Vegas ft. Siobahn Fahey (1992)
13) The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Depression): The Specials (2019)

1980: Stereotype EP: 1
1982: FB3: 5
1987: Deception: 3
1990: Ultra Modern Nursery Rhyme EP: 6 
1992: Walk Into The Wind EP: 12
1994: Home: 7
1994: Nothing Much Better To Do: 4 
1996: Poems EP: 10
1999: To Come...: 2
2001: Six Million Ways To Die: 8
2003: The Hour Of Two Lights: 11
2008: Blood, Looms & Blooms: 9
2019: Encore: 13

The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Terry) (56:36) (KF) (Mega)

Friday, 10 May 2024

A Shot Of Equanimity

Another dip into the shopping bag for an hour-long selection of purchases from last Friday.
 
Topped and tailed by David Holmes, all but one from this decade, a mix of legendary and new(ish) names, all committed to delivering some top tunes, bending the original music into new shapes.
 
Enjoy! 
 
1) Yeah x 3 (Rich Lane Remix): David Holmes ft. Raven Violet (2024)
2) PoPoPoPom (Keith Forrester Remix): Stylic (2024)
3) If.... (Ditz Remix): bdrmm (2020)
4) You Ain't Seen Me (Black Octopus Remix): The Shaker (2024)
5) Leave House (Motor City Drum Ensemble Remix): Caribou (2010)
6) Game (Mezey Remix By Benjamin Boeldt): Martina Topley-Bird (2022)
7) Camouflage (Pattern 2) (Remix by UXB aka Peter Morgan): Campbell / Mallinder / Benge (2022)
8) Sugar High (Saint Etienne Remix): Iraina Mancini (2023)
9) Sylvia (David Holmes Remix): Lisa Moorish (2024)
 
2010: Swim Remixes: 5
2020: If.... EP: 3 
2022: Clinker (Expanded Edition): 7
2022: Game EP: 6
2024: Beyond The Wizards Sleeve / Saint Etienne Versions EP: 8
2024: Blind On A Galloping Horse (Remixes Vol. 1): 1
2024: Shelter Me: In Crisis: 2 
2024: Sylvia EP: 9
2024: You Ain't Seen Me EP: 4
 
A Shot Of Equanimity (1:00:23) (KF) (Mega)

Thursday, 11 May 2023

I Wanna Feel Good

Happy birthday to Greg Dulli, born 11th May 1965.
 
I wasn't immediately struck by The Afghan Whigs - or Dulli's voice - when I first heard them, but it's fair to say that a combination of great tunes, incisive lyrics and sheer swagger won me over.
 
Here are a couple of personal favourites, Somethin' Hot from 1998 and Debonair from 1993, sandwiching two songs from Dulli's many diversions from the Whigs. The Gutter Twins was a sadly finite collaboration with Mark Lanegan that produced one (brilliant) album in 2008. The Twilight Singers roughly existed when The Afghan Whigs didn't, between 2000 and 2011. This performance, from the Lowlands Festival in the Netherlands circa 2006, is a rather fine cover of Too Tough To Die by Martina Topley-Bird.




Have a good one, Greg!

Thursday, 19 January 2023

Born In The Bristol Bronx

Postponed from Wednesday, today's selection features Tricky aka Adrian Nicholas Matthews Thaws. 
 
And about time too. Although, having said that, if I've done a bit more homework in preparing this, I might have delayed it just over a week and posted it on 27th January to celebrate Tricky's 55th birthday. 
 
Sod it, he's waited long enough for a Dubhed selection, let's do it.

The above title refers to Knowle West, the south Bristol suburb where Tricky was born, five and a half decades ago. I was born a few years later but was living in a neighbouring - albeit rapidly gentrifying - suburb in the mid-90s and was well familiar with the term. The first time I remember seeing reference to The Bristol Bronx in print though was in the CD/Book series Volume. Number Ten to be precise, which previewed a song by Tricky (You Don't) from his then forthcoming debut album.
 
How much has changed since then. Tricky has swapped Bristol for Berlin and following that astonishing debut has released a steady stream of albums under his own name and a variety of aliases, Tricky's most recent project being 2021's Lonely Guest.

This selection of a dozen Tricky songs spans a twenty year period from 1995 to 2015. It skips the ubiquitous debut album, Maxinquaye, and cuts off at 2015 (which, in Tricky currency, converts into at least five albums and numerous other releases). What I love about Tricky is his endless hunger for collaboration, for blurring the boundaries between hip hop and pop, rock and rap and this selection provides a dizzying tour of the world.

To make up for the absence of anything from Tricky's debut album Maxinquaye, here's the video for Overcome, which I feel is often overlooked in favour of Aftermath, Ponderosa or Hell Is Round The Corner. The third of six (!) singles from the album, it was the first to crack the UK Top 40, entering at #34 in late January 1995. 

I think I've only seen the video a couple of times previously, on TV, but it's a visually stunning few minutes directed by Mike Lipscombe, whose CV includes Inner City Life by Goldie, Angel by Gavin Friday, Deeper Underground by Jamiroquai and The Everlasting by Manic Street Preachers.
 
In December 2022, SWC over at No Badger Required wrote a brilliant post about Maxinquaye as one of the "Nearly Perfect Albums" series. If you'd never heard the album before, you'd read the post and want to rush out to buy it. If you had heard it before, you'd read the post and want to buy the album again. It really is that good.

I featured Lonely Guest here last July, proof if any needed that Tricky has not stood still since hanging with The Wild Bunch in the late 80s, constantly growing and developing as an artist. Hopefully, this selection gives a brief snapshot. 

It's 30 years in March (I think) since Tricky dropped the first white labels of Aftermath. I'll aim to come back to the Knowle West Boy then with possibly a more ambitious career-spanning selection.

In the meantime, if your appetite has been well and truly whet, check out Tricky's False Idols label on Bandcamp.
 
1) Broken Homes (Album Version): Tricky ft. PJ Harvey (1998) 
2) ESP: Tricky ft. Liz Densmore (2003)
3) For Real (Hip-Hop Remix By Dame Grease aka Damon Blackman): Tricky (1999) 
4) Same Old Song: Tricky ft. Ajeya (2015)
5) Ghetto Youth (Album Version): Tricky ft. Sky (1995)
6) Scrappy Love: Tricky ft. DJ Muggs & Grease (1999) 
7) Somebody's Sins: Tricky ft. Francesca Belmonte (2013)
8) Puppy Toy (Album Version): Tricky ft. Alex Mills (2008)
9) Hakim: Tricky ft. Hakim Hamadouche (2010)
10) Bury The Evidence: Tricky ft. Hawkman (2001)
11) 360º: Tricky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1998)
12) Cross To Bear (Remix By South Rakkas Crew): Tricky ft. Hafdis Huld (2009)
 
1996: Pre-Millennium Tension: 5
1998: Angels With Dirty Faces: 1
1998: Money Greedy / Broken Homes EP: 11
1999: For Real EP: 3 
1999: Juxtapose: 6
2001: Blowback: 10
2008: Knowle West Boy: 8
2009: Tricky Meets South Rakkas Crew: 12
2010: Mixed Race: 9
2013: False Idols: 7
2014: 54U EP: 2 
2015: European Tour Bonus Tracks EP: 4
 
Born In The Bristol Bronx (44:25) (Box) (Mega)

Sunday, 14 August 2022

Hep Hop Excursion

Side 2 of an arguably more 'chiller' than 'chill out' compilation tape, recorded circa July to September 1996.
 
This selection is weighted towards acts from or based in my birthplace Bristol - Massive Attack, Tricky, Carlton, Earthling - and recorded following (and possibly as a reaction to) the proliferation of trip hop compilations in 1994/1995. The term trip hop was apparently coined by Andy Pemberton in June 1994 and first appeared in Mixmag when he reviewed DJ Shadow & RPM's single In/Flux. However, it also became seemingly inextricably linked with "The Bristol Sound", even though many of the tagged artists either had already or would soon transcend such a label.  
 
Renegade Soundwave deliver a suitably spine-tingling take on Pop Will Eat Itself's Underbelly. I remember hearing this over the Virgin Megastore PA when PWEI's remix album Two Fingers My Friends! was released and it was enough for me to shell out for the limited edition 2CD there and then. 
 
Another album I bought on spec, having read about but not heard, was ISDN by The Future Sound Of London although I knew exactly what I was letting myself in for. ISDN is a 15-track album edited together from various live broadcasts that FSOL had transmitted during 1994 to radio stations all over the world using ISDN networking, then a relatively new technology. 
 
Hot Knives featured on the initial limited edition (of 10,000) "cruciform velcro-sealed embossed card case with separate card sleeve". What the Discogs description doesn't mention is that visually ISDN is also a dead ringer for Spinal Tap's Smell The Glove (or original motion picture soundtrack album, if you're a pedant). ISDN was reissued six months later with a more conventional sleeve design and jewel case and a slightly different tracklisting, swapping out three tracks from the original issue, including Hot Knives.

Scorn was formed in 1991 by Mick Harris and Nik Bullen, both ex-Napalm Death and quite far removed from the music of their former band. I only have two CDs by Scorn, the Deliverance EP and Ellipsis. Both are remix projects so possibly unrepresentative of Scorn’s output as a whole, but sphincter-troubling electronic music all the same. By the time of Ellipsis, Scorn had become a solo vehicle for Mick Harris, the album mostly remixing tracks from their last album as a duo, 1994's Evanescence. I have no idea what the original version of Night Tide sounds like but here Scanner aka Robin Rimbaud rebuilds the track around his trademark use of mobile phone and police radio scanners to disturbing effect.

Finally, an honourable mention for several of my favourite chanteuses, all featured here with standout tracks: Martina Topley-Bird, Róisín Murphy, Sarah Cracknell and Tracey Thorn.
 
If you're feeling the heat again today - a peak of 33°C is expected in my neck of the woods - then stick this on for 45 minutes and you may start to experience shivering and goosebumps, which may help.

1) Underbelly (Renegade Soundwave Blackout Mix): Pop Will Eat Itself (1995)
2) Aftermath (Version 1): Tricky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1994)
3) 1 To 1 Religion (Skankapella Remix By Dobie): Bomb The Bass ft. Carlton (1994)
4) Dominoid (Radio Mix): Moloko (1996)
5) Hot Knives (Live ISDN Transmission, VPRO Radio, Netherlands): The Future Sound Of London (1994)
6) Night Tide (Scanner - "Flaneur Electronique" Mix): Scorn (1995)
7) Gone (Alter Ego Decoding Gone, Pt. 2): David Holmes ft. Sarah Cracknell (1995)
8) Protection (7" Edit): Massive Attack ft. Tracey Thorn (1994)
9) Nefisa (Faraway Moses) (Remix By Plunderphonics): Earthling (1995)

1994: 1 To 1 Religion EP: 3
1994: Aftermath EP: 2
1994: ISDN (limited edition first issue): 5 
1994: Protection EP: 8
1995: Ellipsis: 6 
1995: Gone EP: 7 
1995: Nefisa EP: 9
1995: Two Fingers My Friends!: 1
1996: Dominoid EP: 4

Side Two (45:13) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 5 June 2022

You Brightened Up My Scene With Images Stolen From My Dreams

An all-female vocal selection for this Sunday, featuring several highlights from this year, sprinkled with choice songs from the depths of my collection. 

The selection starts with the song that triggered the idea for this post, dusted off when I was sorting through some CD singles in the attic. Sweetest Child was a one-off single that reached #45 in the UK in August 1992. The song was a collaboration between Youth (DJ, producer & Killing Joke) and Maria McKee (Lone Justice and Top Gun movie chanteuse). The Official Chart Company lists the song as a solo McKee but in fact the sleeve states "featuring Maria McKee" and doesn't actually name the act as Sweetest Child. I've gone with the latter eponymous title for simplicity's sake. I've gone for the effects-adorned accapella here, but I'll showcase one of the other mixes one day, featuring some guitar shredding from the much-missed Robert 'Throb' Young of Primal Scream.

There are a clutch of superlative remixes: Lee 'Scratch' Perry's final creative work for Dot Allison is a winner; Märtini Brös lend an indie edge to fellow Germans Toktok vs. Soffy O.; Kate Simko's beats and strings washes Bishi Bhattacharya's sweet vocals; Scotland is the last stop on the musical tour, White Label remixing a highlight from Jan Burnett's collaborative project, The Grand Gestures, featuring the wonderful voice of Emma Pollock, formerly of The Delgados.
 
A couple of cover versions are featured: Hayley Richman hails from Montreal, Canada and delivers a striking cover of Talk Talk's Life's What You Make It. Catherine Anne Davies, a Welsh artist who records as The Anchoress, similarly has a bold attempt at The Cure's Friday I'm In Love, and I love it. 
 
The selection is mostly downtempo, but includes a few more upbeat numbers. Katy J Pearson hails from my birthplace Bristol, is on the Heavenly label and drops her second album (three, if you count her lockdown mini-album of field recordings) in July. I've pre-ordered on the strength of the three singles released so far, including today's selection Alligator.

Jez from A History Of Dubious Taste recommended Ibibio Sound Machine's latest album, Electricity, and he's right, it's an absolute corker. Eno Williams is a compelling voice and frontperson and with Hot Chip on production duties, it's a winner from start to finish. 
 
I've enthused previously about Yuksek's album, Nosso Ritmo, and this is a standout track featuring Queen Rose. Parental warning: you can probably decipher the song title/acronym G.F.Y. and the F-bomb is dropped liberally throughout. 
 
I had to include a few of my other favourite female artists. Martina Topley-Bird returned last year with a fantastic album, Forever I Wait; for this selection, I've dipped back into her back catalogue for a more obscure B-side from 2003, but no less beautiful. 
 
Lisa Germano first came to my attention via the Inconsiderate Bitch EP on 4AD and Puppet was a standout song. The version featured here is from the earlier US album before Ivo & John Fryer signed up Germano and remixed several songs for the release of Happiness in the UK. 

Last, but by no means least, is Billie Ray Martin with a song from the sublime 4 Ambient Tales EP, produced by The Grid. It was one of her first releases after the demise of Electribe 101 and what's proved to be a substantive and fascinating solo career.

Today's manipulated cover image is a photo of "American left-wing political essayist, journalist, activist, feminist, and pop music critic" Ellen Willis, which I've been wanting to use for a while and seemed spot on as a accompaniment for this selection.

1) Accapella Sweetest Child (Remix By Youth): Sweetest Child ft. Maria McKee (1992)
2) Love Died In Our Arms (Lee 'Scratch' Perry Remix): Dot Allison (2022)
3) Modern Woman: Erin Rae (2021)
4) Missy Queen's Gonna Die (Märtini Brös) (Remix By Clemens Kahlcke & Michael Pagliosa): Toktok vs. Soffy O. (2002)
5) Alligator: Katy J Pearson (2022)
6) G.F.Y. (Album Version): Yuksek ft. Queen Rose (2019)
7) 17 18 19: Ibibio Sound Machine (2022)
8) Reflektions (Reworking III) (Remix By Kate Simko): Bishi (2022)
9) Life's What You Make It (Cover of Talk Talk): Hayley Richman (2015)
10) Skyscraper: Martina Topley-Bird (2003)
11) Puppet (Original US Album Version): Lisa Germano (1993)
12) This Road: Denise Sherwood (2022)
13) Friday I'm In Love (Cover of The Cure): The Anchoress (2022)
14) Hearts (Single Version By The Grid aka Dave Ball & Richard Norris): Billie Ray Martin (1993)
15) A Certain Compulsion (Remixed By White Label aka Steve Aungle, Anth Brown & Tom Doyle): The Grand Gestures ft. Emma Pollock (2016)
 
1992: Sweetest Child EP: 1
1993: 4 Ambient Tales EP: 14
1993: Happiness (USA): 11
2002: Missy Queen's Gonna Die EP: 4 
2003: Anything EP: 10
2015: Life's What You Make It EP: 9 
2016: The Grand Gestures Remixed: 15
2019: Nosso Ritmo: 6
2021: Lighten Up: 3 
2022: Electricity: 7
2022: Friday I'm In Love EP: 13
2022: Pay It All Back Vol. 8: 12
2022: Reflektions EP: 8
2022: Sound Of The Morning: 5
2022: The Entangled Remix EP: 2


In researching this post, I ended up revisiting (or in some cases, discovering) the official videos for several songs on YouTube. They're far too good to keep to myself so, following the track list sequencing, here are Sweetest Child ft. Maria McKee, Erin Rae, Toktok vs. Soffy O., Katy J Pearson, Yuksek ft. Queen Rose, Bishi, Hayley Richman and a very unsettling promo for Lisa Germano's Puppet. 
 
If you only have time to watch a couple, then the videos for Erin Rae and Katy J Pearson are recommended.

Wednesday, 29 December 2021

Why Should I Worry?

Martina Topley-Bird's 4th album, Forever I Want, came out in September but I won't have a physical (CD) copy until January 2022. A default contender then for next year's 'best of', though Martina's music is arguably a winner in any year. 

Today's selection dips into Martina's musical history, including her solo albums, frequent collaborations with Tricky and guest spots with Massive Attack and Leila. It goes without saying that it's all wonderful.

Side One
1) Sandpaper Kisses (Acoustic Version By Martina Topley-Bird & Damon Albarn): Martina Topley-Bird (2010)
2) Carnies (Album Version By Danger Mouse & Kennie Takahashi): Martina Topley-Bird (2008) 
3) Suffocated Love (Album Version By Tricky & Mark Saunders): TrIcky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1995)
4) Why Should I?: Leila ft. Terry Hall & Martina Topley-Bird (2008)
5) Hours Away: Martina Topley-Bird (2003)
 
Side Two
1) Makes Me Wanna Die (Single Version By Tricky & Ian Caple): Tricky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1997)
2) Babel: Massive Attack ft. Martina Topley-Bird (2010)
3) When We Die: TrIcky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (2017)
4) Abbaon Fat Tracks (Album Version): Tricky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1995)
5) Black Coffee: Nearly God ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1996)
 
1995: Maxinquaye: A3, B4
1996: Nearly God: B5
1997: Makes Me Wanna Die EP: B1
2003: Need One EP: A5
2008: The Blue God: A2
2008: Blood, Looms & Blooms: A4
2010: Some Place Simple: A1 
2010: Heligoland: B2
2017: ununiform: B3
 

Tuesday, 15 June 2021

Black Swan To Blue Mountain

Bristol on the mix: Easton to Stokes Croft in seven steps.
 
1) Black Steel (In The Draw Mix By Substance) (Cover of Public Enemy): Tricky (1995)
2) Love Will Be On Your Side (Massive Attack Tabla Remix): Indo Animata (1996)
3) Roads (Monk & Canatella Remix): Portishead (2009)
4) Distorted Angel (Remix By Tricky): Elvis Costello & The Attractions (1996)
5) Spooned (Smith & Mighty Dusk Mix): Coldfeet (2001)
6) Burning (RSD aka Rob Smith Remix): Kakhand ft. Sizzla (2013)
7) Nefisa (Portishead Mix): Earthling (1995)

 
 

Tuesday, 18 May 2021

Where Have You Been? You're My Violin

Martina Topley-Bird is back, with a new album Forever I Wait released in September and co-produced with Robert Del Naja aka 3D from Massive Attack. Lots of media interest, including NME, reporting that this is Martina's first album in over a decade. That particular album, Some Place Simple, mainly featured reworkings of songs from her first two albums, so it's actually her first album of new material since 2007's The Blue God.

Like most, I first heard Martina on Tricky's groundbreaking single Aftermath but I am also a huge fan of her solo material. Her first album Quixotic was a patchwork of styles and producers, the sound of an artist finding their identity. The Blue God, produced by Danger Mouse, is a cohesive and outstanding album that I keep coming back to. Some Place Simple, released on Damon Albarn's Honest Jon's Records in 2010, stripped back the songs to great effect.

The lead single from Forever I Wait is Pure Heart, with a rumbling, sinister bassline and guitar chords typical of latter day Massive Attack, but of course it's Martina's voice that carries the song. 

2021 is shaping up to be an great year, with excellent albums from Jane Weaver, The Anchoress (Catherine Anne Davies) and more to come from Dot Allison, Kelsey Lu (hopefully) and Martina Topley-Bird. 

 

Friday, 11 December 2020

5(1)@50: 50 Revolutions Per Minute: 1970-2020

1970 - Double Barrel: Dave & Ansel Collins
1971 - Move On Up (Full Length Version): Curtis Mayfield
1972 - Satellite Of Love (Album Version By David Bowie & Mick Ronson): Lou Reed
1973 - Dance With The Devil: Cozy Powell
1974 - Emma: Hot Chocolate

1975 - Fight The Power (Part 1 & 2) (Album Version): The Isley Brothers
1976 - Disco Inferno (Edit By Khayem): Trammps
1977 - I Feel Love (12" Version By Giorgio Moroder & Pete Bellotte): Donna Summer
1978 - Shot By Both Sides (Single Version): Magazine
1979 - Twat (Live): John Cooper Clarke

1980 - Twist And Crawl (12" Version): The Beat
1981 - The Sound Of The Crowd (Complete) (12" Version): The Human League
1982 - Forever Now (Album Version By Todd Rundgren): The Psychedelic Furs
1983 - Rip It Up (The Intermediate Edit): Orange Juice
1984 - "It's One Louder, Isn't It?”: Spinal Tap

1985 - Raspberry Beret (LP Version): Prince & The Revolution
1986 - Summer Of Love (Single Edit By Shep Pettibone): The B-52’s
1987 - Just Like Heaven (Remix By Bob Clearmountain): The Cure
1988 - Voodoo Ray (Original Mix): A Guy Called Gerald
1989 - W.F.L. (The Vince Clarke Mix): Happy Mondays

1990 - Loaded (Andrew Weatherall Mix): Primal Scream
1991 - 101 (Sonic Shuffle) (Remix By Andrew Weatherall & Hugo Nicholson): Finitribe
1992 - Fallen (Nancy & Lee Mix By Andrew Weatherall & One Dove): One Dove
1993 - What Godzilla Said To God When His Name Wasn't Found In The Book Of Life (Home Demo): American Music Club
1994 - Becoming More Like God (Radio Edit): Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart ft. Anneli Drecker

1995 - Planet Telex (Album Version): Radiohead
1996 - Les Yper-Sound (Album Version): Stereolab
1997 - Dry The Rain (Single Version): The Beta Band
1998 - Feelings: Leila ft. Donna Paul
1999 - Les Nuits (Album Version): Nightmares On Wax

2000 - The Time Is Now (Full Length Version): Moloko
2001 - Paths (Future Sound Of London 'Cosmic Jukebox' Remix Edit): Robert Miles ft. Nina Miranda
2002 - Lessons Learned From Rocky I To Rocky III (Album Version): Cornershop
2003 - New New York: Tes
2004 - Shut Up, Let's Hook Up (GHP Pink Gees Unclean Mix By Go Home Productions): Jason Downs
2005 - No Reason To Cry: The Go-Betweens

2006 - Petrococadollar: Scritti Politti
2007 - Revival: Soulsavers ft. Mark Lanegan
2008 - I Heard Wonders (Album Version): David Holmes
2009 - Sunlamp Show (Disco Bloodbath Effect): The Aliens
2010 - Kiss Kiss Kiss (Acoustic Version): Martina Topley-Bird

2011 - Pure Imagination Part 1: Darwin Deez
2012 - Picking Up The Pieces (Khayem's Lonely In Your Nightmare Remix): Paloma Faith
2013 - Golden Years (Luxxury Edit): David Bowie
2014 - GMF (Live In Concert): John Grant ft. The BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
2015 - Ding Ding Sa: Sa Dingding

2016 - Lush Life (Dancehall Remix)Zara Larsson ft. Tinie Tempah
2017 - Edith Piaf (Said It Better Than Me) (Album Version): Sparks
2018 - Curse Of The Contemporary: LUMP
2019 - The Return: Sampa The Great ft. Alien, Jace XL, Thando Sikwila & Whosane
2020 - La Bande A Papa: Vanessa Contenay-Quiñones