Showing posts with label Richard D. James. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard D. James. Show all posts

Friday, 8 August 2025

How Can You Hate The 808?!

'Cause I certainly don't.

Happy #808 Day!

1) Spastik (12" Version By Richie Hawtin): Plastikman (1993)
2) Xtal (Album Version): Aphex Twin (1992)
3) Voodoo Ray (Original Mix): A Guy Called Gerald ft. Nicola Collier (1988)
4) (You Are My) All And All (Take Twelve) (Remix By Kurtis Mantronik): Joyce Sims (1986)
5) The Way You Move (Club Mix By Carlton Mahone, Jr.): Outkast ft. Sleepy Brown (2003)
6) It's Tricky (Album Version By Rick Rubin & Russell Simmons): Run-D.M.C. (1986)
7) Musique Non Stop (Album Version): Kraftwerk (1986)
8) French Kiss (The Songbird Sings Long Vocal Mix): Lil' Louis ft. Karlana Johnson & Shawn Christopher (1989)

1986: All And All EP: 4
1986: Electric Cafe: 7
1986: Raising Hell: 6
1988: Voodoo Ray EP: 3
1989: French Kiss EP: 8
1992: Selected Ambient Works 85-92: 2
1993: Spastik EP: 1
2003: Speakerboxxx / The Love Below: 5

How Can You Hate The 808?! (47:02) (GD) (M)

Thursday, 7 August 2025

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Or, AFX with a video for Korg Funk5, directed by Nadia Lee Cohen.

As you might expect from Aphex Twin aka Richard D. James, aurally it's a bonkers track, coming in under four minutes and delivering the title's promise of Korg and funk.

Nadia creates an equally bonkers visual narrative involving a dancer (Nadia herself) repeatedly dying and replicating, travelling from a dance studio into the streets and navigating an array of colourful characters along the way.

Korg Funk5 is an old track, first emerging on the 14-track digital-only release Korg Trax+Tunings For Falling Asleep in 2017.

Korg Funk5 more recently popped up in December last year, simultaneously on the 5-track 12" & digital EP London 19.08.2023, and Music From The Merch Desk (2016 - 2023), a whopping 38-track collection for a mere 20 notes. 

Sunday, 24 July 2022

Another Brief Excursion In The Underworld

Side 1 of a mixtape, featuring "13 ambient adventures" and originally assembled 10th January 1998. 
 
When I presented Side 2 on 3rd August 2021, I literally had nothing else to say in the accompanying post, which seems very unfair in retrospect. I'll put it down to the post going out on a Tuesday at the beginning of August and it being relatively early on in my routine of daily posting. I'd either had a very heavy Monday at work and/or very limited time the following morning to finesse a post. 
 
These days, whilst it's still very rare for me to prepare a post days in advance - although I'll often carry an idea or may know what I want to post on a particular day - I usually set aside more time for writing the post, over and above any prep for the musical selection itself.
 
A Brief Excursion In The Underworld's subtitle is a bit misleading. Yes, there are 13 tracks; no, it's not an ambient mixtape; I'll leave you to be the judge of whether it's an "adventure" in any way at all. What it is, is a home for a bunch of off-kilter music that I liked but which didn't fit onto any other of my electronica, dance or ambient compilation tapes at the time.
 
I've previously featured Side 1 of "The Best Of Trance Europe Express" and it's no spoiler to say that Pleidean Communication by A Positive Life aka Stefan Pierlejewski doesn't appear on Side 2. However, it's another misleading mixtape title, as TEE was chock full of excellent music, including this track. A slightly longer version of Pleidean Communication appears on the 1994 album Synaesthetic, which was re-sequenced and re-released with lovely new artwork late last year. For those who prefer physical formats, you can pick up the original issue on CD via Waveform Records or the reissue on double vinyl via re:discovery records. Either way, it's well worth a listen.

Polygon Window is one of the many, many aliases of Richard D. James, releasing a clutch of singles and promos and just one album, 1993's Surfing On Sine Waves. Again, you can pick up a digital re-release of the album with a couple of bonus tracks via Warp Records. Whilst you're there, I'd also highly recommend Polygon Window's Quoth EP, which features the brilliantly titled Bike Pump Meets Bucket.

In the mid-1990s, Banco De Gaia seemed to be the ambient/chill out act that my friends liked, even if they otherwise weren't into that kind of music. I particularly got into Banco De Gaia in early 1994, having seen Toby Marks DJ during my first experience of a Megadog night in Derby. I went on to buy the limited 3CD, 13-track album Last Train To Lhasa in 1995 and although I don't listen to it as often as I should these days, it's not lost any of it's impact. No surprise that you can pick up a special edition of Last Train To Lhasa on Bandcamp. The re-release covers CDs 1 & 2 of the original physical release - including the version of China featured here - plus 5 bonus tracks. 

Rising High Records was founded by musical polymath and innovator Caspar Pound, who tragically succumbed to cancer in 2004 at the age of 33. It's fair to say that his list of achievements and influences on electronic music are too great to list here. A couple of personal favourites were the excellent Further Self Evident Truths .. compilations and Rising High Collective, where Pound collaborated with Marc Williams, Peter Williams and singer Plavka, then known for her work with Jam & Spoon and providing vocals on The Shamen's classic Hypereal. Caspar Pound's daughter Sapho has been responsible for the Rising High legacy in recent years, which has seen much of Rising High Collective's singles and remixes available again in digital format. The version of Move Ya featured here, remixed by Bedouin Ascent aka Kingsuk Biswas, doesn't appear to have been reissued as yet and is exclusive to the first Further Self Evident Truths .. compilation.

Two Lone Swordsmen aka Andrew Weatherall and Keith Tenniswood should need no introduction, especially if you've been a regular visitor to these pages. In fact, I love Glide By Shooting - and it's parent album/EP Swimming Not Skimming - so much that I've featured it here previously. I think the music speaks for itself on this occasion. Simply stunning.

I'll admit that I've not had a great deal of interest in Jon Anderson's career, whether with Yes, Jon & Vangelis or as a solo artist. Yet, he manages to constantly enter my consciousness with music that demands my attention. I'll admit that I was equally ignorant of 1994 album Deseo and have remained largely indifferent to it since, but I was drawn to 1995 companion The Deseo Remixes. Aside from the appeal of the lenticular cover (remember those?) which sadly cracked when I moved home a couple of years later, the CD featured remixes by Transglobal Underground, Deep Forest and The Future Sound Of London, as well as a couple of beauties by Mark Pritchard and Tom Middleton as Global Communication. Bless This is one of the few tracks on The Deseo Remixes to retain the track title from the parent album and, in both cases, closes proceedings. The version here is a shimmering, echo effects-laden chorus with a rhythm that evokes the drum machine from Vienna by Ultravox, seven minutes passing by in a flash (or should that be haze?).

If you enjoy what you've heard here, check out Side 2 which features more goodies (not to be confused with The Goodies) by The Shamen, Scanner, The Art Of Noise, The Grid, Moby, David Toop and Cosmic Baby.
 
1) Pleidean Communication (Original Version): A Positive Life (from Trance Europe Express², 1994)
2) If It Really Is Me: Polygon Window (from Surfing On Sine Waves, 1993)
3) China (Clouds Not Mountains): Banco De Gaia (from Last Train To Lhasa, 1995)
4) Move Ya (Bedouin Ascent Silicon Grooves Mix): Rising High Collective (from Further Self Evident Truths .., 1995)
5) Glide By Shooting (Remix By Andrew Weatherall & Keith Tenniswood): Two Lone Swordsmen (from Swimming Not Skimming, 1996)
6) Bless This (Remix By Global Communication aka Mark Pritchard & Tom Middleton): Jon Anderson (from The Deseo Remixes, 1995)

Side Two here

Sunday, 26 December 2021

Boxing Day

Too obvious?
 
1) Boxes: The Naturals (2007)
2) Call Box (1-2-3): Wall Of Voodoo (1981)
3) Heart-Shaped Box: Nirvana (1993)
4) Beast Box: Luxuria (1990)
5) Boxing Day: AFX (2006)
6) Hasj Box: Olav Brekke Mathisen (2003)
7) Glory Box / Toy Box (Remix): Portishead (1994)
8) Lanhydrock, Cornwall / The Old Music Box Playing In The Nursery (Produced by Jarvis Cocker): National Trust (2010)
9) The Box (Part Four): Orbital ft. Grant Fulton & Alison Goldfrapp (1996)
10) Pillar Box Red (Album Version By Clive Langer & Alan Winstanley): The The (2002)
 
Boxing Day (36:54) (KF) (Mega)

Thursday, 11 November 2021

Viewed From Outside

Back to the future...The Future Sound Of London, that is. This is a 30-minute mix by Brian Dougans & Garry Cobain, tying in with Record Store Day 2016. It was originally broadcast in the closing segment of The 6 Mix With Nemone on BBC 6 Music on Saturday 16th April 2016, roughly 1.30am or thereabouts. Nine tracks from 1991 to 1994, including B12 (as Redcell), Reload (aka Mark Pritchard & Tom Middleton), Luke Slater (as Morganistic) and closing with an (at the time) unreleased FSOL track.
 
1) Papua New Guinea (12" Original): The Future Sound Of London (Papua New Guinea EP, 1991)
2) Mad Monks On Zinc (Original Mix): Holy Ghost Inc. (
Mad Monks On Zinc EP, 1991)
3) Schottkey 7th Path: Aphex Twin (
Selected Ambient Works 85-92, 1992)
4) Paradroid: Redcell (
Redcell EP, 1992)
5) Go To Sleep: Laurent Garnier (
A Bout De Souffle EP, 1993)
6) Le Soleil Et La Mer (Original Mix/Album Version): Reload (
Auto Reload EP: Volume 2 / A Collection Of Short Stories, 1993)
7) In The Shadow (Original Version): Morganistic (
In The Shadow EP, 1992)
8) Basscadet (Bcdtmx): Autechre (
Basscad,EP, 1994)
9) Viewed From Outside: The Future Sound Of London (1994) (
Ramblings Vol. 1 EP, 2017 / Music For 3 Books, 2021)


Thursday, 22 July 2021

101

When I started this blog on 7th December 2020, I didn't really have any thought of how often or how long I'd keep going with posting music. After a fairly relaxed start, I gradually built up some momentum and started posting daily from mid-May and today I bring you post #101. Even a casual glance around at the many blogs that I enjoy and have been inspired by, who have been going for years, decades even, and have thousands of posts to enjoy, means that this is no big deal in the scheme of things. If anything, getting this far has made me admire them even more. I really appreciate everyone who stops by to visit and read my offerings to cyberspace and it's great to receive your comments. Thanks to you all.

On that note, here's a little 101-themed playlist. Yes, arguably another excuse for yet more Andrew Weatherall. My positive bias aside, Weatherall's prodigious work as an artist, remixer, producer and DJ is such that you could probably play Six Degrees Of Separation with my music collection and find him in three. As a counter for Weatherall's ubiquity on this blog, I am pretty confident that this is the only time you'll see Sheena Easton here. Unless there's a Prince-themed post at some point in the future.
 
1) Electribal Memories: Electribe 101 (1990)
2) 101 (101% By Scooby Doo & Shaggy 2): Finitribe (1991)
3) Karma Sitar: 101 Strings (1972)
4) 101 (Def House Mix (Extended Club Version) By David Morales): Sheena Easton (1989)
5) 101 (Intensity Mix By Andrew Weatherall) (Full Length): Finitribe (1991)
6) 101 Rainbows Ambient Mix: Caustic Window (1994)
7) The Golden Age (CD101 Version) (Cover of Beck): The Flaming Lips (2002)
8) Desert Wind (Interstate 101 Mix): Banco De Gaia (1994)
9) Bossa Nova 101: Money Mark (1998)
10) Keys To Your Heart (Khayem's Reverse Reprise): The 101'ers (2021)