2007 that was (by Tim)

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Thankzx Tim, and good on your recovery.

The Reverend, Thursday, 10 January 2008 05:34 (sixteen years ago) link

i was just wondering if tim was ever going to start up his blog again, and now this comes along. thanks tim!

t_g, Thursday, 10 January 2008 09:23 (sixteen years ago) link

hey tim i put this on the ATTN TIM F thread, but i'll put it here, too:

have you heard this?: Trusme - Working Nights 2LP

you might like it.

gr8080, Thursday, 10 January 2008 10:43 (sixteen years ago) link

I thought the best thing about When I See You is the 'normally I wouldn't do this but... here goes nothin' bit, which is like the least convincing display of sheepishness ever.

Matt DC, Thursday, 10 January 2008 11:23 (sixteen years ago) link

good lord the beat to that fantasia/jeezy song

deej, Thursday, 10 January 2008 17:09 (sixteen years ago) link

The TS7 track is fantastic - I think I'm slowly coming round to bassline.

Matt DC, Thursday, 10 January 2008 21:42 (sixteen years ago) link

there's a bassline remix of 'bed' that i'm in love with, but i'm kind of a sucker for the orig song, ymm, as they say, v

gff, Thursday, 10 January 2008 21:47 (sixteen years ago) link

when i see u is amazing. love it.

s1ocki, Friday, 11 January 2008 18:45 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah the TS7 track is outstanding. i have to admit this is the first time i've ever heard anyone do a "schaffel interlude" in music like this but Tim you say it like it's a "thing"?

My other favorite of this bunch is Farah – "Law of Life". Chilling! This is what LCD Soundsystem should sound like!

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 17 January 2008 10:46 (sixteen years ago) link

that jamie duggan is teh wickedness. havent heard anything like that before in my bassline ramblings actually - i'd almost hesitate about bigging it up (exposing as it does so blatantly a (our) early 00s bias), it seems unfair to other more regular bassline! at the same time though i guess it does helpfully triple underline the strong and indiscriminate nostalgic undertow of the genre.

the ts7 reminds me a bit of something off tropical - dance banger absentmindedly drifting off into noodling halfway thru. perhaps that is just a canard i have cornfed to albatross proportions though.

r|t|c, Thursday, 17 January 2008 11:42 (sixteen years ago) link

a canard i have cornfed to albatross proportions

!!

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 17 January 2008 13:06 (sixteen years ago) link

i know right

rtc making it rain on you hoes

r|t|c, Thursday, 17 January 2008 13:10 (sixteen years ago) link

i have to admit this is the first time i've ever heard anyone do a "schaffel interlude" in music like this

it's a trick that's already been used a lot in trance/hard-house/italo-dance/etc (for instance, this 2001 hit by DJ Scot Project)... i've even heard some gabber with schaffel interludes!

Mind Taker, Thursday, 17 January 2008 13:26 (sixteen years ago) link

great thread, thx so much

been wanting to hear that conga people track for a while now

dmr, Thursday, 17 January 2008 15:23 (sixteen years ago) link

apparently the tough alliance are a couple of baseball bat wielding hoolies! or maybe theyre just posers. tunes are great though!

Michael B, Saturday, 19 January 2008 00:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Five - Minimal aka Euro House & Techno:

The sheer volume of uploaded stuff this time around shouldn’t automatically suggest that I enjoyed Euro house and techno more than anything else this year; but it would be true to say I enjoyed more Euro house and techno than any other genre. The attraction of this area of music is largely that there’s just so much good stuff that if you choose the right gatekeepers you can get away with almost never hearing a duff track (that said you’ll probably hate some of these… you know where to send your outraged e-mails).

The big news in 2007 was deep house revivalism, which was a bit distorted by both fans and detractors. Deep house proper remained largely as per, while European house/techno – dominated by “minimal” over the last few years – didn’t so much slide headlong into it as simply adopt some of its sonic signifiers. In fact it might be more accurate to say that the more ostentatious/predictable markers of “minimal” fell somewhat out of favour this year, but while that meant less scratchy, insecticle, unnecessary fussy rhythm tracks, most of the best European material remained as complex, as restless and as inscrutable as in previous years – just with heavier sounding drums, thicker textures and slightly more pronounced hooks. The simplest way to express it would be to say that while stereotypical minimal leaned towards a very “dry” sound, this year a lot of the big tracks felt very “moist” – with all the blurry and foggy (i.e. druggy) connotations this implies.

Despite my “see also” inclusions, there were a lot of tracks I loved this year that I’ve either knowingly or unwittingly failed to mention below just because I had to draw the line somewhere or it just didn’t fit in. The one absence that I must mention is Ame: the duo not only put on my favourite DJ show for 2007 (at Cookies in Berlin) but may have been my producers of the year, what with their own tracks “Balandine”, “Enoi” and “Fiori” and excellent remixes for Underworld, DJ Gregory and Etienne Jaumet. For some reason every time I tried to upload one of their tracks it would all go horribly wrong. Perhaps I’ll correct this later.

Anyway:

Matt John – Soulkaramba
http://www.zshare.net/audio/655482941b0795/
As per my intro rant above: this year the best house and the best minimal were indistinguishable from one another: the vibe was for a moist, hypnotic, drugged-out deepness that allowed everyone to take from the groove what they wanted. “Soulkaramba” was the best (because most rigorous) example: based around a remorseless three-note piano figure and deceptively simple clattering house percussion, its relentlessly mutating repetition seemed to glance back to every famed proponent of house hypnotism (from Mr Fingers to DJ Pierre to Paperclip People to Villalobos), and then gaze forward to an endless horizon of Jon Hassell trumpet and strangely meaningless exchanges passed along the way (“may I introduce you to…” a stranger begins, but then this track makes a virtue of never finishing what I starts). Unlike the more freeform minimal, on “Soulkaramba” the panoramic vistas are glimpsed from within engine-like house groove, its propulsive intensity making the detail all the more engrossing (see also… too many to list in this general vein: Petre Inspirescu’s “Sakadat” and “Le Crème Bonjour”, Kabale Und Liebe & Daniel Sanchez’s “Mumbling Yeah”, Radio Slave’s “Bell Clap Dance”, Andomat 3000 & Jan’s “Postpartum Psychosis” EP)

Dennis Ferrer – Son Of Raw (Loco Dice Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/6556354f8ad428/
Equal to “Soulkaramba” in my affections was this remix of Dennis Ferrer’s “Son of Raw”, a track even more telling in its attempt to fuse US and European sensibilities. Which makes sense: “Son of Raw” was the big crossover US house track for minimal DJs in 2006, its sharp bounce, jazzy keyboard noodling and mysterious falsetto diva vamp (“You don’t know!”) at once mirroring and standing aloof from all the murky pointillist minimal. For their remix, Loco Dice and co-producer Martin Buttrich drag “Son of Raw” back towards pointillism, but in several other directions as well: in particular, the groove’s deep, close-mouthed moans, disintegrating burbles, portentous faux-timpani percussion and serene, metallic synth sweeps remind me as much of Carl Craig’s recent expansive space techno… It’s “house” not in the sense of reminding you where you’ve come from, but rather in offering a place of rest at the crossroads for a dozen destinations. (see also: Minilogue’s hypnotic “Birdsong” and Dennis Ferrer’s irresistible “Transitions” and “A Drumstick and a Light Fixture”)

Tiger Stripes – Hooked
http://www.zshare.net/audio/68817720ea2c88/
Ed Davenport – Eyespeak
http://www.zshare.net/audio/6980766afd2f76/
If you wanted the most concise and cogent explanation of 2007’s minimal/house fusion, it was hard to go past “Hooked”, with its urgent, pulsing deep house groove and dancing, deliquescing synth arpeggios conveying an airiness and lightness of touch that must have been the envy of every other producer going for this vibe (“if only we’d realised it could be so simple!” you can almost hear them thinking to themselves). The Liebe*Detail label made this kind of sound it’s staple this year, and you can hear the same kind of light-fingered deep house urgency on “Eyespeak”, with its glowing one-note bass driving the syncopated snare groove ahead of it like unruly cattle. It’s those restless snares and hi-hats, practically bubbling over like a jazz drummer waiting for his turn to solo, that make the track so addictive. That and the warped vocal samples, which seem to combine to request an answer to a prayer before being sucked into a wind machine. (see also, Jerome Sydenham’s excellent remixes of Argy and Motorcitysoul)

Jacopo Carreras – Olanto (Lee Jones Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/68857970a12c1f/
This track didn’t get all the attention of the above two (wrong record label perhaps) but it’s their equal, if not the best of the three. Almost kaleidoscopic in detail, Jones’ “Olanto” remix is an excellent example of how 2007 saw a good deal of “minimal” distance itself slightly from its more tiresome sonic signifiers (“plip plop”) but retain its trademark restlessness. Every four bars or so Jones introduces some new effect, from feverishly ticking house hi-hats to sea-sick sounding metallic waves to suddenly disconcerting dub whooshes to winsome ambient synth patterns – and yet it never sounds anything but good-natured and almost muscular in its devotion to basic house physicality. (see also: remixes by Jones’ group My My of Motorcitysoul and Simon Baker)

Tracey Thorn – It’s All True (Martin Buttrich Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/6557129933c006/
An anthem that was curiously underrated for all its popularity: I imagine many listeners found Buttrich’s remix of “It’s All True” too obvious somehow, too easily summed up as a hyper-competent minimal producer’s homage to Round Two’s “New Day”. What’s wrong with being obvious, though, when it results in Basic Channel’s (only occasionally explored) bleep-house aesthetic being pushed so far into gorgeous pop territory? Thorn still has one of the best voices for techno-pop ever, her clarity and depth always conveying a sense of tranquillity and resilience that she herself seems unaware of. It’s this vibe which Buttrich mirrors perfectly, his aching, repetitive synth motifs emerging as if from a grotto at the bottom of an enormous lake. Instead of getting larger, more apocalyptic, the track gets deeper and more lustrous, with melodic patterns first played in succession and then laid on top of one another with the languid grace of nature’s own ego-free accommodations. (see also: Ada’s similarly awed-sounding remix of Tracey’s “Grand Canyon”)

Stereotyp – Keepin’ Me (Fauna Flash Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/68518543a1ec23/
Another “New Day” homage perhaps, but this time a little more strident: broken beat producers Fauna Flash making a belated virtue of house’s strictures with forbiddingly frigid synth pulses and stern hi-hats, while above them a succession of divas (or one diva with a very accommodating and ambiguous vocal style) make increasingly overwrought accusations – “Keeping me in your world… that turned me… into a… desperate refugee!” This track makes no apologies about its emotional largesse; if anything, it really hits home when you belatedly realise that no-one involved is joking. As the succession of synths build up and spills over into a Carl Craig-like overblown breakdown (resembling some stage of Craig’s career being 2007 house and techno’s most persistent meme), the unashamed melodrama also marks this out as the halfway-respectable cousin of The Freemasons’ life-or-death pop-house explosions (see also for big emotions: Outlines’ “Listen to the Dreams” and Booka Shade’s “Numbers”; see also for big emotions + divas: Jazzzanova’s very pretty remix of Paul Randolph’s “Believer” and Wahoo’s remix of Ben Westbeech’s “Hang Around”)

Jacek Sienkiewickz – Good Luck
http://www.zshare.net/audio/6632805a76efb0/
The only reason I don’t have a Villalobos track here is that I don’t have a standalone MP3 of his excellent remix of Beck’s “Cell Phone’s Dead”, but this stands in for the guy quite handily. Sienkiewickz is perhaps more rococo: fitful, waterlogged rhythms and unpredictable bleepy synth patterns trace ever more complex patterns across eachother’s surfaces before finally being swallowed up in wistful, gratuitously teary-eyed early Warp Records melodicism, the swirling tinkerbell twinkles only partially concealing the remaining riot of detail that continues unabated beneath. Of all of the tracks I’ve uploaded this is the most self-consciously and self-righteously epic – serious music for serious dancers. I’m usually not that serious but this still sounds lovely in any mood. (see also: Ricardo Villalobos remixes of Beck, Shackleton and Shinedoe; Tolga Fidan’s “Venice”; Onur Ozer’s Kasmir album; Daniel Stefanik’s remix of Johnny Wagner’s “Intercity”)

Jichael Mackson – The Grass Is Always Greener
http://www.zshare.net/audio/6883590e5a5e5f/
Nearly as abstract and as all-encompassing as “Good Luck”, “The Grass Is Always Greener” might feel epic if for a moment it gave the impression of having paid a second thought to structure. Mackson quite openly splits the difference between two of the year’s biggest trends, running a gorgeously warm deep house groove through massive Basic Channel dub-techno filters. The result is a track that takes “deepness” to near-unsustainable levels: half the fun is in trying to pick up the detail of what sounds like a monstrously funky bassline being played in an underground bomb shelter five miles away, while the echo-drenched house percussion threatens to constantly decompose into mere whispers. The track’s sudden swerve into the morose slide guitar of Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game” would be the pay-off of the year if the rest of the track had felt remotely like hard work. (more slightly perverse tunes: Sebbo’s “Beirut Boogie”, Das Krause Duo’s “Good Man Invasion” and DJ Koze’s marvellous remixes of James Figurine’s “55566688833” and Sid Le Rock’s “Naked”).

IT – Women In Toilet (Stefan Goldmann Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/688418818d3627/
I was a bit frustrated by how little people cared about this one, but by the end of the year everyone was over-compensating by throwing hosannas in the direction of Goldmann’s excellent (but slightly inferior) “Lunatic Fringe”. The “Women In Toilet” remix is less look-at-moi but more loveable, a flawless demonstration of Goldmann’s trademark pinging synth tones. I use “demonstration” quite deliberately: the main hook on this remix is a one-note bobbing synth riff that bobs across the spectrum from clipped to bleary in the most remarkable manner. I reckon I could draw it quite easily, but Goldmann’s sound is hard to describe in words, at once immediately identifiable but not obviously distinct – it sort of sounds a bit like Kraftwerk going mad with EQ filters, I guess. Curiously, the track doesn’t sound too thought-out at all: must be that lovely, bouncy and warm bassline, or those lonely-sounding synth whines that make this one of the year’s most widescreen sounding tunes. (see also: Goldmann’s fabulously queasy remix of Marc Romboy’s “Helen Cornell”; “Lunatic Fringe”)

Mari Boine – Vuoi Vuoi Me (Henrik Schwarz Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/68875807fadd81/
Really you should just grab Schwarz’s live album from this year, but if you insist on sampling just one production, go with this one. Of all the producers discussed here, Schwarz is the one who feels most out on his own, forging connections that no one else would dare. While the “Vuoi Vuoi Me” remix fits amongst all these records as yet another accommodation between rococo complexity and rootsy house lushness, its methods are totally distinct – delicate house percussion, blunt but muted bass riffs and gorgeous surround-sound synth chords that bleed imperceptibly into a chorus of beautiful but distressed sounding woodwinds that could have come from a late-era Talk Talk album. Not to mention the loving recontextualisation of Boine’s eerie, frail-sounding vocals, those finally wordless wails helping to make this almost too overwhelming for any dancefloor. (see also: Schwarz’s marvellous remixes of Kraak & Smaak’s “No Sun in the Sky” and Boundzound’s “Louder”, plus his own “Walk Music”)

Zander VT – Then & Before (Redshape Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/69145811966207/
2007 wasn’t just about deep house revivalism, and there was a sub-trend of melodramatic, synthesiser-heavy tech-house tracks whose ridiculous sci-fi melodrama had me group them together under the banner “space battle techno”. Ink & Needle did several tracks in this vein, but my favourite remained Redshape’s remix of “Then & Before”, perhaps because of the way it draws out the exponential curve of its climaxing groove – spacey percussion and squirming riffs and apocalyptic strings that make me think of spaceships shifting into warp speed and stars stretching from pinpoints into lines. Except that the track just keeps spiralling towards ever higher and higher climaxes, so it’s like you’re speeding past stars whose line-of-light just keeps stretching further and further. One for everyone a bit “over” subtlety. (see also: Ink & Needle’s “Seven”, various Audion tracks and remixes)

Faze Action – In The Trees (Carl Craig Remix)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/697269001fbf07/
Whatever the trend was, Carl usually got there first. If his remix of Delia & Gavin’s “Revelee” helped (re?)initiate the space battle techno sound I described above, this unlikely remix of Faze Action’s old disco-revival classic was an unexpected pinnacle. Given the familiarity of the original, it remains such a shock (almost an illicit thrill) to be confronted by little more than a heavy throb of evil synthesisers, like a swarm of wasps marshalled to attack at random in time with a house beat. When those unmistakable disco strings finally come in, the menacing groove that surrounds them imbues their aristocratic refinement and dandyesque flair strange new sensations and implications – like the fine poetry that sends young people to war, they are at once a document of culture and of barbarism. (see also: Craig remixes of Siobhan Donaghy and Junior Boys)

Tim F, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 13:09 (sixteen years ago) link

OMG @ 'space battle techno'!

Matt DC, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 13:29 (sixteen years ago) link

I was there, in 2007 bobbins thread when Tim said "space battle techno".

Ronan, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 13:43 (sixteen years ago) link

This post was probably wasted on you ronan (as in, told you nothing you did not know). I'm glad you got a joke out of it.

Tim F, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 13:44 (sixteen years ago) link

We're all glad!

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 13:46 (sixteen years ago) link

No I enjoyed it thoroughly!

Ronan, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 13:49 (sixteen years ago) link

could the lack of love for 'women in toilet' be down to people being reticent to rep for a track called 'women in toilet'? it sounds a bit pervy!

haitch, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 00:15 (sixteen years ago) link

those schaffelly bassline tracks at the top of the thread are doing my head in, in a great way. cheers for all this Tim!

x-post haha otm, the word 'toilet' has no place in respectable dance music.

jabba hands, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 01:17 (sixteen years ago) link

Thanks dude!

Raw Patrick, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 10:59 (sixteen years ago) link

I hadn't heard that Loco Dice remix before (despite you and others repping for it for ages), lovely stuff. Warm bubblebath minimal is always the best kind.

Matt DC, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 12:34 (sixteen years ago) link

Six - Balearic (Part One of Three)

Poor Kylie. In fairness, her time off from pop should afford her some special consideration, but it remains difficult to hear the post-Goldfrapp glamstomp revivalism of “2 Hearts” as anything other than a strategic error, belatedly latching onto a sound that was already tiresome two years ago. Still, she got one thing right, handing the original over to Swedish band Studio to demolish and reconstruct into a glittering jewel that effortlessly outclasses its source material. It’s a move reminiscent of her drafting in Fisherspooner on remix duties back in 2002: both groups are simultaneously rock bands, production teams, and, at a certain point in time, bywords for the zeitgeist of the era. But if Fisherspooner’s frigid synth riffs were the very definition of electroclash, Studio are synonymous with 2007’s most enjoyable big trend: the return of Balearic.

Studio’s remix of “2 Hearts” is this tenuous movement’s aesthetic highpoint to date, draping Kylie’s coy vocals with glittering spiderwebs of Spanish guitar, supremely supine pulsing disco beats and endless layers of dub echo. In this new and impressively otherworldly context, Kylie’s vocals are genuinely moving: “I can’t even see up here,” she gasps, her previously sly performance suddenly sounding overwhelmed by the enormity of the emotions surrounding it. All the glam ambiguity of the original is sensitively excised from this version: the song’s deadpan sarcasm had no place amongst Studio’s endless horizons of lovestruck earnestness.

Kylie Minogue – 2 Hearts (Studio Version)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/70425497aec619/

One of the key differences between the disco-punk revival (and post-punk revivalism generally) and Balearic is the fact that, unless you pay any regard outright disco-sceptics, disco-punk never needed to be critically rehabilitated – bands like Gang of Four, ESG and P.I.L. have always benefited from a critical consensus regarding their greatness. By comparison, Balearic happily intermingles good and bad taste reference points, ranging from prog to soft-rock to the fag end of late 80s studio-based pop. Studio may fashionably reference krautrock, Arthur Russell and the Happy Mondays, but their high-buff sheen is equally reminiscent of Peter Gabriel and Sting. Most of all, their more songful moments sound like a loved-up version of The Cure, which makes sense: The Cure have always hovered on the good taste/bad taste fault line, like the witty, sharp-tongued friend who is always in danger of going too far and offending everyone with their next indelicate observation (I can sympathise with this).

I’ve included the original and much longer version of their track “Self Service”, only available on the now out-of-print Scandanavian 2006 first print of their album West Coast. I hope it doesn’t sound too snooty to say that not only do I greatly prefer this to the more widely available truncated version of the song, but in fact suspect it’s their finest moment to date. The way that the baggy groove, cheesy electronic effects, morose vocals and sharply glinting guitar build up to a narcotic plateau of tribal intensity captured my heart as much as anything could this year.

Studio – Self Service
http://www.zshare.net/audio/7020158bb7e2eb/

Studio’s British cohorts A Mountain of One offer an even more conflicted take on similar territory: if the first band’s polyrhythms and moping add a certain sharpness to their allure, at its best A Mountain of One’s self-conscious grandeur aspires to match the brooding atmospherics of Phil Collins’ “In The Air Tonight”; at its least successful, their work drifts closer to a vision of Mike & the Mechanics meditating in Goa. A Mountain of One leave me behind when they seem to gesture towards some mystical destination beyond the music itself: at its most torpidly overworked, their lush, meditative MOR-rock evokes the baffling earnestness of the pagan convert, the scent of incense and patchouli oil disconcerting not in itself, but because it cannot support the amassed weight of meaning and significance invested in it.

I find their recent and self-consciously epic instrumental single “Brown Piano” a bit of chore to listen to – I can’t help but feel that the band are placing themselves in the lineage of Talk Talk and Bark Psychosis (two bands I love, mind) when they should be kneeling at the alter of The Blue Nile instead. What a relief it was to find that Studio could so effortlessly resurrect the tune by adding a disco beat and turning the whole thing into a hypnotic weave of ever-shifting patterns. If A Mountain of One spread themselves across a spectrum from focused to diffuse with all the quality stacked up at one end, Studio somehow short-circuit the two poles, implausibly conflating their impulses towards pop and towards smacked-out expansiveness.

A Mountain of One – Brown Piano (Studio Version)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/7044950111a0c9/

Unlike Studio’s glorious earnestness, A Mountain of One’s music work best when it seems uncertain of itself: see for example the wonderful and utterly inscrutable “People Without Love”, a bizarre carcrash collision between Fleetwood Mac’s “Caroline” and a streetcorner sermon on the perils of superficiality. Or this: a gorgeous italo-disco homage featuring a marvelously frail duet between AMO1’s singer and Martina Topley-Bird, over a disco arrangement that stars off wry and whimsical but becomes progressively overshadowed by a chorus of moaning guitars.

A Mountain of One – Can’t Be Serious
http://www.zshare.net/audio/7016464c12f766/

To be continued...

Tim F, Thursday, 31 January 2008 08:23 (sixteen years ago) link

My iPod now has a Tim Finney best of 2007 folder to go with my Resident Advisor best of etc....

The parts on the Studio Kylie remix seem to disconnected to me.... there's not much motivation to them, the various parts dropping in and out seems kinda random. It's probably my least favourite thing by them that I've heard.

To continue kvetching, “People Without Love” is my least fave AMoO tune though that may be down to the time I saw them live where the guy who does the vox was a DICK. AMoO threw a great party in Brighton where they played and Studio DJed (along w/Beyond the Wizards Sleeve).

"Can't Be Serious" is a cover of this right?

Raw Patrick, Thursday, 31 January 2008 09:53 (sixteen years ago) link

I love the Kylie remix, in fact it's my favourite thing they've done, I think. I like the way the flurries of guitar pause for breath, (rather than drop out) and the heartbeat rhythm.

Part of the fun with this stuff is walking the bad-taste tightrope. The ongoing Dire Straits fascination scares me, though - I didn't mind that Otterman Empire edit, but Lindstrom put the whole of Private Investigations on a recent mix - aghr. (Disclosure: I was a huge fan of Dire Straits as a child, and I really don't need to hear it recontextualised or whathaveyou.)

This whole thing is ace, though, Tim. Cheers. Look forward to parts two and three.

Jamie T Smith, Thursday, 31 January 2008 11:00 (sixteen years ago) link

Private Investigations is good once it gets past the talky first part. Unfortunately that first part feels like it's two hours long.

Raw Patrick, Thursday, 31 January 2008 11:02 (sixteen years ago) link

The Kylie remix >>> all other records from last year.

Matt DC, Thursday, 31 January 2008 11:13 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm left out in the cold about Kylie it seems.

Raw Patrick, Thursday, 31 January 2008 11:43 (sixteen years ago) link

x-post steady on

jabba hands, Thursday, 31 January 2008 12:06 (sixteen years ago) link

apart from two or three it actually prob is.

or something, Thursday, 31 January 2008 15:19 (sixteen years ago) link

My iPod now has a Tim Finney best of 2007 folder to go with my Resident Advisor best of etc....

Yeah, I need to put that together myself! I've been slack!

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 31 January 2008 15:21 (sixteen years ago) link

Tim looking at your choices here and listening to many of the tracks I haven't heard before, I'll say it: Tim likes it LUSH!

Tracer Hand, Sunday, 3 February 2008 17:31 (sixteen years ago) link

The Kylie remix is truly great. It reminds me of "Jumpin Jumpin (Azza's Remix)" from 2000 with the way it luxuriously straddles R&B and techno and latin groove (maybe this is what "Balearic" has always meant and I just never knew!) It's got this warm feel but with a kind of hard candy gloss to it, too. I never want it to stop, and it almost never does!

IT - "Women in the Toilet" is such a delicate, flawless track - very much in the vein of "Rej" by Ame, which was in turn in the vein of "Beau Mot Plage" by Isolée, but each of these has successfully stripped more and more away from this baroque, dubby, quaver-wiggle template so that we're left with this, a minimal trance-style ideal version of the form. It also has a lot in common with "In White Rooms". All of these tracks have a brooding quality but the ticking mechanics of the bass and beat suggests a kind of inevitability of routine. I dunno, for the video I imagine a person who lives alone, looking at his or her room, cloudy morning light coming in through the window, they look at their watch, they may not ever see this place again...

Tracer Hand, Sunday, 3 February 2008 17:43 (sixteen years ago) link

Tracer "lushness" is something I've thought about a lot this year. I think it's always been something I rate higher than most others but this year took that to ridiculous extremes. Which is maybe why "balearic" feels so useful as an organising principle - sort of an 'International Secret Society of Lushes' kind of thing going on.

"To continue kvetching, “People Without Love” is my least fave AMoO tune."

I really didn't like it to begin with, or liked parts of it and hated others perhaps. But when I listened to this album repeatedly for the purposes of writing an album review, "People Without Love" began to seem like the most interesting track on there, certainly my favourite on the second EP (though "Arc of Abraham" is pretty ace as well if I remember correctly) - and much less obvious (as in "I see what you're doing here") than I first thought. "Caroline" is of course a tune about an almost Lacanian obsession, a kind of hate/love cycle (following the verses and the choruses) except all that Buckingham has on the "love" scale is the repeated chant of the woman's name. And then AMO1's added arrangement really teases out the underlying melancholy and desperation of the original song. So it's not clear whether they're siding with the preacher against "Caroline" or with "Caroline" against the preacher, or if they ultimately think the two arguments can be sublated.

Tim F, Sunday, 3 February 2008 20:39 (sixteen years ago) link

Redshape remix of Zander VT is a BANGER

deej, Sunday, 3 February 2008 20:46 (sixteen years ago) link

Goldmine of tunes here! Thanks Tim F.

Tough Alliance deserve to be huge.

Bodrick III, Sunday, 3 February 2008 20:46 (sixteen years ago) link

re: "space battle techno"

what about smith'n'hack's "space warrior"??

moonship journey to baja, Sunday, 3 February 2008 21:03 (sixteen years ago) link

PS I like how "Then & Before (Redshape Remix)" by Zander VT works itself up into a totally Red Planet/UR frenzy.

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 6 February 2008 15:34 (sixteen years ago) link

the Studio remix of '2 Hearts' may as well remove her vocals entirely - they feel just left in as a formality altho i like the slight dub aspect of this (would've preferred this to be empthasised). i don't think the track particularly magnifies the song's theme, lush as it is - it intentionally goes beyond that i guess. it's a very pleasant treatment but maybe it's too breezy and could sound more exotic or intoxicating. but unlike many i kinda like 'X' so...

the Zander VT remix is still too subtle for me!

blueski, Wednesday, 6 February 2008 16:03 (sixteen years ago) link

you should check the redshape remix of markus enochson 'red coffe', it's like the soundtrack to a galactic victory march. so epic

r1o natsume, Wednesday, 6 February 2008 20:39 (sixteen years ago) link

all this galactic space music talk has reminded me of "third stone from the sun" by third electric

-- http://www.sendspace.com/file/dt80vl

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 7 February 2008 00:49 (sixteen years ago) link

how the fuck did i miss this thread

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 7 February 2008 00:54 (sixteen years ago) link

Thanks Tim, really enjoying your discussion.

Re Stefan Goldmann I really liked his remix of Blackjoy's 'Untitled' which worked similar territory to the IT remix with possibly a little more swing. His first release on Macro was great too, although it maybe lacked the touches that made 'lunatic fringe' stand out.

Bee En Juan, Thursday, 7 February 2008 01:31 (sixteen years ago) link

the Zander VT remix is still too subtle for me!

-- blueski, Wednesday, February 6, 2008 10:03 AM (10 hours ago) Bookmark Link

???
subtle is maybe the last word i'd use. banger!!!

deej, Thursday, 7 February 2008 02:12 (sixteen years ago) link

To be fair it's so elaborately mapped out that the bangerishness of the second half comes a bit of a surprise. Maybe Steve thinks it could stand to be more Vitalic?

BTW it occured to me that nu deep house vs space battle techno is basically the first part of Underworld's "Cups" versus the second part of Underworld's "Cups".

PS. Bee I haven't heard that remix! Will have to check it out.

Tim F, Thursday, 7 February 2008 02:17 (sixteen years ago) link

Also haven't heard "Space Warrior" :-(

Tim F, Thursday, 7 February 2008 02:17 (sixteen years ago) link

i love how just adding the high hats at the climax of the ZVT remix makes it sound even larger

deej, Thursday, 7 February 2008 02:38 (sixteen years ago) link

status being stats

Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:10 (fifteen years ago) link

Tim you rule.

zshare is broken, btw. pretty sure those links aren't dead. it's just the adblocking/popup detection (which is lame in the first place), doesn't work consistently. i have turned off both and I still get stuck in the same loop as Tracer. would be great if someone who can get at the zshare files could upload them all to mediafire or sendspace.

caek, Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:21 (fifteen years ago) link

same here, all plugins turned off, don't work

Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:33 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah, zshare usually works for me but isn't there.

was wanting to listen to "I wake up early in the morning, to play my con-con-congo" :(

what U cry 4 (jim), Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:38 (fifteen years ago) link

most of those can be found on, like, itunes or similar

lex pretend, Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:42 (fifteen years ago) link

i recommend googling the song's name + rapidshare

eman cipation s1ocklamation (max), Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:43 (fifteen years ago) link

xpost. they can also be found on soulseek or whatever, but when i was reading tim's bits i was hoping to have the thing down in 30 seconds and listen to it. I is lazy.

what U cry 4 (jim), Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:44 (fifteen years ago) link

the zshare thing should be able to be worked around by right-click/"save target as"

Дyo! (The Reverend), Sunday, 28 December 2008 23:57 (fifteen years ago) link

I will upload these to sendspace over the next few days.

Tim F, Monday, 29 December 2008 00:03 (fifteen years ago) link

Great reading, Tim. What is the name of the Facebook group these are appearing on?

Home made ectoplasm (I am using your worlds), Monday, 29 December 2008 00:07 (fifteen years ago) link

thanks tim!

caek, Monday, 29 December 2008 00:09 (fifteen years ago) link

This thread is so good I almost feel like it should be funded by private donations! Thanks for going out of your way, a lot of this stuff slipped under my radar, I kindof love end-of-years for catchup.

Plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 29 December 2008 00:39 (fifteen years ago) link

thanks Tim, looking forward to hearing these and re-reading - loved it last year too.

Pnau (who provide it’s, um, instrumentalist I suppose

The other half of Pnau was involved too, he just doesn't have his face airbrushed on the front cover.

choom gang of four (sic), Monday, 29 December 2008 00:49 (fifteen years ago) link

nah the zshare links dont work

cozwn, Monday, 29 December 2008 01:56 (fifteen years ago) link

Jesus dudes, none of these tracks are particularly hard to get hold of if you want to hear them.

(NB - we aren't really meant to allow linking to full MP3s of commercially available music. I've been turning a blind eye here because Tim is Tim and doing sterling work promoting this stuff, but any future links responding to "anyone got that Aeroplane track?" or similar will be deleted).

Matt DC, Monday, 29 December 2008 02:22 (fifteen years ago) link

Tim surely you don't prefer the original 'Fascination' to the Bimbo Jones and Linus Loves remixes

i notice there's a Van She Tech remix of 'Walking On A Dream', as if they read my mind...

Timezilla vs Mechadistance (blueski), Monday, 29 December 2008 02:45 (fifteen years ago) link

the underwhelming “What’s It Gonna Be” by Platinum & H20.

also surprising! maybe it helps if you see the video

Timezilla vs Mechadistance (blueski), Monday, 29 December 2008 02:46 (fifteen years ago) link

"I've been turning a blind eye here because Tim is Tim"

Appreciated! However if you'd prefer I'm happy to just syndicate the write-ups and let people e-mail me or join the facebook group for the download links - let me know if so.

The Facebook Group (which will continue into 2009, perhaps with a name change) is called "Strictly The Best: The 2008 Glamourous Pop Club". I made it quasi-private so I'm not sure if it comes up in searches. Feel free to send me a message on facebook asking for an invite.

Tim F, Monday, 29 December 2008 06:41 (fifteen years ago) link

hahaha Tim of course you've been getting into Steely Dan and Rickie Lee Jones--you like the Ne-Yo album! it's a '70s singer-songwriter album!

Matos W.K., Monday, 29 December 2008 07:27 (fifteen years ago) link

should have been a TIM @ KFC . EDU thread

mufasa marchant (Curt1s Stephens), Monday, 29 December 2008 07:29 (fifteen years ago) link

his zshare links wda worked

cozwn, Monday, 29 December 2008 07:41 (fifteen years ago) link

(great stuff as usual tim, I'm only messing)

cozwn, Monday, 29 December 2008 07:42 (fifteen years ago) link

Motorcitysoul – Change You
http://www.sendspace.com/file/v9je9e

I’ve written several times of late about the resurgence of “deep house” as a determining stylistic principle in (the classy end of) dance music. This was a big thing last year too, and was responsible for lots of my favourite music of 2007 (stuff from Henrick Schwarz, Matt Johns, Dennis Ferrer), but this year it began to feel like THE THING in dance music. My interest has fallen off quite a bit, and I’ve provided several different theories as to why this is the case. But the key issue is probably that 2008 was classy dance music’s least ‘pop’ year in ages: lots of minimal (though no longer “minimal”), barely inflected “quality” productions so full of “soul” that there was no room left for a tune, so “deep” that all topographical dynamism gets smothered, all made by “cats” so jive that a positive reaction from plebian suburban, adolescent, gay, drug-using and/or female audiences would be rejected with distaste even if it was possible. I really don’t like the notion of “quality” anything in dance music: it suggests a reliability that is born of an aversion to making mistakes. Pop versions of dance music meanwhile tend to flirt with disaster, as they jump from the safe ground of niche stylistic affectation, across the yawning chasm of middlebrow crossover and towards widespread acceptance and adulation amongst people who don’t even know what rhodes keys are, let alone how to make them sound good in a house track. (NB. I'm not trying to suggest a "quality"/"pop" either/or here)

“Change You” is a nice exception to this trend, although for all of that a fairly middlebrow one; perhaps Motorcitysoul are as “quality” as my dance music listening tends to get these days. What marks this out is that it’s faux-US House in the broadest sense rather than the narrowest, less about getting a certain bass sound and more about the aching melodrama of its smooth male diva performance. It starts out fairly unobtrusively, its slowly morphing one-note synth bass pulse and nonchalant tenor vocal suggesting a tune happy to lounge in light-coloured calico pants in the afternoon sun. How it changes is obscured by one of those curious tricks of repetition that is hard to catch even when you’re listening for it. At about four minutes in, the groove is stripped back to a (relatively) intense staccato pulse while the diva sighs in a new melody: “Love has always been like this/a whispered prayer beneath a kiss…” In a pop tune this would be the middle-eight, and in a dance remix of a pop tune it would be the ostentatious breakdown which coincides with that middle-eight, when you realise that the song you’ve happily been dancing and singing along to is actually skating across a paper-thin surface covering a void of existential uncertainty.

House can capture this bigness of emotion with restrained gestures through an adjusted economy of scale, with even relatively mild expansions in the terrain of the groove suddenly evoking a sense of destabilisation or loss of identity. In “Change You” the shift in register moves from relaxed confidence (I imagine a game of unhurried, subtle flirtation) to a kind of barely concealed, urgent desperation, the groove’s imperceptible immersion into cavernous bass and tense bleeps resembling beads of sweat on a nonchalant pokerface. By itself this would be just about enough; what makes “Change You” magical is the way this is wrapped around the smooth diva’s performance, as he unwittingly sinks from his master’s perch and finds himself the slave of his own game of desire. Like Sade’s “No Ordinary Love”, this is mood music on the verge of a nervous breakdown.

Tim F, Monday, 29 December 2008 08:00 (fifteen years ago) link

New link for Aeroplane's "Whispers":

http://www.sendspace.com/file/nxnckk

Tim F, Monday, 29 December 2008 13:46 (fifteen years ago) link

Geeneus ft. Katy B – As I
http://www.sendspace.com/file/4hx06s

Possibly my biggest regret (among several) with regard to the year end lists contributed to Pitchfork, In Press etc. was my failure to adequately rate this absolute gem of a poppy UK funky house tune – certainly one of my absolute favourites of last year. One interesting thing about UK funky is how, perhaps due to the absence of a clearly identifiable sonic marker that would form the equivalent of the 2-step beat for UK garage, it’s gradually developed a much more distinct, treasurable homegrown song-style (in retrospect, UK Garage never really did this – perhaps because it never had to). So many of the great UK funky female vocal anthems – “Do You Mind”, “Mr. Seduction”, “Make Your Move”, “Tell Me” etc. – fall within strictly circumscribed parameters: very young, girly sounding singers, performances pitched exactly midway between R&B reserve and house diva histrionics, all driven by a sex-frenzied hunger that is entirely its own. Oh, and lyrics that surprise with their scrupulous formalist perfection.

On “As I”, the rhyming is almost decadently perfect: “I tried to put my finger on the time/when I started to see you in a different light/did it creep into my mind?/Or did you give me a sign?/I ain’t sure…/When your hand brushes past mine like that/did you mean to or was it an accident?/I wish that you’d do it again/so that I could feel your skin/once more…” There’s a… tightness to funky’s songwriting which marks it out from most vocal house, which usually draws a sharp line between the tension-building verses and the all-bases-go release of the choruses. In funky, the jump from the verses to the choruses is actually quite subtle, a very slight ramping up of the air of tension that is always already hovering close to fever pitch.

The music, of course, is delectable and irresistible, the usual perky funky beat moulding itself to ravey yet feminine soft-centered synth chords, like T99’s “Anaesthesia” or Nasty Habits’ “Dark Angel” remade as an unabashed singalong pop anthem. Plus the icing of the cake: that strange cantering beat that sprints across the end of every eighth’s bar (I like to pretend this is Geeneus’ sly response to Simon Reynolds’ complaint that too many funky rhythms have the awkward gait of a horse). In terms of context, “As I” wins for being a superlative demonstration of funky’s openness to whatever idea works. But context would be nothing without the seductive, sumptuous swing of its galloping groove, or the swooning desperation of Katy’s desire.

Tim F, Sunday, 11 January 2009 07:28 (fifteen years ago) link

hey tim, do you think you could re-up that veronicas song

jordy (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 15 January 2009 09:35 (fifteen years ago) link

I am so good 2 U:

http://www.sendspace.com/file/vzw9qz

Tim F, Thursday, 15 January 2009 14:55 (fifteen years ago) link

thx u

jordy (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 15 January 2009 19:06 (fifteen years ago) link


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