|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12"
|
|
D 003EP
|
180-gram vinyl. English producer Jon Gurd, having emerged from a traumatic family-related drama, dedicates his Birth Right EP to his brother with the message, "Tomorrow Is / Promised / To No One." The result of almost two years of lab-driven experimentation, the EP features field recordings, analog rumbling, and modular synthesis. Gurd recalls, "seriously my process for producing this has been all over the place, literally stumbling on shit, slipping over my own creative vomit, workflow went out the studio window on day one." Includes remixes by Dave Clarke and Ancestral Voices (Liam Blackburn (Indigo, Akkord)).
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
12"
|
|
D 001EP
|
The Soft's "Icaria" focuses on the more hypnotic aspects of electronic and dance music, and draws influence from krautrock and minimalism as well as contemporary electronic artists like Walls, Jon Hopkins, and The Field. Killawatt's "Aeolis Mons" was inspired by "a load of random field recordings... I wanted to create something that built up and... then breaking back down and fading away... the entire process of an intense trip condensed down into a few minutes." Thermalbear's "Carpe Noctem" is a simple sequence of tones and frequencies presented with (relative) harmonic sense against a backdrop of solid bottom end.
|