- 1: Uma Casa Portuguesa
- 2: Nem Ás Paredes Confesso
- 3: Cansaço
- 4: Solidao (Cançao Do Mar)
- 5: Povo Que Lavas No Rio
- 6: Há Festa Na Mouraria
- 7: Lisboa Nao Sejas Francesa
- 8: Ai Mouraria
- 9: Estranha Forma De Vida
- 10: Foi Deus
- 11: Maria Lisboa
- 12: Tudo Isto É Fado
- 13: Primavera
- 14: Barco Negro
- 15: Fado Hilário
- 16: Coimbra (April In Portugal)
Cerca:amalia
- A1: Fado Hilário
- A2: Há Festa Na Mouraria
- A3: Povo Que Lavas No Rio
- A4: Solidão
- A5: (Canção Do Mar)
- A6: Maria Lisboa
- A7: Foi Deus
- B1: Estranha Forma De Vida
- B2: Ai Mouraria
- B3: Lisboa Não Sejas Francesa
- B4: Barco Negro
- B5: Primavera
- B6: Tudo Isto É Fado
- B7: Cansaço
- B8: Nem Ás Paredes Confesso
- B9: Uma Casa Portuguesa
She not only popularized fado throughout South America, she reinvented it; singing material that moved far beyond the traditional tales of failed romance to explore instead the deepest crises of the soul and spirit.
Limited edition audiophile pressing on 180gram premium vinyl.
Thanks to her, an internationally unknown folk music like Portuguese fado became a medium of universal expression known throughout the world. This collection includes some of her greatest hits, including such perennial classics as
"Uma Casa Portuguesa", "Ai Mouraria", and the unforgettable "Coimbra", also known as April in Portugal.
AMÁLIA RODRIGUES, vocals, with:
Jaime Santos - Portuguese guitar, Santos Moreira - Spanish classical guitar, Domingo Camarinha - Portuguese guitar, Castro Mota - Spanish classical guitar,Raul Nery - Portuguese guitar,José Nunes - Portuguese guitar. Orchestra conducted by Frederico Valério.
Sessions recorded between 1951 and 1962 in Lisbon Paris, and London.
- A1: Trepa No Coqueiro - Ari Kerner Veiga De Castro ; Ari Kerner Veiga De Castro
- A2: Uma Casa Portuguesa - Reinaldo Ferreira, Matos Sequeira ; Artur Fonseca
- A3: Fado Madragoa - José Galhardo ; Raul Ferrão
- A4: Sem Razão - Fernando Farinha ; Alberto Correia
- A5: Sempre Que Lisboa Canta - Aníbal Nazaré ; Carlos Rochat
- A6: Lerele - Francisco Muñoz Currito ; Genaro Monreal Lacosta
- A7: Si Si Si - José Pérez Moradiellos
- A8: No Me Tires Indiré - Ramón Parelló ; Genaro Monreal Lacosta
- A9: Lisboa Antiga - José Galhardo ; Raul Portela
- B1: Quem O Fado Calunia - Aníbal Nazaré ; Raul Ferrão
- B2: Lisboa À Noite - Fernando Santos ; Carlos Dias
- B3: Marujo Português - Linhares Barbosa ; Artur Ribeiro
- B4: Fado Gingão - Lamberto Braz ; Moniz Trindade (Egas Moniz Félix Trindade)
- B5: Mi Florero - Luis Gómez Gutiérrez-Otero
- B6: Aïe Mourir Pour Toi - Charles Aznavour
- B7: Marcha Do Centenário - Norberto De Araújo ; Raul Ferrão
- B8: Verde Limão
Amália Rodrigues, international star, nicknamed "the Queen of Fado", had a special relationship with France and Paris in particular. From the end of the 1950s, she met with success and became a popular artist, filling the Parisian halls. This record recounts this through three performances at the ABC, the Alhambra and the Bobino, preceded by a recording in the French radio studios.
- 1: Uma Casa Portuguesa
- 2: 1 Lisboa Nao Sejas Francesa
- 3: 1 Nem As Paredes Confesso
- 4: 1 Foi Deus
- 5: 1 Fado Amalia
- 6: 1 Tudo Isto É Fado
- 7: 1 Coimbra
- 8: 1 Estranha Forma De Vida
- 9: 1 Barco Negro (Mae Preta)
- 10: 1 Lisboa A Noite
- 11: 1 Ai, Mouraria F
- 12: 1 Fadista Louco
- 13: 1 Maria Lisboa
- 14: 1 Povo Que Lavas No Rio
Fado is the popular folk music of the cities of Portugal and is an
expression of "saudade". "Saudade" is a difficult word to translate for it means many things, sadness, longing for someone or something, the past or even the future; nostalgia, yearning, wistfulness all of which is expressed not only in words and music, but is the very vocal qualities of the singer. Amalia Rodrigues and fado have come to mean the same thing. Amalia is the goddess of fado, and although there are many fado singers in Lisbon, Amalia reigns supreme. Even without understanding Portuguese one can feel "saudade" when listening to her thrilling voice.
There are no two voices like these. The late Amália Rodrigues, the Queen of Fado, a unique singer up there with the great voices of 20th century popular song like Piaf, Sinatra, Ella, Oum Kalthoum. Mariza, the young singer that has helped bring Fado into the 21st century. Two of the greatest and most influential stylists of Fado, the ex-libris of Portuguese popular music, a world cultural heritage.
Two artists who have a lot in common, beyond their origin. Mariza swept global audiences off their feet like only Amália had done in the 1950s and 1960s, with her residences at legendary venues such as the Paris Olympia or Carnegie Hall. Through her critically acclaimed recordings and unexpected collaborations, Mariza expanded what Fado could be – just like Amália had done in the 1960s and 1970s. Mariza became the ambassador of Portugal’s music in the 21st century like only Amália had been able to be in the 20th century.
2020, the 20th anniversary of Mariza’s career, the centenary of Amália’s birth. “This the best way I can find to pay my tribute to Amália, and to thank her for the legacy and inspiration she gave us,” says Mariza. It’s been a long time coming, but now it’s here: Mariza Sings Amália. Ten Amália standards reinvented for the 21st century, their soul intact, their identity unmistakable, their stylings unexpected.
For this new album, Mariza invited an old friend – Brazilian musician and producer Jaques Morelenbaum, regular accomplice of Ryuichi Sakamoto or Caetano Veloso. Morelenbaum produced Mariza’s triple-platinum 2005 album Transparente; here, he creates a seductive, inspired series of orchestral arrangements, simultaneously classic and innovative, that allow Mariza to delve into songs we all thought we knew and make them new, fresh, ravishing.
Mariza may have performed all over the world, may have multi-platinum albums that topped charts throughout the glove, may have received endless prestigious awards – but in the studio, face to face with the standards that defined Fado for global audiences, Mariza is starting from scratch. She has recorded Amália before, but never like this, never with this wisdom, this experience, this power of interpretation. Now was the time to try on for size the great Amália classics: “Gaivota”, “Estranha Forma de Vida”, “Com que Voz”, “Fado Português”, “Povo que Lavas no Rio”, “Foi Deus”... Ten in all for an album where Mariza more than lives up to her awards, her success, her performances and assumes the mantle only Amália wore before: that of an ambassador of music, culture, talent.
Recorded between Lisbon and Rio de Janeiro, Mariza sings Amália. Like only Amália could have done, like only Mariza can. Is it Fado? Yes, and no. Above all, it’s a match made in heaven.
- A1: So 3 04
- A2: Ojos Verdes 3 00
- A3: Av 2 41
- A4: Fado Amália 2 59
- A5: Havemos De Ir A Viana 2 47
- A6: Meia Noite E Uma Guitarra 2 35
- A7: Grito 3 26
- A8: Nao Sei Porque Te Foste Embora 2 58
- B1: Fado Do Ciume 3 07
- B2: Carmencita 3 02
- B3: Lar Portugues 2 52
- B4: Saudade Vai - Te Embora 3 37
- B5: Maria Da Cruz 3 14
- B6: Que Deus Me Perdoe 3 48
- B7: Los Piconeros 2 23
- B8: Troca De Olhares
In the late 1990's label manager Nik Weston was working for Island Records and in particular the label imprint Island Blue set up by Ross Allen. It was here that he first heard the timeless jazz version masterpiece of Amalia from Kirk Degiorgio's As One. The track featured on a promo cd but never made it to a commercial release for Island Blue and was later featured on the full length album release for San Francisco label Ubiquity Records a few years later in 2001. 'Amalia' is a sultry jazz classic featuring gorgeous keys from Jamie Odell aka Jimpster. As relevant today as it ever was when initially made and here presented as a single in it's own right for the very first time. On the flipside another track that never made it to single in this version was the unique jazzual 'Spiritual Rotations' by Butti 49 from Norway. Nik had later worked with Butti 49 whilst working for Exceptional Records for the Habit album in 2004 but 'Spiritual Rotations' itself initially featured as an exclusively album only track for Future Sounds Of Jazz Volume 8 in 2001 for German label Compost. So there you have it... two welcome killer Jazz classics that deserve a revisit for your attention cut on limited 180 gram vinyl for your ears, your turntable and your dancefloor....
Working on opposite sides of the landmass we call Canada, Vancouver/Montreal duo Potatohead People (producers Nick Wisdom & AstroLogical) have been making waves for quite some time with their signature jazzy boom-bap meets boogie inside the bassbin vibes. Called a "formidable tandem" by OkayPlayer, their sounds have been championed early on by the likes of Kaytranada, Soulection, Nightmares on Wax, Pomo, Exmag, Big Boi, and Phife Dawg. After a few early releases on Vancouver based netlabel Jellyfish Recordings, Brooklyn's Bastard Jazz reissued their 2012 landmark Kosmichemusik EP and pressed a 7" released on Valentine's Day 2013. The association landed their song "Back To My Sh*t" (featuring Frank Nitty of Frank'n'Dank) on a Powerade produced LeBron James documentary and Nick and Astro began working on a debut LP for Bastard Jazz, presented here.
Big Luxury draws from influences disparate as classic jazz, prog rock, disco 90's hop, DJ Shadow-Era downtempo beats, alongside modern influences like the Brainfeeder crew and new electronic sounds coming out of Nick Wisdom's adopted hometown of Montreal. What's resulted is a finely honed, extra buttery album that effortly glides between tempos, but never loses the mood. The album also features a whole host of guest vocalists - J Dilla's younger brother Illa J, legendary Canadian MC Moka Only, New Zealand's Sorceress, and Amalia all provide contributions to the sounds within. Big Luxury is a velvety ride through vibes and a magnificent debut for these talented young Canadians.
- Amaliah - No Way Out
- Call Super - I Love Like Your Men
- Chaos In The Cbd - Orange Blank
- Charlie Dark - Foundation And History
- Dreamcastmoe - In And Out
- Isaac Carter - Take U There
- Joe Armon-Jones Maxwell Owin - Se Discoteque
- Kink Feat. Rachel Row - Its Already Here
- Manami - Scramble Clip
- Marcellus Pittman - #Eastsidechampions
- Mr. Redley Transatlantic Era
- Nat Wendell - Tell Me
- Niks - Lilac Skies
- Suze Ijó - Up There
- Yu Su - Flourish
GALA announce Ten Years of GALA – a compilation marking a decade of independent culture
Ten Years of GALA is both an archive and a horizon: a reflection on where GALA has come from, and a signal of what lies ahead.
Founded in 2016 as a one-day gathering in South London, GALA has grown into a global point of reference for dancers, artists and collectives drawn together by a shared commitment to independence, collaboration and underground music culture. Rather than charting success through scale alone, the festival has consistently prioritised integrity, community and musical curiosity – values that underpin this release.
Spanning fifteen tracks, Ten Years of GALA unfolds as a considered journey. It opens with an intimate spoken contribution from Charlie Dark, grounding the compilation firmly in GALA’s home of Peckham before gradually expanding outward into fuller, club-focused terrain. From there, the record moves between moods and tempos, tracing a path from reflective moments into the physical language of the dancefloor.
The compilation brings together longtime friends of the festival alongside newer voices drawn into its orbit in recent years. Each artist contributes a distinct perspective, but collectively the tracks form a coherent portrait – not of a single sound, but of a shared ethos shaped over ten years of gatherings, collaborations and days spent dancing together.
Rather than a retrospective in the conventional sense, Ten Years of GALA functions as a living document. It captures fragments of past editions, scenes and relationships, while remaining firmly oriented toward the future. These are not museum pieces, but records designed to be played, shared and folded back into the spaces from which they came.
Together, the compilation holds a piece of GALA’s first decade – not as a closed chapter, but as a foundation for what comes next.
- A1: Starbase 17
- A2: Hold It Tenderly (Feat. Ernesto & The Basement Gospel)
- A3: L'arrivée (Feat. Fred Everything)
- A4: Horizon (Feat. Jorge Bezerra & Nathan Haines)
- B1: Enough... (Feat. Sarai Jazz & Dwaine Hayden)
- B2: Tentative (Feat. Sio)
- B3: Oceans Apart (Feat. Audrey Powne & Karizma)
- B4: You've Got This (Feat. Lyricl & Peacey)
- B5: Keep It Light (Feat. Amalia)
- C1: Biome (Shwayvertath) (Feat. Si Tew)
- C2: Can I? (Feat. Pete Simpson)
- C3: Cardiac (Feat. Oveous)
- C4: Falling Apart (Feat. Charles Webster)
- D1: Change The Rules (Feat. Kaidi Tatham)
- D2: English Gentleman (Feat. Clyde Beats. Jorge Bezzera & Octavio N. Santos)
- D3: Honey Bee (Feat. Natasha Watts, Omar, Jd73 & Octavio N. Santos)
- D4: Give Love (Feat. Erin Buku)
- D5: Beginnings (Feat. Aart Iveson & Rudi Iveson)
- E1: Grey (Feat. Sarai Jazz)
- E2: Let's Talk (Feat. Omar & Max Beesley)
- E3: Greed (Feat. Clyde Beats)
- E4: Twin Flame (Feat. Josh Milan)
- E5: Shine (Feat. Rona Ray)
- F1: Soul To Soul (Feat. Ziyon)
- F2: Youniversal Love (Feat. Osunlade)
- F3: Endless (Feat. Clara Hill)
- F4: World We Know (Feat. Imaani)
Atjazz presents his long-awaited 27-track long player "Starbase 17" — an epic odyssey through song and sound, offering a rich tapestry of styles that draws listeners into a wondrous sonic realm where rhythm, harmony, and imagination intertwine.
Taking inspiration from his extensive body of work, Martin "Atjazz" Iveson fuses his signature deep musicality with cutting-edge production to reach new creative heights. This time, he brings an exceptional ensemble of world-renowned collaborators aboard his cosmic vessel, each adding their own distinct brilliance to the voyage
Together, this stellar lineup consisting of Fred Everything, Nathan Haines, Sio, Karizma, LyricL, Peacey, Pete Simpson, OVEOUS, Charles Webster, Kaidi Tatham, Clyde Beats, Natasha Watts, Omar, Max Beesley, Josh Milan, Rona Ray, Osunlade, and Clara Hill joins Atjazz on a journey through sound, space, and emotion — where each track is a world of its own, yet all are united by a shared creative vision and boundless imagination.
Repress
Via their studio in London, the Illusive Gluten People have crafted a timeless 4-track EP of precision minimal heat—chunky, rolling club grooves designed for the dancefloor.
Supported by:
Raresh | SB-Unit | Prosper | Joseph Capriati | Voigtman | Tai Lokun / Rinse FM | SUCHI / Rinse FM | Amaliah / Rinse FM | Archie Hamilton | Bartolomeo | Jimpster | Sean Sines | Hutch / Rinse FM | Hayley Zalassi | La Fleur | Subb-an | Timo Maas | Rupert Ellis / Circa Groove | Severino / Horse Meat Disco | Storm Mollison | ADMNTi | Ryan Clover / Homage NYC | Azo | Aletha / Rinse FM | Jad & The | Alec Falconer | Call Super | Rupert Ellis | KT | La Fleur | Raw Silk | Francesco Mami | Paperkraft | Miley Serious | Byron Yeates | Mr Redley | Michelle Manetti | Ysanne / Phonica | Scarlett O’Malle
- 01: Maria Do Carmo - Beijos São Como As Rosas
- 02: Jose Paradela D&Apos;Oliveira - Fado De Se Velha
- 03: Edmundo De Bettencourt - Crucificado
- 04: Madalena De Melo - Cantares
- 05: Luiza Baharem - Fado Mondego
- 06: Alberto Xavier Pinto - Fado Do Paraizo
- 07: Maria Victória - Fado Maria Victória Nº 1
- 08: Maria Silva - Fado Alice
- 09: Adelina Fernandes - Misérias
- 10: Estêvão Amarante - Fado Do Cauteleiro
- 11: Alfredo Marceneiro - Olhos Fatais
- 12: Ermelinda Vitória - Fado Da Minha Aldeia
- 13: Dr Lucas Junot - Triste (Fado)
- 14: Maria Alice - Quando O Meu Filho Adormece
- 15: Laura Santos - A Magia Do Fado
- 16: Joao Rocha Jor - Fado Rocha
Vinyl[21,64 €]
The definition of the word 'fado' is technically 'fate', though the Portuguese meaning bound up with this term is more complex. The music itself can be fairly closely compared with that of Greek rebetika - also the American blues or the original working-class tango music of Argentina and Uruguay - and similarly takes it's common subject matter from the various cruel realities of the world. Though perhaps what distinguishes fado in character is it's often poised acceptance of the pains of life rather than protestation or resistance - as writer Paul Vernon says "It speaks with a quiet dignity born of the realisation that any mortal desire or plan is at risk of destruction by powers beyond individual control"
Death Is Not The End compile here a spine-tingling collection of fado recordings, taken from records issued in the mid 1910s through to the 1930s. The fado's Lisbon and Coimbra variants are presented here by some of the music's earliest recorded stars - spanning a time period leading up to the emergence of the fado's all-conquering star, Amália Rodrigues.
Moxie’s On Loop imprint proudly presents ‘Manifold’, the highly anticipated debut solo EP from Amaliah. The rising Londoner delivers on her burgeoning ravey promise, unleashing a remarkable trio of percussive club tracks that link UK house aesthetics with global soundsystem influences, and comes with a wonderfully knotty remix from celebrated producer Call Super.
Borne Fruits founder Amaliah has rightfully ascended through the musical ranks of her native city to emerge as one of its most exciting voices. As a DJ and producer, she intersects at the exhilarating crossroads of contemporary house sounds, soundsystem culture and UK club influences to packed dancefloors weekly across the UK and EU. The Manifold EP flexes Amaliah’s parallel trajectory as a wicked tunesmith, offering her long-awaited and most substantial musical offering to date for Moxie’s much-loved On Loop imprint.
Opening track “Helix” curls a percussive membrane around its funky core, pumping along with nocturnal rave menace punctured by sirens and grotty synths. Next up, “Me So” shimmers with bubbling assuredness, diffusing Detroit-inspired melodies atop a bumpy house stepper that spurts with synthetic glee along its way. “Spooky Dub” greets us on the flip, wasting no time in igniting its punchy dembow groove while peppering its rubbery bassline amongst some dub-drenched fx. It briefly retreats for a half-step breakdown before re-launching us straight back to dancefloor salvation. Can You Feel The Sun’s Call Super sees us out with a typically psychedelic labyrinth-like remix of “Helix”, refracting a minimalised Electro groove through a magnificent fairground ride of wide-eyed sound design and intimate melodics.
Early support from Saoirse, Call Super, Parris, Moxie, Niks, Roza Terenzi, ISAbella and featured in Pangaea’s BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix.
- 01: Maria Do Carmo - Beijos São Como As Rosas
- 02: Jose Paradela D&Apos;Oliveira - Fado De Se Velha
- 03: Edmundo De Bettencourt - Crucificado
- 04: Madalena De Melo - Cantares
- 05: Luiza Baharem - Fado Mondego
- 06: Alberto Xavier Pinto - Fado Do Paraizo
- 07: Maria Victória - Fado Maria Victória Nº 1
- 08: Maria Silva - Fado Alice
- 09: Adelina Fernandes - Misérias
- 10: Estêvão Amarante - Fado Do Cauteleiro
- 11: Alfredo Marceneiro - Olhos Fatais
- 12: Ermelinda Vitória - Fado Da Minha Aldeia
- 13: Dr. Lucas Junot - Triste (Fado)
- 14: Maria Alice - Quando O Meu Filho Adormece
- 15: Laura Santos - A Magia Do Fado
- 16: Joao Rocha Jor - Fado Rocha
Tape[16,39 €]
The definition of the word 'fado' is technically 'fate', though the Portuguese meaning bound up with this term is more complex. The music itself can be fairly closely compared with that of Greek rebetika - also the American blues or the original working-class tango music of Argentina and Uruguay - and similarly takes it's common subject matter from the various cruel realities of the world. Though perhaps what distinguishes fado in character is it's often poised acceptance of the pains of life rather than protestation or resistance - as writer Paul Vernon says "It speaks with a quiet dignity born of the realisation that any mortal desire or plan is at risk of destruction by powers beyond individual control"
Death Is Not The End compile here a spine-tingling collection of fado recordings, taken from records issued in the mid 1910s through to the 1930s. The fado's Lisbon and Coimbra variants are presented here by some of the music's earliest recorded stars - spanning a time period leading up to the emergence of the fado's all-conquering star, Amália Rodrigues.
Peach Discs’ first EP of the post-summer season comes from DJ, producer, and our good pal Amaliah.
The five tracks that make up the Hypnosis EP are a true showcase of Amaliah's rapidly growing skills as a producer, as she picks thoughtfully from her inspirations and flips them into a uniquely Amaliah-coded record – leaning into the housier side of her sound while incorporating elements of bass, garage, UK funky, and prog that have become her calling card.
Lead track "Hypnosis" draws a line straight back to her early UK raving days, with tuff, speed-garage-indebted drums bouncing off prowling subs and emosh, pinging synth lines, while "Watch This" harnesses a similarly heaving bassline but dips towards classic UKG territory with its swinging, broken beat and disembodied vocal chops.
The closest thing to straight-up house on the EP, "Hold Me Closer," features Amaliah's vocals for the first time, as well as additional production from Shanti – an influence evident in the tight, ascending bassline that wraps itself around the stomping percussion.
"Laser Tag" and "Earthling" are maybe the most Amaliah-coded tracks on the record – a pair of highly percussive, UK funky inspired tunes that balance shoulder-bumping drums with wild, arcing synths that prowl across the stereo field, trippy and screwface inducing in equal measure.
Amaliah is also the founder of Borne Fruits, an independent label, event series, and monthly Rinse FM show, showcasing new sounds and emerging talent. This record follows neatly in that vein, as her own emerging talent marries forward-thinking sound design with her roots in raving and soundsystem culture for an EP that's all her own, and one we're thrilled to release.
- A1: Third Root Radio
- A2: Reflection Of The Times (Feat Reggie Coby)
- A3: Justice Or Else
- B1: Bullets For The Truth (Feat Amalia Ortiz & Queen Yonasda)
- B2: The Messengers (Feat World Trade)
- B3: Yanga's Theme
- C1: Flags And Body Bags (Feat Sofy Encanto Of Elastic Bond)
- C2: A Day In The Life / Poet (Feat Fiend & Marcelandrie); Featuring – Fiend (2)
- C3: The Revolution Won't Go Viral (Feat Bavu Blakes)
- D1: Soul Force (Feat Da'shade, Riders Against The Storm, Bavu Blakes, Vocab)
- D2: Libertad (Feat Mellow Man Ace); Featuring – Mellow Man Ace
- D3: Soul Force (Cookin' Soul Remix); Featuring – Bavu Blakes, Da'shade, Riders Against The Storm, Vocab; Producer – Cookin' Soul
Die Melody-Gardot-Magie kehrt zurück auf den Plattenteller. „The Absence“ war ihr drittes Album und erschien im Mai 2012. Die Mischung aus sinnlichem Jazz, Pop-Balladen und Brasil-Sounds schoss weltweit in diverse Jazz- und Pop-Charts und wurde bereits im gleichen Jahr in Frankreich mit Platin ausgezeichnet. Neben Melody Gardot glänzen auf dem Album der aus Brasilien stammende Produzent und Gitarrist Heitor Teixeira Pereira, Bassist John Leftwich, Perkussionist Paulinho da Costa sowie die Schlagzeuger Jim Keltner und Peter Erskine
A vivid portrayal of Zaltsman’s direction, My Luv delivers 4 hard hitting club tracks, with rhythmic percussion and heavy basslines throughout. ‘The hook’ remaining a staple of this release, the tracks are all equally useful in peak time club scenarios as they are for after-hours listening.
The stripped back, bouncy ‘Moving’ features the vocals of London based poet and musician, James Massiah. An eerie synth runs throughout, complimentary to the vocals and choppy drums. The lead track, 'My Luv', is an out and out club-weapon. Chopped up vocals and a deep dark sub bass. This has seen a Summer of being deployed by some of the best DJs in the scene, taking advantage of its ‘obnoxiously long’ breakdown, before descending into chaos.
Complimenting these two tracks, 'Page 365' is a more sensitive body of music, engaging listeners with a strong bassline hook, before progressing into a more heavy hitting club track, with a large focus on groove, taking influence from the UK Funky scene. Finally, the most club-driven track from the record. 'Flatspot' is dominated by its forceful bassline and rolling percussion. This is out and out designed for peak-hour fun.
Early DJ Support:
Moxie, Saoirse, Louise Chen, Leon Vynehall, Ben UFO, Parris, Moopie, D.Tiffany, re:ni, Amaliah, Stenny




















