Always lurking amidst the underground Porto music scene is Spitbender, the most stable moniker of the ever-morphing Francisco Antão. Spin gathers a collection of tracks that demonstrate his experimentalism & coy sonic precision. Spitbender takes cues from Jungle & Hip Hop producers to create his own unique blend of Downtempo. What becomes clear throughout the album is the attention to detail: it is infused as much by Industrial's red-line spectra as it is by the dubplate logic of the Darkside Continuum, yet it does so at its own tripped out speed.
Spin begins with the laid-back but constantly shifting 'Global Overgroove'. Its breakbeat science moves in & out of DSP glitch-work & dub reflections. When its slinky bassline melody arrives, a certain dread sets in.
'Weyward Fold' drops into a driving, hard-edged chug, threaded with snippets of Malcolm X's disobedient pedagogy. The momentum carries into 'Headnod Doctor', where the bass distortion thickens & the cymbal circuit is overloaded, landing somewhere between Hip‑Hop grit & metal weight.
Side A ends with the downtempo roller 'Dogs and Moles (Skylurk Mix)'. The familiar break drifts into new territory, pulled along & wrapped in a slap-back echo. A quirky melody cuts through the haze, giving the track a fresh tilt. The mulch of the track forms a steady, unhurried pulse.
Spitbender's spacious atmospherics & groove-focused approach comes further into focus on 'Nothing Here But the Recordings'. Creating his own chapter in the book of Trip Hop, his minimalist touch is laid out in full.
'Force the Hand Ov Chance' pulls Boom Bap gently into dub mechanics, letting space do the heavy lifting. Its simplicity hides a deep pocket.
Returning to broken-up distortion, 'Mirrors of Flesh (Dub Mix)' finds Spitbender using the mixer as an instrument to push & pull the heavy drums of Benjamin Brejon of Méchanosphere alongside the voice of Rui intoning the title phrase.
Sitting between the album's two poles, 'Out Take Dub' fuses the clipped‑obsession timbres of Spin's heavier moments with its blissed out flow. Feedback & distortion are welcomed & drawn long.
In the end, Spin hits like a fully formed statement—lean, focused, & unmistakably Spitbender. Every track pushes its own angle, but together they land with a clarity that feels earned. It's a sharp marker in his trajectory, & it leaves a charge in the air.
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One of the true, undisputed pioneers of Dutch techno, Steve Rachmad appears on Dekmantel for an EP of peerless machine music. On the 3-6-9 EP, the artist also known as Sterac, Parallel 9 and many other names plies a powerful trade in funked up, gritty and soulful techno made the proper way.
The connection between Rachmad and Dekmantel reaches back many years via his frequent appearances at the Dekmantel Festival — he has two performances at the 2026 edition as well as sets at Dekmantel Selectors lined up later in the summer. The 3-6-9 EP lands ahead of an album and world tour that marks 45 years in service to electronic music, nodding to Rachmad's earliest roots in electro funk through to his day-one embrace of house and techno as it made its way across the Atlantic from Chicago and Detroit.
There's a rowdy, rave-spirited energy to the synth hook bucking its way through the centre of '3 Creation Energy', coming on in brassy tones laced with artful distortion while the drums dutifully jack the way they ought to. There's a more linear, pressure cooker quality to the tidal filter work guiding '6 Physical Manifestation' to its own energetic peaks, while '9 Completion and Delivery' surfs on coursing waves of arpeggiated lead lines before breaking through to the oceanic calm of grandiose pad tones.
There's no mystery to unpick here — this is quite simply techno perfection made with the instinct and experience of a master of the form, whose life is synonymous with every inch of the culture.
- A1: Intro
- A2: The White Sheet
- A3: No Tears
- A4: Jesse James
- B1: G’s
- B2: I Seen A Man Die
- B3: One
- C1: Goin Down
- C2: One Time
- C3: Hand Of The Dead Body (Feat. Ice Cube)
- D1: Mind Playin Tricks 94
- D2: The Diary
- D3: Outro
- D4: Ease Up Now
Red Vinyl[25,63 €]
The Diary by Scarface returns to vinyl for the first time since 2014, now expanded to a 2xLP and featuring the never-before-released bonus track “Ease Up Now.” Newly remastered, this definitive edition includes the original 1994 artwork, carefully restored for vinyl by acclaimed designer Mr. Krum. Featuring fan favorites like “No Tears” and “I Seen a Man Die,” this platinum-certified classic is presented with upgraded audio and an expanded format, making it the most comprehensive edition to date.
The Diary by Scarface returns to vinyl for the first time since 2014, now expanded to a 2xLP for the very first time, including a previously unreleased B-Side!
Newly remastered, this definitive edition features the original 1994 artwork, carefully restored for vinyl by acclaimed designer Mr. Krum
Originally released October 18, 1994, The Diary debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, marking one of Scarface’s most commercially successful releases.
- A1: Intro
- A2: The White Sheet
- A3: No Tears
- A4: Jesse James
- B1: G’s
- B2: I Seen A Man Die
- B3: One
- C1: Goin Down
- C2: One Time
- C3: Hand Of The Dead Body (Feat. Ice Cube)
- D1: Mind Playin Tricks 94
- D2: The Diary
- D3: Outro
- D4: Ease Up Now
Black Vinyl[25,63 €]
The Diary by Scarface returns to vinyl for the first time since 2014, now expanded to a 2xLP and featuring the never-before-released bonus track “Ease Up Now.” Newly remastered, this definitive edition includes the original 1994 artwork, carefully restored for vinyl by acclaimed designer Mr. Krum. Featuring fan favorites like “No Tears” and “I Seen a Man Die,” this platinum-certified classic is presented with upgraded audio and an expanded format, making it the most comprehensive edition to date.
The Diary by Scarface returns to vinyl for the first time since 2014, now expanded to a 2xLP for the very first time, including a previously unreleased B-Side!
Newly remastered, this definitive edition features the original 1994 artwork, carefully restored for vinyl by acclaimed designer Mr. Krum
Originally released October 18, 1994, The Diary debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, marking one of Scarface’s most commercially successful releases.
Indie Exclusive 2xLP on Opaque Red Vinyl with 8x10 Glossy Insert. Contains Bonus Track "Ease Up Now"
Dewa Alit, master of radical Balinese gamelan, returns to Black Truffle with Baur Bentur. Genetic (2020, BT063) introduced international listeners to the magical sound-world of Alit’s Gamelan Salukat, who perform on instruments tuned to a unique scale derived from modified versions of two traditional Balinese scales. The two pieces heard on Chasing the Phantom (2022, BT093) further demonstrated his radical fusion of tradition and experimentation, with passages where unorthodox techniques make the acoustic ensemble resemble glitching electronics. Baur Bentur now highlights another aspect of Alit’s work, presenting pieces composed in 2024 and 2025 where Gamelan Salukat performs alongside virtuoso pianist Sri Hanuraga. Alit’s music is grounded in deep reflection on the tradition of Balinese gamelan and its place in the contemporary world. His title, ‘Baur Bentur’, which translates as ‘mixing and smashing’, points to his embrace of the intercultural mixture of Eastern and Western elements in the search for innovation. Against the calcification of Balinese music into tourist entertainment, Alit poses his searching, experimental work, which celebrates the communal values and performance practices of traditional gamelan while pushing into startling new directions.
‘Sukat Tacara’ is a study in layered tempos, meters, and polyrhythms, a constantly shifting dialogue between piano and the instruments of Gamelan Salukat. It begins close to a traditional concerto, pairing a brisk sequence of melodic variations from the piano with a spare but propulsive accompaniment of drums and hanging metallophone tones, punctuated by low gong strikes. The piano builds in volume and density across a rapid succession of fragments, at points recalling George Antheil’s ticking wind-up machinery, though Hanuraga’s jazz background shines through in the fluidity with which he navigates the complexities of the score, where chromatic movement co-exists with bluesy phrases. An abrupt change in the piano to patterns of dense clusters introduces a new episode, during which the metallic instruments of the gamelan enter the foreground. The piece dazzles with its inventive rhythms and dynamics, building to a stunning passage featuring the signature heavy muting technique of the Gamelan Salukat metallophones in kinetic patterns that would be at home on a Príncipe release.
The title piece begins at high intensity and rarely lets up, working through bracing unison ensemble melodies and punctuation points where piano and gamelan together seem to become a single, thudding drum. For much of the piece the piano is tightly integrated into the ensemble, the harmonic extensions of the melodic line subsumed into a moving cloud of complex overtones generated by the gamelan instruments. Wildly kinetic on the rhythmic level, the piece swarms with microscopic movements of beating patterns generated by the ‘blend and crush’ of three simultaneous tuning systems: the equal temperament of the piano and the saih cenik (small scale) and saih gede (big scale) used by the gamelan instruments. Accompanied by the composer’s thoughtful liner notes and images of the musicians, Baur Bentur is a stunning next step in Alit’s radical combination of tradition and innovation.
- 1: Meteorite
- 2: Greyscale
- 3: Pablo
- 4: Stresser
- 5: Ethan Allen
- 6: Indian Giver
- 7: Radical Firepower
- 8: Ford
- 1: Morale Is Low
- 2: Coping With Senility (Lowlife Owns A Pen)
- 3: This Afternoons Malady
- 4: Fixed On Ththe One
- 5: Sitcom Epiphany
- 6: Solar
- 1: New Clear Saturday
- 2: Regrets Are Unanswered Dreams
- 3: Demonica
- 438: Calumet
- 5: One Transmission
- 6: Same To You
- 1: Record City After World
- 2: The New State
- 3: Lunatic
- 4: The Highs And Lows
- 5200: 0 Miles
- 6: Heart Of Desire
- 7: Early Stars
- 8: Morale Is Low (Alternate Version)
- 1: That's Why She Hates Me
- 2: Solar (Alternate Version)
- 3: Lowlife (Version Remix)
- 4: Grace (Wizard Glick Is Swimming)
- 5: Drive By Negly
- 6: Early Stars (7" Version)
- 7: That's Why She Hates Me (" Version)
- 8: Hialeah
- 9: Figured Out
Opaque Red Vinyl[86,98 €]
Die vollständigen originalen Studioaufnahmen des aus San Diego stammenden, über Boston geformten Alternative-Trios - remastert, restauriert und in einem opulenten Boxset vereint. Wait A Lifetime versammelt die unvergleichlichen Alben der Band Junk und This Afternoon Malady sowie R.I.P., erweitert um ihr unvollendetes drittes Album, Singles, Split-Veröffentlichungen und Beiträge zu Compilations. Das begleitende 68-seitige Booklet zeichnet die gesamte Geschichte anhand eines Essays von Nina Cocoran und Dutzender zeitgenössischer Fotos nach. Alles ist untergebracht in einer beeindruckenden, kaschierten und lackierten Box. Sink in die Erde - und flieg.
- 1: Meteorite
- 2: Greyscale
- 3: Pablo
- 4: Stresser
- 5: Ethan Allen
- 6: Indian Giver
- 7: Radical Firepower
- 8: Ford
- 1: Morale Is Low
- 2: Coping With Senility (Lowlife Owns A Pen)
- 3: This Afternoons Malady
- 4: Fixed On Ththe One
- 5: Sitcom Epiphany
- 6: Solar
- 1: New Clear Saturday
- 2: Regrets Are Unanswered Dreams
- 3: Demonica
- 438: Calumet
- 5: One Transmission
- 6: Same To You
- 1: Record City After World
- 2: The New State
- 3: Lunatic
- 4: The Highs And Lows
- 5200: 0 Miles
- 6: Heart Of Desire
- 7: Early Stars
- 8: Morale Is Low (Alternate Version)
- 1: That's Why She Hates Me
- 2: Solar (Alternate Version)
- 3: Lowlife (Version Remix)
- 4: Grace (Wizard Glick Is Swimming)
- 5: Drive By Negly
- 6: Early Stars (7" Version)
- 7: That's Why She Hates Me (" Version)
- 8: Hialeah
- 9: Figured Out
Black Vinyl[80,63 €]
Die vollständigen originalen Studioaufnahmen des aus San Diego stammenden, über Boston geformten Alternative-Trios - remastert, restauriert und in einem opulenten Boxset vereint. Wait A Lifetime versammelt die unvergleichlichen Alben der Band Junk und This Afternoon Malady sowie R.I.P., erweitert um ihr unvollendetes drittes Album, Singles, Split-Veröffentlichungen und Beiträge zu Compilations.Das begleitende 68-seitige Booklet zeichnet die gesamte Geschichte anhand eines Essays von Nina Cocoran und Dutzender zeitgenössischer Fotos nach. Alles ist untergebracht in einer beeindruckenden, kaschierten und lackierten Box.Sink in die Erde - und flieg.
2026 Repress
Twenty five years after its initial release, and accompanying the re-release of 'Internal Empire' Tresor Records is proud to present a new cut and pressing (180gm) of Robert Hood's essential 'Master Builder'.
The ongoing importance of this single and its adjacent album is indisputable, essential both to techno and to Tresor. It is a history intertwined.
This work elevates its maker as master, and remain a cherished moment in the Tresor story, sharing an irrefutable singular magic, sounding as present and indispensable as when first created. To understand this work fully is to stand back and celebrate its impact.
Originally released in 1994, 'Internal Empire' marks a point of transition for Robert Hood moving on from his previous collaborations within Underground Resistance. Robert Hood advanced uncovering the power of true minimalism. Deep soul through a simplicity that showed how much could be done with so little. The devastating rhythms of this album forge the unmatched spirit of this sound, influencing generations to come.
"25 years ago, I was faced with the challenge of following up on 'Minimal Nation'. I cancelled all my tour dates for that summer, setup my studio in the living room and began to work on 'Internal Empire'. My intention was to create something distinctively di erent. Looking out my living room window in Detroit watching people go by gave me a new perspective. It made me look at the world within myself. 25 years later I am still discovering.' - Robert Hood
The Austrian imprint Fortunea Records took a little break to fill up their batteries and comes back now this summer with a release by the Bavarian duo Decent Rides. They are around for a couple of years and are also the masterminds behind the label Interloot Records.
On the ‚Like We Do‘ EP they are your guides for a versatile house infiltrated tour. The title-track is an energetic floorfiller with modulated synth sequences and heart stomping drum patterns. Definitely the killer app on this wax.
The second track on the A-side features the tune ‚Mind Maze‘. A funky bouncing bassline, reverberant almost siren sounding tones, staccato vocal samples and high accentuated hats make you blister your feet from your high intensively dance moves.
On track B2, the duo adds further "Colours" to the record. This melancholic deep house tune exudes a beautiful, somber, and yet captivating atmosphere that is impossible to resist. This track could be very effective when played during sunrise or sundown.
And finally, they round off this release with cosmic dub sounds and shimmering chords. "Lembo" invigorates the senses. Every beat on this tech house track is an invitation to let go and feels you the pulse of the underground scene.
Go check this out!
Limited to 200 records. There will be no repress!
Mastering by Patrick Pulsinger.
Anthony Hüseyin presents their new album O Geliyor (Making O), in which they return to the rediscovery of their gender, their childhood, and their attachment to Zeki Müren.
Müren is widely regarded as the most important queer exponent in the history of Turkish Art Music (Türk Sanat Müzigi). This genre of music was open to musical hybridism, and Müren himself also included elements of jazz and pop music.
Stylistically, O Geliyor (Making O) is a combination of contemporary discoid electro-pop music, based on Turkish Art Music by Zeki Müren. After successful current re-interpretations of Turkish music styles like neo-Anatolian pop and neo-Arabesk, this album provides a first take on neo-Turkish Art Music.
The album title is referring to the third genderless person pronoun in Turkish called "O", which encompasses all gender possibilities in one word. The album reflects on the memories that haunt us and the indescribable wounds of displacement. Set against the backdrop of Berlin, home to many immigrants and political and queer refugees, it exposes the profound emptiness in a metropolis wishing to imagine itself as a safe haven for the free-spirited, yet always reminding the Other that they don't belong. At the same time, it delivers anthems for the displaced, for the queer migrants who traverse internal and external landscapes in search of a place called home.
Anthony Hüseyin is a non-binary musician and performance artist of Kurdish-Turkish and Arabic descent who works with voice, text, film, dance, and installation. Raised in Urfa in Southeastern Turkey, where they learned traditional local music, they went on to study both classical and jazz singing in Istanbul and Rotterdam. Their works combine the personal and political to explore memory, identity, community, collective consciousness, and the body.
- Step (Ft. Swizz Beatz)
- Lied 2 U
- Slid Off
- Daddy Rich Interlude (Ft. Richard Pryor)
- Stop Counting
- My Poccets
- Og To Bg (Ft. Kanobby)
- Dogg Wattup Doe (Ft. Peezy)
- Leave That Dogg Alone
- Pop
- My Shit (Ft. Trinidad James)
- 17: Rules
- Bread Under The Bed (Ft. Stresmatic)
- No Ticcet Needed (Ft. Kanobby)
- Long Beachin (Ft. Shawn Louisiana)
- Qtsamyah (Ft. October London)
Snoop Dogg’s 22nd album is a tight, 35-minute project that blends his classic G-Funk style with a more futuristic sound.
Featuring production from Pharrell Williams, Swizz Beatz, and Erick Sermon, it moves between high-energy tracks like
“Step” and smoother moments like “QTSAMYAH” with October London. The album presents a polished, cinematic look at Snoop’s evolution,
reinforced by an accompanying short film, showing his style and influence remain strong in 2026.
- Step (Ft. Swizz Beatz)
- Lied 2 U
- Slid Off
- Daddy Rich Interlude (Ft. Richard Pryor)
- Stop Counting
- My Poccets
- Og To Bg (Ft. Kanobby)
- Dogg Wattup Doe (Ft. Peezy)
- Leave That Dogg Alone
- Pop
- My Shit (Ft. Trinidad James)
- 17: Rules
- Bread Under The Bed (Ft. Stresmatic)
- No Ticcet Needed (Ft. Kanobby)
- Long Beachin (Ft. Shawn Louisiana)
- Qtsamyah (Ft. October London)
Snoop Dogg’s 22nd album is a tight, 35-minute project that blends his classic G-Funk style with a more futuristic sound.
Featuring production from Pharrell Williams, Swizz Beatz, and Erick Sermon, it moves between high-energy tracks like
“Step” and smoother moments like “QTSAMYAH” with October London. The album presents a polished, cinematic look at Snoop’s evolution,
reinforced by an accompanying short film, showing his style and influence remain strong in 2026.
- Step (Ft. Swizz Beatz)
- Lied 2 U
- Slid Off
- Daddy Rich Interlude (Ft. Richard Pryor)
- Stop Counting
- My Poccets
- Og To Bg (Ft. Kanobby)
- Dogg Wattup Doe (Ft. Peezy)
- Leave That Dogg Alone
- Pop
- My Shit (Ft. Trinidad James)
- 17: Rules
- Bread Under The Bed (Ft. Stresmatic)
- No Ticcet Needed (Ft. Kanobby)
- Long Beachin (Ft. Shawn Louisiana)
- Qtsamyah (Ft. October London)
Snoop Dogg’s 22nd album is a tight, 35-minute project that blends his classic G-Funk style with a more futuristic sound.
Featuring production from Pharrell Williams, Swizz Beatz, and Erick Sermon, it moves between high-energy tracks like
“Step” and smoother moments like “QTSAMYAH” with October London. The album presents a polished, cinematic look at Snoop’s evolution,
reinforced by an accompanying short film, showing his style and influence remain strong in 2026.
- Step (Ft. Swizz Beatz)
- Lied 2 U
- Slid Off
- Daddy Rich Interlude (Ft. Richard Pryor)
- Stop Counting
- My Poccets
- Og To Bg (Ft. Kanobby)
- Dogg Wattup Doe (Ft. Peezy)
- Leave That Dogg Alone
- Pop
- My Shit (Ft. Trinidad James)
- 17: Rules
- Bread Under The Bed (Ft. Stresmatic)
- No Ticcet Needed (Ft. Kanobby)
- Long Beachin (Ft. Shawn Louisiana)
- Qtsamyah (Ft. October London)
Snoop Dogg’s 22nd album is a tight, 35-minute project that blends his classic G-Funk style with a more futuristic sound.
Featuring production from Pharrell Williams, Swizz Beatz, and Erick Sermon, it moves between high-energy tracks like
“Step” and smoother moments like “QTSAMYAH” with October London. The album presents a polished, cinematic look at Snoop’s evolution,
reinforced by an accompanying short film, showing his style and influence remain strong in 2026.
Straight from the depths of techno, Lewis Fautzi delivers an intense EP where each track pulls you deeper into a raw, immersive soundscape.
Featuring five tracks that explore deep textures, driving rhythms, and dark atmospheres, "Ghosts Don't Text Me" reinforces his unmistakable signature style.
5 tracks. 1 identity. Pure energy from start to finish.
Mauro Pawlowski's 'Unspectacular Times' is the sound of an artist completely at ease with himself, and with the world, in all its ordinary, unglamorous beauty. Ten songs rooted in everyday observation and emotion, produced by Scorpio Twins (Stephane Misseghers and Bruno Coussée) with a full 24-carat 80s gloss: lush synths and basslines.
Where everything around us seems to demand maximum volume and instant outrage, Pawlowski turns that logic quietly inside out. These are songs about love that sneaks up on you, desire that builds in an art gallery, and a Nobel Prize winner falling off his bike and giving a thumbs up. Small moments, but in Pawlowski's hands, that's where everything worth paying attention to actually lives.
Guest appearances from Brianne Dunne (Daryl Hall & John Oates) and Pol Coussée, a Belgian saxophonist who found his way from London to Toronto and has played alongside Barry White and Isaac Hayes.
Following the 70s-tinged 'Eternal Sunday Drive', his second album on Unday Records 'Unspectacular Times' is Pawlowski's most pop focused to date. His most recent chapter in a career that has taken him from Evil Superstars to dEUS, through theater, dance, film and more alter egos than most artists have albums.
- A1: Cauldron
- A2: Ground Loop
- A3: Eclipse
- A4: Solar Flare
- B1: Locris
- B2: Petrichor
- B3: Mantra
Gary Bartz und das neue Londoner Ensemble Your Brother’s Keeper präsentieren mit "Where Rivers Meet" ein tiefgründiges und intuitives Studioalbum, das die seltene Begegnung zweier Generationen von Jazzmusikern einfängt. Das Album, das pünktlich zum 20-jährigen Jubiläum von Brownswood erscheint, vereint Bartz' Tradition mit der jungen, pulsierenden Szene Londons. Das Ergebnis ist Musik, die sich mit Offenheit und Intensität entfaltet, getragen von tiefem Zuhören und gemeinsamer Improvisation.
Im Zentrum des Projekts steht Bartz, eine der einflussreichsten Vertreter des modernen Jazz. Der Saxophonist, dessen Karriere sich über mehr als fünf Jahrzehnte erstreckt, machte sich einen Namen durch Auftritte mit Charles Mingus, Max Roach und Art Blakey, bevor er sich Miles Davis in dessen elektrisierender Phase der frühen 1970er-Jahre anschloss. Mit seinen gefeierten Aufnahmen mit der NTU Troop wurde er schnell zu einer prägenden Figur des Spiritual Jazz und schuf ein Werk, das Generationen von Musikern und Zuhörern gleichermaßen begeistert. Sein Spiel – lyrisch, tiefgründig und unverkennbar gefühlvoll – zählt nach wie vor zu den markantesten Stimmen des Jazz.
Das Album markiert zudem die Gründung von Your Brother’s Keeper, einem neuen Kollektiv um Schlagzeuger und Produzent Jake Long (Maisha), dessen musikalischer Dialog und die Improvisation tief in der Musik verwurzelt sind. Mit Ali MacSween (Piano, Synthesizer, modulare Effekte), Axel Kaner-Lidstrom (Trompete), Twm Dylan (Kontrabass), Tim Doyle (Percussion) und Chelsea Carmichael (Tenorsaxophon) sowie Long am Schlagzeug spiegelt die Gruppe eine Szene wider, die den Sound des zeitgenössischen Jazz im letzten Jahrzehnt maßgeblich geprägt hat.
- 1: Punk Art
- 2: Someone’s Tuning Up
- 3: Punk Rock Daze
- 4 1: 2-3-4
- 5: Mal-One’s Out To Lunch
- 6: The Ballad Of Punk Rock
- 1: Holiday In Other People’s Misery
- 2: Future Nostalgia
- 3: Welcome To The Punk Rock Disco
- 4: The Ballad Of Johnny Rotten
- 5: Those New York Dolls
- 6: Punky Rocking Xmas
Yes here we are 50 years on from year zero 1976 (where did that go!!!). To celebrate this and the fact we are all still here and talking about the importance of the Punk Rock movement i put together an album under the banner Punk Rock Daze. The title reflects it was all such a daze, as it ran by so fast and also as a reminder of an old Malcolm McLaren remark that came to mind. That when the band and management were discussing the look and name of the Sex Pistols forthcoming album ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’. Malcolm remarked, lets sell it as you would sell washing powder, bright, simple and with fluorescence colours. Great idea so here is my homage to that thought.
So I hope you enjoy the gesture and here’s to another 50 years of Alchemy, Joyousness and
instruction (Anarchy, Chaos and Destruction).
Peace and Punk Mal-One
- 1: Dee Dee Brave – My My Lover (Tony Humphries Dub)*
- 2: The Brotherhood – Love Will Make It Right (Club Mix)
- 3: Deuce & Satin – Hyper
- 4: Jomanda – Make My Body Rock
- 5: Bobby Harding – Feelin' Happy (The Kiki Club Mix)
- 6: Man Machine – Elektro-Genetik
- 7: Mae-1 – Sweet Feelin’
- 8: Romanthony – Falling From Grace (Tony Humphries Demo Mix)*
- 9: Kerri Chandler – Kerri Kaoz Beat (Acetate Instrumental)*
- 10: Jomanda – Don’t You Want My Love (Street Style Mix)
- 11: Anthony Thomas – You Don’t Love Me
- 12: Jay Williams – Sweat (Dance Track)
- 13: Jay Williams – Sweat
- 14: Precious – Definition Of A Track
- 15: Victor Romeo Presents Leatrice Brown – Love Will Find A Way (Zanzibar Edit)*
- 16: When Worlds Collide – Deep (2263 Mix)
- 17: Mondee Oliver – Make Me Want You (Club Mix, Extended)
- 18: Deskee – Let There Be House (Mix Abcd I)
- 19: Ed The Red Feat. Mj White – Broken Promises (Club Mix)
- 20: Mr. Monday – Appreciate
- 21: How Ii House – Time 2 Feel The Rhythm (Symphonic Mix)
- 22: Romanthony – In The Mix (A Tribute To Tony Humphries)
- 23: Billy “Jack” Williams Presents Utterance – Grant Me Utterance
(*Previously unreleased)
Telling a tale of house music’s early days or roots without mentioning Tony Humphries as a club DJ, remixer and radio disc jockey would make it an incomplete, forged and most of all a bit of a yawn.
Born in Brooklyn in 1957, Humphries’ musical journey is synonymous with New York City’s dance music history and the evolution from uptempo soul music to house: from being a dancer at David Mancuso’s infamous Loft parties to becoming a mobile DJ and getting the call from Shep Pettibone to become his right hand at
the then new Kiss FM radio station, followed by countless remix offers and a legendary residency at Newark’s Club Zanzibar. Next to that one, is was especially his work as a radio disc jockey for said station during most of the 1980s until 1994 that gave him majestic clout. Breaking new records week in, week out,
putting New Jersey acts like Adeva and Jomanda or countless up-and-coming producers from there on the musical map, while simultaneously playing the hottest imports from Europe, trax from Chicago, dance classics and all things straight from New York’s music factory that never seemed to stop.
Going to his vast and almost complete archive of radio shows from way back when he graced those airwaves, we at Running Back Records have pickedNew Release Information original recordings that symbolize his importance as an industry giant and ambassador of this style of music.
„But one thing I would like to point out is that, as a DJ, the music I play is not my music. I want to make it perfectly clear that it is music that is released, and it’s everyone’s music. I do not take any other credit than being the middle person exposing this music.“
(Tony Humphries in: What Kind of House Party Is This?, Jonathan Fleming, 1996)
- A1: Dee Dee Brave – My My Lover (Tony Humphries Dub)*
- A2: Jomanda – Don’t You Want My Love (Street Style)
- B1: R-Tyme – Illusions (Mayday Mix)
- B2: Blakk Society Feat. David Hollister – Just Another Lonely Day (Club Mix)
- C1: Anthony Thomas – You Don’t Love Me
- C2: Victor Romeo – Love Will Find A Way (Zanzibar Edit)*
- C3: Romanthony – In The Mix (Tony’s Classic Mastermix)
- D1: Slam – Eternal
- D2: Mondee Oliver – Make Me Want You (Club Mix, Extended)
- E1: Bobby Harding – Feelin' Happy (The Kiki Club Mix)
- E2: Deskee – Let There Be House (Mix Abcd I)
- E3: Bizzy B – B With U
- F1: When Worlds Collide – Deep (2263 Mix)
- F2: Jay Williams – Sweat (Dance Track)
(*Previously unreleased)
Telling a tale of house music’s early days or roots without mentioning Tony Humphries as a club DJ, remixer and radio disc jockey would make it an incomplete, forged and most of all a bit of a yawn.
Born in Brooklyn in 1957, Humphries’ musical journey is synonymous with New York City’s dance music history and the evolution from uptempo soul music to house: from being a dancer at David Mancuso’s infamous Loft parties to becoming a mobile DJ and getting the call from Shep Pettibone to become his right hand at
the then new Kiss FM radio station, followed by countless remix offers and a legendary residency at Newark’s Club Zanzibar. Next to that one, is was especially his work as a radio disc jockey for said station during most of the 1980s until 1994 that gave him majestic clout. Breaking new records week in, week out,
putting New Jersey acts like Adeva and Jomanda or countless up-and-coming producers from there on the musical map, while simultaneously playing the hottest imports from Europe, trax from Chicago, dance classics and all things straight from New York’s music factory that never seemed to stop.
Going to his vast and almost complete archive of radio shows from way back when he graced those airwaves, we at Running Back Records have pickedNew Release Information original recordings that symbolize his importance as an industry giant and ambassador of this style of music.
„But one thing I would like to point out is that, as a DJ, the music I play is not my music. I want to make it perfectly clear that it is music that is released, and it’s everyone’s music. I do not take any other credit than being the middle person exposing this music.“
(Tony Humphries in: What Kind of House Party Is This?, Jonathan Fleming, 1996)




















