6 years after their first merch collab Rotterdam outfits WOEI and CLONE team up once again for their ‘’Always Connected’’ drop! Way back in ’95 when Serge operated his store inside the Urban Unit skate shop, Woei was one of the regulars buying records and practising his mixing skills for hours on the shop decks. Woei eventually became one of the main sneaker heads in The Netherlands and started supplying everyone with fresh kicks out of his WOEI shop (with iconic Piet Parra logo - one of the homies of the Fret Click Crew), while Clone Records became a source for all your musical needs! Don’t miss this team-up between these two Rotterdam-based stores! - 100% Cotton, 220 gsm fabric weight - Pre washed for zero shrinkage - Regular fit - Unisex - Woven flag at waist - Made in Europe - Machine wash 30 degrees inside out, don't tumble dry
Buscar:fab g
6 years after their first merch collab Rotterdam outfits WOEI and CLONE team up once again for their ‘’Always Connected’’ drop! Way back in ’95 when Serge operated his store inside the Urban Unit skate shop, Woei was one of the regulars buying records and practising his mixing skills for hours on the shop decks. Woei eventually became one of the main sneaker heads in The Netherlands and started supplying everyone with fresh kicks out of his WOEI shop (with iconic Piet Parra logo - one of the homies of the Fret Click Crew), while Clone Records became a source for all your musical needs! Don’t miss this team-up between these two Rotterdam-based stores! - 100% Cotton, 220 gsm fabric weight - Pre washed for zero shrinkage - Regular fit - Unisex - Woven flag at waist - Made in Europe - Machine wash 30 degrees inside out, don't tumble dry
6 years after their first merch collab Rotterdam outfits WOEI and CLONE team up once again for their ‘’Always Connected’’ drop! Way back in ’95 when Serge operated his store inside the Urban Unit skate shop, Woei was one of the regulars buying records and practising his mixing skills for hours on the shop decks. Woei eventually became one of the main sneaker heads in The Netherlands and started supplying everyone with fresh kicks out of his WOEI shop (with iconic Piet Parra logo - one of the homies of the Fret Click Crew), while Clone Records became a source for all your musical needs! Don’t miss this team-up between these two Rotterdam-based stores! - 100% Cotton, 220 gsm fabric weight - Pre washed for zero shrinkage - Regular fit - Unisex - Woven flag at waist - Made in Europe - Machine wash 30 degrees inside out, don't tumble dry
6 years after their first merch collab Rotterdam outfits WOEI and CLONE team up once again for their ‘’Always Connected’’ drop! Way back in ’95 when Serge operated his store inside the Urban Unit skate shop, Woei was one of the regulars buying records and practising his mixing skills for hours on the shop decks. Woei eventually became one of the main sneaker heads in The Netherlands and started supplying everyone with fresh kicks out of his WOEI shop (with iconic Piet Parra logo - one of the homies of the Fret Click Crew), while Clone Records became a source for all your musical needs! Don’t miss this team-up between these two Rotterdam-based stores! - 100% Cotton, 220 gsm fabric weight - Pre washed for zero shrinkage - Regular fit - Unisex - Woven flag at waist - Made in Europe - Machine wash 30 degrees inside out, don't tumble dry
6 years after their first merch collab Rotterdam outfits WOEI and CLONE team up once again for their ‘’Always Connected’’ drop! Way back in ’95 when Serge operated his store inside the Urban Unit skate shop, Woei was one of the regulars buying records and practising his mixing skills for hours on the shop decks. Woei eventually became one of the main sneaker heads in The Netherlands and started supplying everyone with fresh kicks out of his WOEI shop (with iconic Piet Parra logo - one of the homies of the Fret Click Crew), while Clone Records became a source for all your musical needs! Don’t miss this team-up between these two Rotterdam-based stores! - 100% Cotton, 220 gsm fabric weight - Pre washed for zero shrinkage - Regular fit - Unisex - Woven flag at waist - Made in Europe - Machine wash 30 degrees inside out, don't tumble dry
6 years after their first merch collab Rotterdam outfits WOEI and CLONE team up once again for their ‘’Always Connected’’ drop! Way back in ’95 when Serge operated his store inside the Urban Unit skate shop, Woei was one of the regulars buying records and practising his mixing skills for hours on the shop decks. Woei eventually became one of the main sneaker heads in The Netherlands and started supplying everyone with fresh kicks out of his WOEI shop (with iconic Piet Parra logo - one of the homies of the Fret Click Crew), while Clone Records became a source for all your musical needs! Don’t miss this team-up between these two Rotterdam-based stores! - 100% Cotton, 220 gsm fabric weight - Pre washed for zero shrinkage - Regular fit - Unisex - Woven flag at waist - Made in Europe - Machine wash 30 degrees inside out, don't tumble dry
Keep your CD player or Mixer clean and dust free when not in use with these official DMC Technics protective covers. These stylish, durable, fabric covers feature the Technics logo embroidered in gold, silver, or gun metal black thread.
Designed to fit various model CD Players and Mixers not just Technics.
Perfect at home, in the studio or in the club.
Classic Technics logo embroidered in black thread
Hard-wearing, durable fabric
Protects against dust and grime
Splash proof denier
Ideal for ugly or damaged plastic covers
Dimensions 18 x 14 x 6.75 inches (38.5 x 32.5 x 13.5 cm)
Official merchandise
The latest release on Jai Alai follows the format of forgotten vinyl tracks never before released on 7” format, or previously CD only album tracks, and will raise some eyebrows in artist selection and pairing.
Donaldson Toussaint L’Ouverture Byrd II was one of the most significant jazz artists of all time having joined Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers in the mid-50s and establishing himself as one of the best hard bop trumpeter/flugelhorn players. His progression was continuous through the 50s/60s working with John Coltrane, Gigi Gryce, Pepper Adams, Thelonius Monk, Sonny Rollins as sideman, and became one of Blue Note Records leading artists.
By the end of the 60s Byrd decided to move away from that idiom, experimenting with jazz fusion, African music and Rhythm & Blues. He worked hard to make jazz and its history part of the curriculum in US music colleges and he taught at many including Rutgers, Hampton, Howard, and Columbia, the latter from who he received his PhD in music.
Byrd took a great interest in how Miles Davis’ experimentation was resonating with a younger audience, and despite being castigated by his musical peers, his development of jazz fusion changed the jazz scene forever. His work with the Blackbyrds was a cornerstone for the progression of jazz funk in the UK.
The effect of his hook-up with brothers Larry & Fonce Mizell was immediate and his Blue Notes albums “Black Byrd” (1973), “Street Lady”, “Stepping Into Tomorrow” (1974), “Places & Spaces” (1975) and “Caricatures” (1976) became legendary on the newly evolving jazz funk scene with certain tracks such as “Change (Makes You Wanna Hustle)” normalising dance jazz on the disco floors, not to mention being a rich source for many hip-hop samples.
A slightly leaner period followed when he moved to Elektra Records and of the three albums with his new incarnation 125th Street NYC, a group of musicians he taught at North Carolina Central University, two were produced by Isaac Hayes including “Words”, “Sounds, Colors & Shapes” (1982) from which “Everyday”, a fabulous forgotten piece of mellow jazz funk derives.
By the end of the 80s he had returned to his harder straight-ahead jazz roots, but his place in history and the evolving of jazz as a dance culture in our clubs should never be forgotten.
repress !
Four years after Nuova Napoli, Nu Genea are back with Bar Mediterraneo, a new album and journey, which projects the sounds of the Neapolitan duo formed by Massimo Di Lena and Lucio Aquilina even further.
Nu Genea's Bar Mediterraneo is an idea of a shared place where people meet and fuse together; a space that leaves its doors open to travellers and their lives, always exposed to the whims of fate. Some of this can be experienced through the multitude of sounds that come together in the tracks, layers of different acoustic instruments, voices and synthesizers merging in a unique musical blend.
Opening up to the voices of many different people, separated by languages but united by the sea and the music, Nu Genea's hometown, Napoli, becomes a true place of encounter.
You can hear this all along. In "Gelbi", a gorgeously deep and propulsive Ney flute plunges into murky waters of the melancholic Tunisian dialect sung by Marzouk Mejri. In "Marechia'", unbridled happiness and sun ooze from the delicate vocals of Célia Kameni and create an acrobatic bridge between French and Neapolitan language. In "Straniero", your soul is arrested from the moment the slow spell-binding mandolin ignites the hypnotic patterns recorded by the legendary Afrobeat drummer Tony Allen. In "Bar Mediterraneo", the title track, bittersweet guitar’s riffs, analog waves and choirs are overwhelming the song giving you what you would like to hear on a boat trip along the Amalfi Coast.
Nu Genea couldn't afford to overlook their firmly anchored roots into the Neapolitan culture and its dialect with "Tienaté", where the power of neapolitan language (interpreted by Fabiana Martone) supports those quarter-tone strings and the uncessant folk-disco groove that spreads to the entire song. In "Praja Magia", repetitive mandolin riffs lead the song, giving space to a choral yet tight vocal line that speaks of Varcaturo, a village close to Napoli. In "Rire", a volley of poetic, deceptively laidback, lyrical fury interpreted by Sicilian Marco Castello intimately combines with a highly musical, multi-textured instrumental backbone and the swoon of a chanson in its heart. In "La Crisi'', the lyrics of a Raffaele Viviani’s poem from 1930 have been adapted to a laidback jazz-funk groove in full NG style. In "Vesuvio", revaluing the evocative verses and powerful mantra of Vesuvio, Nu Genea re-adapted to the dancefloor a folk song by the working-class band E’ Zezi from Pomigliano D'Arco, combining the voices of a school choir with Jupiter-6 arpeggios and bold percussions.
Bar Mediterraneo is the place where people constantly return to transform curiosity into participation, tradition into sharing, unfamiliar into familiar. When travellers come through its “doors”, carrying their treasures of words and emotions, they aren’t strangers any more. They take part in a shared experience, enriching themselves and others by leading to unexpected musical journeys.
Italian Progressive Trance Holy Grail!
“Fabula”, one of the most sought after dance rarities of the 90s, gets the reissue treatment via Ultimo Tango - romantic strings, quirky acid riffs, blissful pads, sharp kicks - a beautiful, timeless fantasy awaits!
Fabulous Soundtracks, the fourth studio album by reclusive Los Angeles musician Jack Name, is an homage to the IRL world and its twisted and varied romance with the worlds of our minds, in a wild collection of "soundtracks'', each a sonic re-construction dedicated to a distinct scene. Both musically and lyrically, this is Name's most adventurous and genre-defying album. Elements of acid, dance, folk, micro-tonal weirdness, horror, sensuality, impressionism, and bursts of rock fuse with Name's most direct yet ethereal lyric writing to date.
Each song with artful intention confuses dream-like experiences and common everyday situations, and vice-versa, sometimes inflicting a frightening energy into the banal, or this in reverse. Offering a "fabulous soundtrack" as the title implies, to dreamlike cinematic scenography including but not limited to; walking alone through a park at night, a woman tiptoeing through a garden, a person wrestling with time and change, lust, grieving a pet, driving alone in the rain, laying in bed with a lover, a bare tree standing in a field, looking through pieces of glass, and inviting the devil into the home (as one does).
X PROD presenta su primer vinilo bajo el sello X LABEL, cuatro de sus mejores cortes de los últimos meses que no necesitan presentación. Este proyecto mantiene en el anonimato la identidad del artista, ingeniero de mastering, diseñadores gráficos, productores ejecutivos, fábrica de prensado y todo el equipo del proyecto.
Breakbeat de primera calidad sin más calificativos…
Repress!
THE M.V.P.'s burst into life on the Northern Soul scene back in 1975 courtesy of Blackpool Mecca DJ Ian Levine and has long since divided opinion. Is it pop, is it soul, are they black, are they white, etc etc. Well, it's a rock record from 1971 and has nothing to do with soul... but everything to do with Northern Soul! It packed the floor at the Highland Room and was adopted as a Wigan Casino anthem and immortalized by Tony Palmer in his 1977 Granada TV documentary This England. It was reissued by UK Buddah, due to popular demand, driven in no small part by the TV show and its 20 million viewers. Now, some 40 years on, we present the iconic track, both stereo and mono mixes, as mastered at the time by Bell Sound's senior engineer Joe Breschie.
SALES POINTS:
All time Northern Soul Classics - Two fabulous sides
Massive appeal to ALL Northern Soul fans
As featured in the film Northern Soul
1994 was a year of fervent resistance against the encroaching Criminal Justice Act in the UK. Amidst the clamour of dissent, three historic demonstrations echoed through the streets of London, challenging the very fabric of authority and transforming the nature of peaceful protest, forever.
Through the lens of Matt Smith (Exist To Resist), witness the raw energy and unity of the protests that shook the capital. Each image in this zine is a testament to the power of the people, capturing not just moments frozen in time, but the spirit of a generation refusing to accept oppressive legislation.
Pages: 68
Size: A5 (21cm x 14.8cm)
Binding: Staple bound
Print: Black & white
Front cover design: Tom Booth Woodger
Interior design: Jez Tucke
- A1: Los Saicos– Demolición
- A2: Jean Paul 'El Troglodita'– Tema Del Troglodita
- A3: Gloria Travesí– Pobre Adan
- A4: Los Cuatro Brillantes– Vuelve A Mi Barquita
- A5: Claudio Fabbri– Fiesta De Verano
- A6: Los Saicos– Te Amo (Instrumental)
- A7: Golden Boys (11)– No Resisto Más
- B1: Los Peruvian Brass– Virgines Del Sol
- B2: Chano Scotty Y Su Combo Latino– Prende La Vela
- B3: Chano Scotty Y Su Combo Latino– Psicosis
- B4: Toño Y Sus Sicodelicos– Mr Boogaloo
- B5: Los Guajiros Del Ritmo– El Fresco
- B6: Alicia Estrada– Yolanda
- B7: Toño Y Sus Sicodelicos– El Guayacol
Disperú is the first independent record label in Peru and South America that was founded and run by a woman. In the space of five years Rebeca Llave turned not only Disperú into a successful company but also transformed it into an amplifier and showcase for unique Peruvian popular music projects including the raw, wild and visceral sound of Los Saicos, 60s punk pioneers. This compilation comprises 14 amazing tracks, ranging from cumbia or boogaloo to beat and garage, to celebrate the music legacy of this unique pioneer woman. Disperú was founded at a key moment for Peruvian popular music. In 1965 young Peruvians were gaining prominence in society and the entertainment industry. The hangover of the 'new wave', with its balladeers, persisted on the radio and television, but rock bands were also emerging, inspired by what was happening musically in Liverpool and on the beaches of California. Guided by her ability to spot talent and target what she perceived as commercial prospects, Rebeca signed up an impressive lineup of artists. Several of which would move on to bigger labels, after 'the girl with the charming smile' had set them on the recording road to fame. Besides gathering young rockers (Los Saicos, Jean Paul El Troglodita_) and new wave bands (Los 4 Brillantes, Golden Boys_) under its umbrella, Disperú also ventured into coastal and Andean music from Peru and tropical music (Chano Scotty y su Combo Latino, Toño y sus Sicodélicos_).
the debut release of naples based house music producer fabrizio fattore.
he released first single on world peace(run by joe clausell&gigi testa),it’s nice cosmic
jazzy fusion deep house.
since then we have been paying attention to his music.
our release is revival of classic detroit techno and house.
a1 “deep blue” is simply killer detroit techno which reminds us early 90’s stuff.
b1 “passengers to mars” is his trademark cosmic deep house.
b2 “moon temple” is jazzy new age down tempo.if you like some slow stuff of kuniyuki,
you will love it.
music sounds classic but we’re feeling classic is new.
hope you like!
- A1: Suffer For Fashion
- A2: Sink The Seine
- A3: Cato As A Pun
- A4: Heimdalsgate Like A Promethean Curse
- A5: Gronlandic Edit
- A6: A Sentence Of Sorts In Kongsvinger
- B1: The Past Is A Grotesque Animal
- B2: Bunny Ain't No Kind Of Rider
- C1: Faberge Falls For Shuggie
- C2: Labyrinthian Pomp
- C3: She's A Rejecter
- C4: We Were Born The Mutants Again With Leafling
- D1: Du Og Meg
- D2: Voltaic Crusher/Undrum To Muted Da
- D3: Derailments In A Place Of Our Own
- D4: No Conclusion
Reissue des 2007er Albums "Hissing Fauna, Are You The Destroyer?" auf rotem und gelbem Doppelvinyl, das Of Montreals Karriere prägte und weiterhin als Klassiker gehandelt wird. Pitchfork nannte das Album "unaufhörlich faszinierend und unerschöpflich wiederholbar", würdigte es mit der Auszeichnung "Best New Music" und platzierte es in den Top 5 Alben des Jahres 2007.
1981, the leaden years are over, the socialist left is in power in France and the first wave of punk seems a long way off. However, the youth of the day had not said its last word, and bands were springing up all over the place, free radio stations were opening up, fanzines were being published, concerts were being staged on the fly and little by little a scene was forming, a motley crew of kids in revolt, radical activists and just plain old folk passing through.
After having cut their teeth in a variety of more or less confidential bands, in which you'd come across a good number of players from this up-and-coming alternative scene, the members of Guernica moved up a gear, determined to blow on the still-glowing embers of rebel rock. With the shortage of venues the rule at the time, they began by scouring the suburban MJCs, putting on wild concerts and eventually meeting up with the squatters of the Couronnes commune and the members of V.I.S.A., with whom they played an active part in organising concerts in squatted buildings in these relegated areas of the capital.
In February 1983, the V.I.S.A. association and the Abattoir art collective (which included some members of Guernica) organised a concert at the Usine Pali-Kao. That evening, two groups took to the stage in succession: Guernica and a fledgling duo, Bérurier Noir. The evening will go down in the history of alternative rock as one of the key turning points of the period. After the departure of Loran, who played guitar with both bands, Fabrice Benoît joined Guernica on guitar, and the gang continued for a few more months, ending on a high note with a chaotic concert at the Eldorado in Paris.
Until now, it's been impossible to get your hands on any of the band's recordings unless you're lucky enough to own the Paris Mix compilation, the Guernica/Bérurier Noir split or the V.I.S.A. Usine Cascades 1982 cassette. This vinyl, a perfect record of the era, brings together the six tracks recorded by the band at the time.
London-based four-piece Adult Jazz announce their first full-length album in a decade, So Sorry So Slow, out 26 April 2024 via Spare Thought. Alongside the announcement comes lovesick new single ‘Suffer One’ featuring Owen Pallett, a cautious excavation of self and sexuality, clambering across a gorgeously shapeshifting, filmic five-minutes.
Containing some of the band’s most abrasive but gentle, beautiful and melismatic work to date, So Sorry So Slow has many defining characteristics: romance, panic, devotion and remorse, threaded together by an intentionally laser-focused love. It’s deeply personal, bruised and candid in its expressions of tenderness, and deeply pained in its concurrent reflections of ecological regret. Across its hour-long runtime, a delicate, frenetic energy and glacial heaviness coexist, the band pitting those paces against one another. In their richly experimental timbre, dancing strings and fluttering falsettos prang against a bed of brass drones like a wounded bird.
“We started writing in 2017 and began recording in 2018,” says vocalist Harry Burgess. “We genuinely thought it might be finished in 2018! But things kept developing and, having resolutely not struck while the iron was hot, there was no real external push to rush things after that, so we just kept letting things shift and unfold until it felt right. Listening back to my voice notes it’s nice to notice that there are fragments of ideas from the whole period 2017-2023 which have shaped the record.”
Recorded in bursts at studios across London and in the band members’ flats, at Konk, on the Isle of Wight and in Sussex, So Sorry is unambiguous in its evolution. Sonically, there are sparks of the arrhythmic brightness that afforded the band’s critically acclaimed debut album Gist Is its cult adoration, for fans of Arthur Russell and Meredith Monk, but with a blossoming, melancholic darkness often overhead. Piano sprees and luscious string sections appear like low-hanging stars on a night-time drive, whilst plunging vocal distortions and humming brass loops resurrect heavy limbs in a bad dream.
“I usually have objects as kind of totems for ideas,” explains Burgess. “The album initially started out to do with performance… the totem was a head mic, one of the subtle skin-tone ones, discreet on the forehead of a West End star. A number of the first songs in their original forms were almost musical theatre piano ballads. I think that was really a device to write about my life as the ‘main character’ (pre internet-speak reframing): regrets about romance, relationships - unsustainable relationships with the self and others.”
“However, once we started writing, the ideas about unsustainable personal relationships, loving unevenly and heartbreak conflated with a more expressly ecological regret. Like contending with big feelings of loss, endings, beauty, desolation, and with how much joy the earth contains in it. Feeling so much gratitude bound up in waves of sadness. Maybe witnessing a slow-motion goodbye to all that, or its last gasps. I love the earth and the life it supports so much. I love how ecosystems fit together - even the brutal stuff. It may be basic to say, but now is the time to be laser focused on that love. I was thinking about human centrality on earth, us as the ‘main character’, the way that is served by faith and romanticism, and the subsequent disingenuous understandings of our position in the ecosystem, as only stewards somehow, rather than subjects. The totems at this point: a herald’s horn, lorry inner tubes, archaeological tools. I guess from doom, industry, history respectively.”
“Now I would say the record is about gripping. Totems being: crampons, rope, drips, desalination equipment, accruing various survival tech. I think gripping sums up both of the threads. There’s the emotionally correct clinging to the earth that is the substrate of everything we value, or the delusional clinging to our imagined dominant position. But also the practical, technological aspects of creating a sustainable relationship, of remaining here. Then I think of romance again.”
So Sorry So Slow comes out 26th April 2024 on Spare Thought, mixed by Fabian Prynn at 4AD Studios and mastered by Alex Wharton at Abbey Road.
Adult Jazz is Harry Burgess, Tim Slater, Steven Wells and Tom Howe.




















