Lalalar is back with a new album on Les Disques Bongo Joe! After setting European stages on fire with the release of their first LP in 2022, the almighty Turkish band returns with En Kötü Iyi Olur, an album that reflects their image: edgy, independent, political, and tremendously effective. With their roots in Anatolian poetry and sounds, but their focus on a club-oriented, uncompromising rock, Lalalar has not given up and is once again ready to turn everything upside down.
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Following on from 2020"s debut album "Vodou Alé" and two EPs last year, the collaboration between Haitian seven-piece Chouk Bwa and Belgian production duo, The Ångströmers return with their second album "Somanti". Full of Afro-Caribbean voodoo polyrhythms and bass-weight dub electronics, the group count the likes of Gilles Peterson, Gideon Coe, Trevor Jackson, Worldwide FM as fans.
After the success of Cruise Control repress, Les Disques Bongo Joe are proud to announce the official reissue of Polymood, second album of L"Éclair and maybe their most renowned project for the moment. Recorded live in Amsterdam by the wizard Japser Gelük (Altin Gün, Allah Las, Jacco Gardner, this library-groove-oriented album goes deep into L"Éclair influences back in the days : Piero Piccioni, AIR, Sly Stone or Can.
- A1: African Dub - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- A2: Universal Dub - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- A3: Midnight Movie - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- A4: Getto Skank - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- A5: Lime Key Rock - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- A6: Lovers Serenade - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- B1: Treasure Dub - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- B2: Schooling The Beat - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- B3: Campus Rock - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- B4: Half Ounce - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- B5: Worrier - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
- B6: East Africa - Joe Gibbs And The Professionals
Wenn ihr Dub-Reggae der 70er Jahre liebt, dann ist diese Limitierte Yellow LP eine wichtige Ergänzung eurer Sammlung! Der Produzent Joe Gibbs war für die vier Mitte der 70er Jahre unter dem Titel African Dub All-Mighty veröffentlichten Scheiben verantwortlich, aber die Musiker waren in Wirklichkeit eine wechselnde Ansammlung von Mitgliedern der Bands Soul Syndicate, We the People und The Revolutionaries sowie das ergänzende Genie hinter dem Mischpult Errol Thompson.
- A1: Chapter Three - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- A2: Rema Dub - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- A3: Tribesman Rockers - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- A4: Freedom Call - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- A5: Jubilation Dub - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- B1: The Entebbe Affair - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- B2: Angolian Chant - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- B3: Zion Gate - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- B4: Jungle Dub - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- B5: Dub Three - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Crucial Attempt - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Behind Iron Bars - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Ghetto Slum - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Yard Music - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Iron Gate - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Power Pack - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Free The Children - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Fashion One - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Rhythm Tackle - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
- Sniper - Joe Gibbs & The Professionals
California's Joe Babylon has been steering his own Roundabout Sounds through some lovely deep house waters over the last few years. Now the producer makes a big statement with his own debut album. He is something of a veteran having co-founded Plug Research back in 1994 and hosted underground events in Los Angeles during the mid '90s. Following on from outings alongside the likes of Rick Wilhite and Rondenion he now brings his own dusty, carefully disheveled house sounds to the fore. They have been crafted using an MPC which gives them their rough-edged appeal and they go from heads down back room joints to dubbed-out minimalism via dream late-night reveries. It makes for a fresh take on a tried and tested house template.
'Higher Than High' ist eine gefühlvolle Disco-Nummer mit unerbittlichem Beat. Der Track wurde zusammen mit drei anderen Nummern um 1976 für den GRC aufgenommen. Die B-Seite ist eine Aufnahme von John Edwards. 'It's Got To Be The Real Thing For Me This Time' ist ein Uptempo-Song von Sam Dees.
The West Indian-born alto saxophonist Joe Harriott was one of the most convincing boppers outside of the USA, though by the end of the 1950s he was exploring freer musical pastures, and the quintet with which he undertook the exploration was an outgrowth of the hard bop band with which he'd made a name on the British scene.
Often in the past the group's music, in which trumpet and flugelhorn player Shake Keane figured alongside Harriott in the front line, has been compared with that of the early Ornette Coleman quartets, but here it's far more interactive, a fact borne out most obviously by the lack of soloists. Here on Free Form (1961) is where the rhythm of that indigenously West Indian form is extraordinarily maintained in the midst of characteristic group exchanges.
The recent find of four Joe Graham recordings in the GRC/Aware tapes has shown there was much more to Joe’s talents than the southern soul of his 60s Chant recordings and the synthesiser, electro pop he recorded for various Atlanta labels in the 80s. ‘Higher Than High’ is a soulful disco number featuring a relentless beat. The track already has a strong following, thanks to advance plays in Europe and the UK from DJ Dave Thorley. This track, along with three other numbers, were recorded around 1976 for the GRC stable – just as the company was floundering so badly that the songs were left as unmixed multi-track tapes. Now mixed the demand for this one will be high.
We’ve taken the opportunity of including another excellent, unreleased at the time, recording from the revered John Edwards. ‘It’s Got To Be The Real Thing For Me This Time’ is an uptempo Sam Dees song, unheard until the 1990s release of the first batch of GRC/Aware tapes
- A1: Joe 90 Main Titles
- A2: A Dream Come True
- A3: A Wolf In The Fox's Den
- A4: Air/Sea Rescue Colonel Mcclaine
- A5: Wagon Train Of Fear
- A6: Running The Gauntlet
- B1: Tragedy Aboard The U85/Porto Guava
- B2: A Song And Dance Of Death
- B3: The Tangled Web
- B4: Race Of Intelligence
- B5: Taking The Win
- C1: Fleming In The Fortress
- C2: Breakout And Pursuit
- C3: Nuclear Winter
- C4: Boy With A Suitcase
- C5: Church Rats
- C6: Divine Intervention
- D1: Agent Sladek
- D2: Sladek's Recital
- D3: Trapped In The Sky
- D4: The Alpine Clinic Waltz
- D5: Balloon Ride
- D6: The Mine Rescue
- D7: Joe 90 End Titles
First appearing on TV screens in September 1968, Joe 90 was a unique nine year old boy with the ability to absorb the brain patterns of top experts
enabling him to become the most special agent of W.I.N. (World Intelligence Network).
Whilst there are arguably better-known scores amongst Barry Gray's sublime catalogue of work with the Andersons, the composer's work for Joe 90 is in many ways
the most consistent and inventive selection he ever wrote. Developing a theme for the new series was always the musician's starting point, and for Joe 90, the pop charts breezed into Gray's studio,
with an opening tune featuring a genuine groove. Mixing Gray's inventive electronics with 60s "surf rock" guitars was an inspired decision.
It is no wonder that this piece has gone on to enjoy a second life as a Northern Soul disco floor-filler.
For episodic incidentals, Gray was freed from the detached unearthly premise of Captain Scarlet and able to bring back a playful sensibility
and a more mature musical palette which are amply illustrated in this 24 track collection.
Black Truffle is pleased to welcome free jazz legend Joe McPhee back to the fold with Oblique Strategies, a wild trio recorded in Antwerp in 2018 in the company of Mette Rasmussen’s fire-breathing alto saxophone and Dennis Tyfus’s post-Fluxus antics on tape, voice, and percussion. Rasmussen and Tyfus have previously recorded together as Bazuinschal, and some similar strategies are on display here: mysterious metallic scrapes, extended tones in which voice and sax become indistinguishable, comic explosions of varispeed tape. With McPhee on board, however, proceedings are more sumptuous, with the two horns moving fluidly from expeditions into the extremes of their instruments’ registers to pointillistic note-splatter and Ayler-esque folk melodies; we even get to bask in some of the slow-motion free blues that McPhee has now been playing for half a century. McPhee is heard primarily on tenor, Rasmussen mainly on alto, but with Rasmussen doubling on sundry objects, and the whole trio contributing vocals, certainty about who is doing what becomes nigh impossible.
The recording and production add to this hazy unclarity. Where much contemporary improvised music aims at dryly clinical hi-fi, the lively reverberant space of Oblique Strategies calls to mind the less-than-pristine sonics of classic free jazz artefacts like John Tchicai’s Afrodisiaca or McPhee’s own Underground Railroad. A further dimension of oblique unpredictability is added by subtle changes in the sense of space: at times merely a reverb tail glimpsed between phrases, at other points the whole mix seems to be momentarily swallowed up in slap-back, blurring the lines between acoustic instruments and the decayed fidelity of Tyfus’ tape playback. Spread across four pieces ranging from four to nineteen minutes in length, Oblique Strategies moves with anarchic swagger from explosions of clattering cymbals and bellowing horns to near-silent episodes of mysterious rumble and clunk. ‘Death or Dinner?’ opens the record with a lovely duet of climbing melodic patterns shared between the two saxophones, played with a buzzing oboe-like tone. A long, wavering note sung by Tyfus cues the first of countless changes of direction, eventually leading to a crescendo of watery splutters and duelling saxes. At points Tyfus’ keening resemble the signature moves of his friend and collaborator, Ghédelia Tazartès; at others, his tape-sped huffs and puffs possess a rawness reminiscent of Henri Chopin or Gil Wolman. The dialogue between wailing saxophones and vocal cries, punctuated by percussive thuds and crashes, can at times feel less like a musical performance and more like the calls of some mysterious forest creatures, possessing a primordial energy that might remind some listeners of the outdoor antics of Brötzmann and Bennink’s Schwarzwaldfahrt.
Oblique Strategies can also be delicate at times, as on the beautiful third piece, ‘Destilled Edible’, dominated by a slow, microtonal melody played with a breathy tone resembling a shakuhachi. The closing side-long ‘Light My Fire’ ranges across classic improv call and response, skittering trumpet blurts, inept cymbal clatter, mock-operatic vocals, and crude tape manoeuvres. Momentarily pausing at the ten-minute mark for an interlude of ghostly room sound and crackling texture, its closing moments unfurl a glorious dual saxophone finale, the almost epic tone subtly undermined by Tyfus quietly tapping out swing rhythms. Arriving in a striking sleeve adorned with Tyfus’ drawings, Oblique Strategies is an invigoratingly free-spirited blast of improvisation.
Downloads
- A1: Raz Olsher - Pacific Dreams
- A2: Los Pirañas - Puerta Del Sol
- A3: Lola's Dice - Sacudete
- A4: Guess What - Children's Favourite
- A5: Acid Coco - Seguimos Sonriendo
- A6: Juan Hundred - Always Ready To Smoke
- A7: Las Mijas - Ronca (Carta Para Una Mija)
- B1: Dip In The Dub - La Cumbia Del Sufi Que No Sabia Bailar
- B2: Chupameeldedo - Metalero
- B3: Guess What - Stickle Bricks
- B4: Candeleros - El Bravo
- B5: Iko Chérie - Lepidoptera
- B6: Ronald Snijders - Off The Groove
- B7: Raz Olsher - Vamonos Cocos
yellow LP[28,28 €]
- A1: Raz Olsher - Pacific Dreams
- A2: Los Pirañas - Puerta Del Sol
- A3: Lola's Dice - Sacudete
- A4: Guess What - Children's Favourite
- A5: Acid Coco - Seguimos Sonriendo
- A6: Juan Hundred - Always Ready To Smoke
- A7: Las Mijas - Ronca (Carta Para Una Mija)
- B1: Dip In The Dub - La Cumbia Del Sufi Que No Sabia Bailar
- B2: Chupameeldedo - Metalero
- B3: Guess What - Stickle Bricks
- B4: Candeleros - El Bravo
- B5: Iko Chérie - Lepidoptera
- B6: Ronald Snijders - Off The Groove
- B7: Raz Olsher - Vamonos Cocos
black LP[23,49 €]
- 01: Fantasia For Nausicaä
- 02: The Road To The Valley
- 03: Confessions In The Moonlight
- 04: The Lost Paradise
- 05: The Wind Forest
- 06: My Neighbor Totoro
- 01: Kiki’s Delivery Service
- 02: Starting The Job
- 03: Heartbroken Kiki
- 04: Porco E Bella
- 05: Madness
- 06: Ashitaka And San
- 01: Kodamas
- 02: Princess Mononoke
- 03: One Summer’s Day
- 04: Sootballs
- 05: The Sixth Station
- 06: Merry-Go-Round Of Life
- 01: Mother Sea
- 02: Ponyo On The Cliff By The Sea
- 03: A Journey (A Dream Of Flight)
- 04: Nahoko (An Unexpected Meeting
- 05: The Procession Of Celestial Beings
- 06: When I Remember This Life
“20 years ago, I dreamed a dream of creating a family of like-minded, crazy individuals from all corners of the planet. That dream was Crosstown Rebels. Over these years, I have forged beautiful friendships, discovered very talented artists and tried my best to help, advise and support some of the most colourful characters in dance music. It’s been 20 years of madness, magic and music. Now it’s been distilled into our own book to mark this milestone. I’m honestly surprised at how much I remembered!” - Damian Lazarus
For 20 years Crosstown Rebels has forged a path as one of the world’s leading electronic music labels.
Established in 2003, Damian Lazarus’ label manifesto has not changed. Discovering and nurturing new talent has always been the beating heart of the label, with a mission to soundtrack the future of the dancefloor and beyond. Introducing the world to the likes of Jamie Jones, Seth Troxler, Maceo Plex and Art Department was just the beginning. Today the roster is gloriously international, showcasing the truly global scene that Crosstown has shaped over the years.
Of course, there’s the parties too. The early Slash & Burn and Rebel Rave parties paved the way for Damian to create two of the world’s most cherished experiences, Get Lost and Day Zero, and in turn setting a benchmark for electronic music events worldwide.
Now the Crosstown Rebels story is told in a new 240 page book. 20 years of madness, magic and music. Starting right back before the beginning and taking us through to the present day, acclaimed electronic music writer Joe Muggs dives into the label’s history, interviewing Damian at length and revealing Crosstown’s story as never told before. The book brings together countless unseen photographs and artwork taken from the last two decades. It tells the story of how the dance underground battled and triumphed. This is a unique publication, not only for fans of Crosstown Rebels and Damian Lazarus, but also for anyone with an interest in independent label culture and the evolution of dance music over the last 20 years.
- Deluxe 240 page book
- Limited edition with only 400 copies on public sale
- De-bossed hardback cover, printed on FSC® certified papers, with alternating paper stocks, book ribbon and G.F. Smith endpapers
- Foreword by Pete Tong MBE
- Comprehensive label discography
- Printed in the UK by PurePrint, the first CarbonNeutral® printer in the world




















