[Audio] Fenech-Soler’s ‘Maiyu’

Fenech_Soler

One of the UK’s best ElectroPop/Indie-electro outfits, Fenech-Soler, return this week with plans to unleash their second album later in the year and a taste of what to expect. It’s been a rough year or so for these guys, but they are back, fighting fit, and gearing up for a sold-out tour before the album drops.

Following last October’s All I Know single, this new track, Maiyu, proves why Fenech-Soler never disappoint. Kicking off with a deep Housey bassline, the track slowly builds into a rapturous, glitzy, ElectroPop anthem. Taking it’s time to switch between it’s pulsating, dirty synth bass grove and huge euphoric keys, Maiyu, takes you along for the ride as it dips and builds. Assisted by Ben;s rousing vocals and  evocative lead lines the track build toward percussion fuelled finale that is sure to see this one as a live favourite.

♫ Fenech-Soler – Maiyu

Fenech-Soler’s new album is due out later this year.

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[Mixtape] Moonlight Matters’ ‘Vibes Mix’

Moonlight Matters

Moonlight Matters – Vibes Mix = Seba whips up a storming hour in his new mixtape. Expect some huge, current, synth sounds swinging from House to Disco and back again with one or two interesting asides, including a track forthcoming on his own Players label.

♫ Moonlight Matters – Vibes Mix

The tracklist:

01. Moonlight Matters – Memories of Blue
02. Black Sabbath – Planet Caravan (Poolside Rework Extended Intro.)
03. Straws – Nobody Else
04. Lana Del Rey – Ride (Photek reMix)
05. Jessie Ware – Night Light (Joe Goddard reMix)
06. Moonlight Matters – The Rock
07. Duke Dumont – The Giver
08. Clancy – How to Hold on
09. Two Door Cinema Club – Sun (Robert Delong reMix)
10. Oliver – Night Is On My Mind
11. Arcadis – Angel
12. Chris Malinchak – So Good To Me
13. Falcon Lake – All I Want
14. Black Strobe – The Girl From The Bayou (Dub Mix)

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[MP3] French Horn Rebellion’s ‘Girls’

French Horn Rebellion

Not content with leaving it at just Poster Girls, New York duo French Horn Rebellion, even the inclusionists are now releasing a tribute to all Girls. Helped along the way by JD Samson, from Le Tigre & MEN, and rapper Fat Tony, French Horn Rebellion pull out all the stops to get the party started right here.

The new single a fun, feel good, tune with a laid back, but heavy, vibe. Rocking a bassline you can’t help but move to. Punchy synth stabs rub shoulders with  fleeting strings and a rolling electric piano riff in a multi layer tune where French Horn rebellion’s vocals are complimented by Samson and a breakdown from Fat Tony. Summery  and infectious, Girls will undoubtedly put a smile on your face.

French Horn Rebellion (Feat. JD Samson And Fat Tony) – Girls

French Horn Rebellion’s Girls is released 5th March.

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[Interview] Sally Shapiro talk about their new album

 sally-shapiro_thumb1

Sally Shapiro first came into our lives way back in 2006. This duo, because Sally Shapiro is a duo, made up of ElectroPop producer extraordinaire Johan Agebjörn and an blissful unnamed singer whom we shall henceforth call Sally (to avoid (or create) confusion), have put out some of the most exciting, listenable, Italo-Disco tinged ElectroPop records in the last decade. Released today is album number three, Somewhere Else, that has already spawned the acclaimed singles What Can I Do? and Starman, the latter featuring a guest turn from Toronto’s Electric Youth.

The album is a thrilling excursion through poppy, dancefloor friendly electronic music with heart. Johan’s beats are always meticulously produced. Clean, shiny and pitch perfect whilst Sally’s sugar sweet, personal vocals tell tails in the most appealing way. This time around the pair have a little help with Anoraak, Le Prix and the aforementioned Electric Youth all doing turns on Somewhere Else.

Sally and Johan too some time out from their album release prep to chat with us about how this unlikely partnership hooked up and what the album holds:

ER: First off, how did you two get together?

S & J: We met in a youth environmental organization back in 2001 where we both worked at the office. But we actually didn’t discover our common interest in 80s disco until 2004!

ER: Did you both come to Sally Shapiro with the same influences, or do you each bring something different with you?

S & J: Johan is more the expert on various genres of electronic music. Sally has a good feel for what is a good and catchy pop song. She can’t really deliver a good vocal performance if she’s not into it. In the beginning, it felt like poppy 80s disco was the only thing that worked for both of us, but we think that we have broadened a bit since the start.

ER: I always feel that there is a 60s British Pop influence to Sally Shapiro songs, in a kind of Saint Etienne way. Is that the case or do you think there is just a 60s Pop influence in classic Swedish Pop in general?

S & J: We don’t think that the 60s are a conscious influence, but we listen to British pop like Saint Etienne and Belle & Sebastian for example. “What Can I Do” was very inspired by Belle & Sebastian.

ER: With so many good ElectroPop artists coming out of Sweden, and the music seeming to be the more dominant form of Pop there, do you think there is a reason for ElectroPop finding it’s spiritual home in Sweden?

S & J: We don’t know. When we grew up it was not like that, Sweden was a guitar country and far behind the UK when it came to appreciating electronic music. But Sweden was also early a very computerized country so maybe that’s a reason.

♫ Sally Shapiro – What Can I Do?

ER: Where does the name Sally Shapiro come from? Are we right in thinking Johan chose it? Is it named after anyone?

S & J: It was Johan’s suggestion to use a pseudonym in the tradition of Italo disco stars like Valerie Dore and Katy Gray. It’s not named after anyone, but we wanted a name that sounded English, with a surname that was not too common and not too uncommon. And then the first name should begin with the same letter as the surname, and it’s beautiful with names that end with a y, isn’t it?

ER: Sally’s said she has no interest in being a Pop star. When you originally wrote songs together was it with the intention of the public hearing them, or just for fun?

J: Well the goal was to make a track for fun and hopefully that someone wanted to release on a 12″ record. But we never thought it would reach out to more than the Italo disco fans and vinyl collectors to be found on various forums on the internet.

ER: Were you surprised with the reception Disco Romance received, and how fast it became a hyped record?

J: Yes, though it actually didn’t become hyped that quickly. At the very beginning, the distributor complained that it didn’t sell so well. Then Pitchfork rated it “best new music” and everything changed, it got re-released twice and licensed to different countries. But the whole process of re-releases and finally two remix albums based on the tracks took one and a half year.

ER: And now, three albums later. How would you say your sound has changed since the first record?

S & J: It’s a bit more varied, we’d say, but still grounded in 80s disco, which is  still the ultimate genre of music. But these days we take influences also from trance, euro dance, IDM, jazz, electronic funk, indie pop etc.

ER: Is there a theme that runs through Somewhere Else?

S: There’s a theme in all our music, we think, about melancholic longing and hope. Hoping that something will be better, maybe in a different place, somewhere else.

ER: How did the collaborations on the new album come about?

S & J: Johan released the album “Casablanca Nights” in 2001 with a lot of collaborations, so he’s got quite used to working with other producers and he likes it. He works with Le Prix a lot, sometimes they meet in Stockholm but mostly via the internet as we live in Lund in Southern Sweden. The collaboration with Anoraak was originally Anoraak’s idea and a different version of that track appeared on his album a few years ago, we’re really happy with the track and wanted to release this version too. The collaboration with Electric Youth was our idea as we really like them. Both those collaborations were carried out through the internet, we’ve never met them…but it would be nice! Apart from the collaborations mentioned here, there are also lyricists, co-writers (frequently Roger Gunnarsson) and guest musicians involved on the album.

ER: How does the writing and recording process work for Sally Shapiro? Is Johan allowed in when Sally’s recording now?

S & J: No, Johan is still not allowed in. Johan is the composer and producer, sometimes together with other songwriters and producers. When he has something almost finished he plays it to Sally and gets some feedback. We then write the lyrics together, and the vocals are almost always the last things that are recorded before finally mixing the track.

ER: Is there a favourite synth or bit of studio kit.

J: Not really, it shifts. Yamaha DX-7 wasn’t used before this album, it can sound really smooth. Earlier there were a lot of sounds from the Roland Juno-60 and Jupiter-4.

ER: If money was no object, what synth would you love to own?

J: Elka Synthex.

♫ Sally Shapiro – Lives Together (Johan Agebjörn Dub)

ER: Are there plans for Sally Shapiro beyond Somewhere Else?

S & J: Not which are official right now.

ER: Are Sally Shapiro more of a full cooked breakfast, or bowl of cereal kind of duo?

S & J: Bowl of cereal probably. Sally drinks coffee, Johan drinks tea.

Many thanks to Sally and Johan for speaking with us.

Sally Shapiro’s Somewhere Else is released today in the UK and tomorrow in the rest of the world. It comes highly recommended.

Tomorrow, Sally and Johan will be hosting on online release party where you can chat with them and ask them stuff we was too lazy to ask, details here.

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[Video] Ladytron’s ‘International Dateline’ (really!)

Yup, you read the headline right. It’s the video for Ladytron’s International Dateline, one of our favourite Ladytron tracks. Taken from 2005’s Witching Hour album (was it really so long ago?)

We’re not 100% sure on the story behind the clip, It was uploaded by Ladytron’s Daniel hunt (and confirmed on their official Facebook page) with the text “Shot in 2006. Previously unreleased.”. So there you go.

Ladytron’s Witching Hour is, well, out now.

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[MP3] Christa Vi remixed by Skitch

Christa Vi

London based singer/songwriter Christa Vi’s Your Heart is getting on in music years now. Originally brought to our attention way back on November 2011 and released n March last year it’s settled in as one of those songs that occasionally pops into your head for no reason other than it’s stored in your brains ‘unnervingly catchy’ bank. The tracks track was given a new lease of life yesterday with a brand new video and a brand new reMix. the video, a stop motion epic that makes our brains hurt when we think about making it, can be seen here, the remix can be heard below.

South London producer Skitch, who used to be one half of Blende, delivers a straight-up Disco jam. Like the first wave of French Touch, this tune is a heavily filtered groover. the high point of the reMix is the innovative use of the vocals, which sees Skitch cutting and pasting the lyrics to create new sentiments and a vocal hook that fits his pool party Disco perfectly.

Christa Vi – Your Heart (Skitch reMix)

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[Mixtape] Anoraak’s ‘Venice Mix’

Anoraak

Anoraak – Venice Mix = Here’s a brand new mixtape fro French Dreamwave originators Anoraak. there a whole heap of the best electronic music around in this fifty minuets, including a fresh new reMix from Anoraak of Trésors.

♫ Anoraak – Venice Mix

The tracklist:

01. Kamp! – Melt
02. Pyramid – Wolf (Crayon reMix)
03. p e a c e FIRE – Death By English
04. Acquarium – Wind Sails
05. Cut Copy – Zap Zap
06. French Horn Rebellion – Love Is Dangerous (Chrome Canyon reMix)
07. Forgotten Illusions – Crystal Contour
08. Montevideo – Horses (Zimmer reMix)
09. Lazy Kiss – 00’s (Auxiliary Tha Masterfader reMix)
10. Blackjoy – Moustache
11. Jupiter – Hoola Hoop (Vagenta reMix)
12. Trésors – Pleine Lune (Anoraak reMix)

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[Video] White Blush’s ‘Juice Of My Heart’

Here’s LA ElectroPop experimentalist White Blush new video for her tracks Juice Of My Heart.

Carol Rhyu herself directs the clip, which is pretty brutal, but I won;t spoil it for you, just watch.

White Blush’s self-titled début EP is out now.

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[Audio] New Arcades’ ‘Dreamers’

New Arcades

Dreamers is the latest addition to New Arcades soon to be released début EP. we’ve heard four tracks so far from this London based duo, the EP will apparently contain six tracks. That means there’s two more surprises coming, which we’ll be excited to hear. These guys are really carving out a name for themselves when it comes to big, emotional, SynthPop.

The new track, Dreamers, is an instrumental piece, but the absence of New Arcades passionate vocals doesn’t make it any less resonant. This duo really work their instruments to draw out every ounce of felling in their music. Pulsating Italo bass builds the tracks core leaving tons of headroom from sparkling melodies and promise filled drones to weave an uplifting, nostalgic, mood. Things are looking very good for this pairs forthoming release.

♫ New Arcades – Dreamers

New Arcades’ début EP is out soon.

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[Video] Computer Magic’s ‘A Million Years’ (+ ‘Another Science’)

Here’s the new video for the wonderful Computer Magic’s equally wonderful forthcoming new single, A Million Years. It’s an amazing slice of garage ElectroPop, and the video fits that ethos nicely.

Gorilla music video filmmaking at it’s finest, the clip is Lo-Fi and fun as hell.

While you’re here, check out one of the A Million Years EP. Another Science, a pulsating, delay fuelled Indie-ElectroPop track that sees Danielle working her Moog to it’s fullest

♫ Computer Magic – Another Science

You can pre-order the A Million Years 7” single from Computer Magic’s store, here.

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