[Audio] Kate Boy’s ‘The Way We Are’

 

kate-boy

The Way We Are is Stockholm ElectroPop outfit Kate Boy’s follow up to their critically acclaimed In Your Eyes and it’s accompanying Northern Lights EP. Seeing what the foursome would do next, after such a wave-making début, was something we were pretty eager for. And now we’ve found out, we’re a bit surprised, but pretty excited to hear more.

Surprised because The Way We Are which, whilst drawn a multitude of lazy comparisons to The Knife, is really Depeche Mode. Musically this track is a contemporary version of anything from Some Great Reward, maybe even with a bt of period Front 242 and Nitzer Ebb too. Amongst this 80s Industrial pounding singer Kate Akhurst growls her way through an impassioned performance. These influences aren’t too surprising considering old school Industrial still has a big audience in Scandinavia, and with The Way We Are Kate Boy deliver a haunting update to the sound. Or, you could just be tedious as hell and say it sounds like Deep Cuts-era The Knife, well done if you did!

♫ Kate Boy – The Way We Are

Kate Boy’s Northern Lights EP is out now.

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[Video] Neon Neon’s ‘Hammer & Sickle’

 

Neon Neon    Hammer   Sickle  on Vimeo

Hammer & Sickle is the forthcoming new single from Welsh ElectroPoppers Neon Neon, the second to be taken from their sophomore album Praxis Makes Perfect. Expect bouncy, introspective, catchy synth Indie vibes here.

Check out the video, a tribute to maverick Italian publisher Giagiacomo Feltrinelli, put together but the duo themselves.

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[Audio] Little Boots’ ‘Nocturnes’

 

Little Boots

Despite accusations of label interference and lack of direction, we loved Little Boots’ first album, Hands. We will admit though, when that album was finally released there did seem like a bit of a disconnect between the artist we had been watching grow for the previous couple of years and the one Hands presented. Whilst the songs on it were pretty amazing, and still are, there seemed to be a lack of the personality that shone though in her first few EPs. Still, the album is a favourite of ours, and Victoria herself is a shining beacon for ElectroPop in the UK (no disowning ElectroPop and recording a Folk second album for her!). Her sophomore record, Nocturnes, is out this week, and this one sounds like Little Boots. Every beat of the album oozes with personality. Difficult second album? Boots makes it look easy.

Some may have felt that the atmospheric, Kraftwerkian Motorway was an odd choice of a single, but as an album opener it’s indisputably perfect. As a single it felt moody and introspective, but as the first beats of Nocturnes it becomes a majestic call-to-arms, an electronic love letter between Victoria and the listener, an invite to the rest of the album. This is followed swiftly by Confusion, a track which lays down the Chicago House influenced law. Yet beneath the deep bassline and warehouse beats this really is the same Pop princess we came to love in 2008, and that’s the beauty of Nocturnes, it’s loaded with pitch perfect Pop songs that have been wrapped in a blanket of rich House grooves that compliment, not smother, the catchy songwriting Little Boots has always displayed. Co-production from DFA’s Tim Goldsworthy probably adds to this formula’s success, bringing his minimal sensibilities to balance Victoria’s big songs and passion for 90s House. Current single Broken Record is the pinnacle example of this. If there is a more prefect mix of infectious ElectroPop and cool-as-hell House, we’re yet to hear it. Most of Little Boots recent single are present and correct on Nocturnes. The aforementioned Motorway and Broken Record sit alongside the slightly older Every Night I Say A Prayer and Shake, all of which have trickled out, in a slightly low-key manner, in the past year or so but when you listen to them together in this context you really realise that a) Little Boots has produced some of the most exciting music in recent months and b) there was always a plan. The only omission of Nocturnes when it comes to the single is Headphones, which was perhaps considered too Poppy for this collection, but it is sorely missed. So, to the new tracks that appear here. Beat Beat is the closes we get to Little Boot’s DiscoPop of old, perhaps because (we think) this is the oldest song here. It’s upbeat mirrorball vibe is an island amidst the strobe light cool. Crescendo provides one of the records’ surprise highlights, a raw Pop track that comes layered with dramatic piano and impassioned vocals. Strangers and All For You both show a gentle, yet compelling, side to Little Boots House-Pop which ease you into the albums closer, Satellites. Closing the record on an immense high Satellites appears the pinnacle mixture of everything Little Boots from 2008 to the present. Big ElectroPop, House basslines, euphoric choruses, everything we love about Victoria Hesketh, and it’s on this track that her sweet, yet dramatic and resonant, vocals shine their brightest. To say Nocturnes has been eagerly awaited would be an understatement, and, thankfully, it has lived up to our expectations. Whist lacking some of the Pop sheen of Hands, this record takes us down dark alleyways of club cool delivering tracks to loose yourself in on the dancefloor, but with the same tracks gives you something you’ll come away humming. Definitely recommended.

♫ Little Boots – Every Night I Say A Prayer

♫ Little Boots – Broken Record

♫ Little Boots – Motorway

♫ Little Boots – Shake

Little Boots’ Nocturnes is released today.

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[MP3] Strangers reMixed by No Ceremony

 

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The forthcoming new single from London SynthPop trio Strangers, Something New, has been given a moody electronic workout by enigmatic Manchester based outfit No Ceremony. Something New is due for release later this month backed with another new track Never Enough on Strangers own label, Just Off Pop.

No Ceremony take thing deeper and darker with their haunting electronics. Like Minimal Synth, but with more groove, this reMix plays around with vintage drum machine sounds and space synths against brilliant chimes and running hi-hats. It’s like certain elements of the track were honed to pinpoint accuracy and weaved into a tapestry of Post-Punk, House and Experimental Electronics. A welcome addition to the single.

Strangers – Something New (No Ceremony reMix)

Strangers’ Something New is released 13th May on Just Off Pop.

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[Audio] Soft Metals’ ‘Tell Me’

 

Soft Metals

Tell Me is our first hint of LA SynthPop/Minimal Synth duo Soft Metals’ long awaited sophomore album. The new full length LP, titled Lenses, follows the bands acclaimed 2011 self titled record and is set to drop in June. Tell Me gives us just a little taste of what to expect from Lenses.

It’s a track that is severely whetting out appetites. Hypnotic bests, robotic apreggios, metallic chords, all tempered with Patricia’s gentle, haunting vocal. Delivering an almost classic Italo groove, with just a hint of the kind of cosmic vibe you’d expect from Sci-Fi Italo, the ice cold electronics work together to produce something that is far warmer than the sum of it’s parts suggest, far funkier too. By the time the big vintage keys kick-in you can;t help but be drawn back into Soft Metals world. It’s a welcome return that has us eagerly awaiting the album.

♫ Soft Metals – Tell Me

Soft Metals’ Lenses is due to be released 16th June via Captured Tracks.

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[Audio] Selebrities’ ‘Temporary Touch’

 

Selebrities

Here’s a lush bit of Shoegaze SynthPop to help soften the edges of the mid-week. Brooklyn four piece Selebrities have unleashed the first new track from their forthcoming second LP Lovely Things. To be released by those fine folks at Cascine, our first flavour of what’s to come is delivered in the form of the swirling Temporary Touch.

It’s a track that makes me feel seventeen again, as it wraps up the best in British early 90s Shoegaze in a bouncy electronic blanket. Temporary Touch slips along with Indie sensibilities and a pulsating synth bassline accompanied by a swathe of post-Chillwave soundscaping. But the hook here is the song, and Maria Usbeck introspective vocal, which have the ability to draw you right into Selebrities world and makes you feel like it’s 1993 again.

♫ Selebrities – Temporary Touch

Selebrities’ Lovely Things is set for release 25th June on Cascine.

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[Video] Goin’ Old School: Soul II Soul, Robert Palmer & Nine Ways To Win

 

Goin’ Old School isn’t a trip down music memory lane, it’s a mugging in the dark alleyway of nostalgia:

First up today it;s one of our favourite tracks from London’s Soul II Soul. The track that started it all, 1988’s Fairplay, featruing Rose Windross.

Here’s Robert Palmer’s synth driven Johnny And Mary from 1980.

And lastly some obscure British Pop from 1983 and Nine Ways To Win’s Close To You.

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[Video] Pet Shop Boys’ ‘Axis’

 

Pet Shop Boys   Axis   YouTube

This is Axis, the first single from SynthPop legends Pet Shop Boys long awaited new album Electric, and it;s insanely good. A modern-Moroder robo-Disco epic with a B-Boy breakdown. Produced by Stuart Price too.

Check the video, a retro future freak-out that is absolutely perfect for the track. A neon, dreamlike, playground that’s lasertastic.

Pet Shop Boy’s Electric is due out in June.

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[MP3] The Presets reMixed by Tomas Barfod

 

The Presets

Fall is the next single to be taken from Australian ElectroPop duo The Presets’ award winning (well, electronic rumors award, anyway) Pacifica album. The single, one of the bigger tunes on the album, comes equipped with a reMix package featuring the likes of Alan Braxe, SymbolOne, Hook ‘N’ Sling, Erick Rincon, Ta-Ku and this mix from, LA based, Danish producer Tomas Barfod.

Barfood cooks up a warm, enveloping, deep dance version of the tune. Folding in a slight House vibe and loads of big, progressive, sounds. Delivering a track that could work either as a hands-in-the-air sunrise tune or something more groovy and intimate, Barfood works a classic dancefloor sound and keeps the emotional content at the fore. While you’re here, check out Erick Rincon mix too, taking a different route, Rincon mashed the song to a jump-up beat and some tribal House electronics.

The Presets – Fall (Tomas Barfod reMix)

The Presets – Fall (Erick Rincon reMix)

The Presets’ Fall is out soon on Modular Recordings.

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[MP3] Wolf Saga covers Frank Ocean

 

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Canadian synth head Wolf Saga is definitely becoming a big blip on our radar. He caught out eye (or is that ear?) last month with his track Reign At Night, a rapturous synthesizer opus. In-between producing wondrous original tunes Wolf Saga has indulged his love of recording cover versions with this new tune, as he performs Frank Ocean’s Thinkin’ ‘Bout You.

Wolf Saga, once again, treats us to waves of rich synths tempered with an R&B flavour. There’s something about the sound pallet Wolf Saga uses, the tones of his sounds, that is just pleasing to the ear. On Thinkin’ ‘Bout You he uses them to the fullest, blending them with his understated voice to create something laid back and shimmering. Pure blissful vibes here.

Wolf Saga – Thinkin’ ‘Bout You (Frank Ocean Cover)

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