Showing posts with label Detroit Techno. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Techno. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

DSC this Sunday

So after one week hiatus Dalston Sunday Club is back. We decided to hold the show every other Sunday and this week shows that the added preparation equals more treats for you. So this Sunday 10/04/11 we will be streaming live right here with special guests Bi-Bop (ReviveHER/Cool In The Pool) and Elliott Mess (Naive Melody/ReviveHER).
Tune in to the stream 6:30PM GMT

Friday, 6 August 2010

Clubland August


The conceptualization of science fiction through techno is nothing new, especially not for Robert Hood. As far back as his first albums, Internal Empire and Minimal Nation, Hood has posited the existence of other worlds, alternate realities, supposed futures. His latest long player Omega continues this recurring theme, postulating a post-apocalyptic world of decay and decrepitude in which one man works to find a cure for a plague that has rendered any human survivors zombies.

Tuesday, 1 September 2009

Clubland September



With the sad passing of James Stinson of Drexciya some years ago, the dark aquatic electro sound of Detroit looked to be in decline, though in reality that has hardly been the case. Gerald Donald, the other member of the group has kept busy with Dopplereffekt, Der Zyklus, and recording most recently under the name Heinrich Mueller.

Friday, 26 September 2008

14 Tracks



It's a fast paced world out there. Too fast to nestle down to the computer night and day to forage for hidden delicacies of the musical variety, let alone group a bunch of them together in one silken, sonorous swag bag.
Good thing is, there's someone out there doing it for you.
14 Tracks is an affiliate of the mighty Boomkat on-line store out of Manchester. Those gorgeous little dance-wise goblins serve up weekly release sheets of the top end techno, dubstep, far out electronica and experimental whateverness. Most of it is on a dub tip, all of it quality.
Anyway back to 14 Tracks. Subscribe to this modern marvel of the new musical age and get a slippery electronic slice of mail inserted into your inbox on a weekly basis, updating you on the latest fourteen nuggets of sound gear assiduously assembled on whatever that weeks theme may be.
The best of dubstep, the most coveted covers, rootical radness, Kompakt's finest moments... the list goes on. A single track will run you 99p, the whole bunch you can net for a measly £6.86. As for the quality of the tracks selected, well just go to the site and find out.
Utterly ridonkulous!

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

DJ BONE



CLUBLAND

The term underground gets thrown about like kids toys these days, without meaning, for almost no reason. It has been a long time since dance music could be denoted underground and have that really mean that it was pushing against the trends, forging new ground, remaining true to itself without following a bigger trend. With a recent purchase I was reminded of one artist I truly consider to be underground; evidenced by his longevity (yet relative anonymity) as a DJ and producer, uncompromising ideals and do it yourself spirit.