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Let Them Eat Cake Double Pass Giveaway

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There's just over three weeks to go until Melbourne's best boutique festival Let Them Eat Cake returns to the stunning surrounds of Werribee Park to ring in 2014 in style with a lineup to satisfy even the most discerning electronic music lover.

Thanks to the good people at LTEC, we have a double pass to giveaway to one of our lucky readers. To be in the draw simply enter our competition below! The winner will be notified at 5pm on Friday December 13th. Good luck!

Let Them Eat Cake 2014 Lineup
Bicep
Cyril Hahn
Digital
DJ Koze
Dusky
EPROM
Estère
Floating Points
Hypnotech
James Holden
Julio Bashmore
Kode9
LTJ Bukem
Mark Pritchard
Soul Clap
TOKiMONSTA
Wolf + Lamb

Tickets on sale here.

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NYE VS NYD: Pulse Party Guide

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As 2013 rolls to a close, the time has come to choose your side. Will you see out the year on New Years Eve, or will you save yourself for one of the enormous New Years Day parties popping up all over the country?

Should you be a punter who refuses to feel even a flicker of FOMO and backs it all up across New Years Eve and New Years Day, Pulse have put together a list of the New Years Eve and New Years Day parties that will bid adieu to 2013 and welcome in 2014 with an appropriate level of flair.

NEW YEARS EVE

Shore Thing
Where: Bondi Beach, Sydney
Who: Skrillex, Jack Beats, Alvin Risk, What So Not
Why: Apparently Skrillex is bringing his spaceship down to Bondi Beach. What more can we say?

Lost and Found
Where: The ivy, Sydney 
Who:Danny Tenaglia (5 hour set), Bicep, Cyril Hahn, Will Saul
Why: Because five hours of Danny Tenaglia, that’s why.

Strange Fruit ft. James Holden
Where: The Abercrombie, Sydney 
Who:James Holden, Phil Smart, Trinity (live), Dave Stuart, U-Khan, Ben Ashton.
Why: If you like extended sets, world class techno acts plus some of this countries finest talent in house and techno, then even reading this sentence was time you could have spent getting yourself a ticket.

 

Origin NYE
Where: Ozone Reserve, Perth
Who: Wiz Khalifa, A$AP Rocky, Flux Pavilion, Kill The Noise, TC & Jakes, Juilo Bashmore, Dusky,Tokimonsta, Jacques Greene, Kode 9, Kito & Reija Lee, Floating Points, Shadow Child, Camo & Krooked, High Contrast, Danny Byrd, Metrik, Dynamite MC and Loadstar. 
Why: Fan of hip hop? No problems. Prefer house? Too easy. Drum ‘n’ Bass more your thing? Origin has pretty much got you covered if you’re in Perth this New Years Eve.

The House De Frost
Where: The Toff in Town, Melbourne
Who: Zanzibar Chanel, Andras Fox, Michael Ozone, Misty Nights, Andee Frost
Why: Looking for that something a little left of centre this New Years Eve? The House De Frost is the place for you.

Paradise NYE
Where: Overseas Passenger Terminal, Sydney
Who: Norman Jay, Aeroplane, Russ Dewbury
Why: Enjoy the scenery of Sydney Harbour to the soundtrack of legendary DJ Norman Jay. Sorted.


NEW YEARS DAY

 

Let Them Eat Cake
Where: Werribee Mansion, Melbourne
Who: Bicep, Cyril Hahn, Digital, DJ Koze, Dusky, Eprom, Estere, Floating Points, Hypnotech, James Holden, Julio Bashmore, Kode9, LTJ Bukem, Mark Pritchard, Soul Clap, Tokimonsta, Wolf & Lamb, AttackAttackAttack plus many more. 
Why: Let’s face it, it will more than likely be too damn hot to really get into the character of French monarch who espoused the eponymous phrase of this Melbourne based festival but that shouldn’t stop you from partying like royalty this new years day.



Lost Disco
Where: The ivy, Sydney
Who: Soul Clap, Wolf and Lamb, DJ Koze, Brohn, Gabby, Mia Lucci, Mergio (live), Co-Op,Cassette plus more.
Why: There is a pool handy should you need to rest your aching feet if you’ve backed it up from New Years Eve. And you won’t find the likes of Wolf & Lamb, Soul Clap and DJ Koze on the same line up in Sydney again in a hurry.


 

S.A.S.H
Where: The Abercrombie
Who: Secret special guest, Kris Wadsworth, Trus’ Me,Dexter Kane plus more.
Why: With Christmas just past, when are you going to enjoy being surprised like this again? (unless you have those friends that throw surprise parties for you… )

Spice Afloat
Where: The Bella Vista, Sydney Harbour
Who: Audiojack, Lovebirds, Murat Killic, Robbie Lowe, Softwar, Morgan, Mantra Collective DJ’s.
Why: Watching the sunrise on the first day of 2014 on Sydney Harbour? With the likes of Audiojack and Lovebirds? Why are we still convincing you?!

 

Animals Dancing
Where: People’s Markets Warehouse, West Melbourne
Who: Big Strick, Kyle Hall, Tom Of England, Chida, Cos/Mes, Lovefingers, Suzanne Craft, Jonny Nash, Andee Frost, Tornado Wallace, Willie Burns, Roland Tings plus more.
Why: Animals Dancing returns for another year of New Years Day revelry and if you were lucky enough to attend any of the previous years’ shindigs, you just know you’ll be in for a treat.

Field Day
Where: The Domain, Sydney
Who: Wiz Khalifa, A$AP Rocky, Flume, Solange, The Wombats, London Grammar, Ta-Ku, Hermitude, Chet Faker, Flight Facilities (Decade DJ Set), Flux Pavilion, What So Not, Juilo Bashmore, Crystal Fighters, Kill The Noise, Dusky, Shadow Child, Jacques Greene, Panama, Alison Wonderland (DJ Set), Elizabeth Rose, Wave Racer, Motez, Cosmo’s Midnight plus more.
Why: Take refuge on the lush greenery of the Domain should you still be feeling a little dusty from any NYE celebrations or launch yourself straight into a decidedly delightful line up…

Space Ibiza Sydney
Where: The Greenwood, Sydney
Who:Yousef, Audiojack, Crazy P Soundsystem, Javi Bora, DJ S.P.Y, Jonathan Ulysses, Mr. Doris plus more.
Why: If you’re keen for a little taste of the white isle this summer, look no further. Celebrating its fifth consecutive year, Space Ibiza Sydney continually brings the goods for punters ready to tackle 2014 head on.  

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Flume's Headphone Highlights Mixtape

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Aussie producer of the moment and multiple ARIA winner Flume has prepared a mixtape for Red Bull Music Academy Radio's new series, 'Headphone Highlights', where producers are invited to curate a mixtape of their influences and favourite tunes. Flume's selection is pretty much what you'd expect; a mix of on-point electronica, house and pop - much of it homegrown talent such as his Future Classic label mates Seekae, Touch Sensitive and Panama.

You can stream Flume's mixtape below. Enjoy!

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Tracklist
INTRO: Flume – Intro (Ft. Stalley) – Future Classic
Ultraísta – Smalltalk (Four Tet Remix) – Ghostly International
Lxury – J.A.W.S – Method Records
Seekae – Another – Future Classic
Lone – Airglow Fires – R&S Records
Clams Casino – Crystals – Self-Released
Flying Lotus – Zodiac Shit – Warp Records
Flume – Space Cadet (Ft. Ghostface Killah & Autre Ne Veut) – Future Classic
Toro Y Moi – Talamak – Carpark Records
EPROM – Hurricane – Rwina Records
Ryan Hemsworth – Against A Wall (Ft. Lofty305) – Last Gang Records
Disclosure – You & Me (Flume Remix) – Future Classic
Hayden James – Beginnings – Future Classic
What So Not – Touched – Sweat It Out!
Ben Khan – Eden – Self-Released
Flume – Intro (Ft. Stalley) – Future Classic
Panama – Always (Wave Racer Remix) – Future Classic

Listen to Flume on Pulse Radio

DMT Growing In Popularity Across America

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DMT, the active ingredient in ayahuasca, has 'a larger proportion of new users' compared to other powerful drugs, according to Adam Winstock, founder of the Global Drugs Survey. Films like the cult hit "Enter the Void" in 2009 and the 2010 documentary "DMT: The Spirit Molecule," likely play a role in the recent popularisation of the drug, with number of people claiming to have used used DMT at some point shooting up from an estimated 688,000 in 2006 to 1.47 million in 2012, according to a national survey. 

The drug is known to be a much stronger hallucinatory experience than other mainstream hallucinogenics, like ketamine, LSD and magic mushrooms, with users often experiencing a 'journey,' and when taken as part of a traditional Amazonian ritual, is often times performed under the supervision of a spiritual guide. Psychedelic tourism has also grown steadily in the last few years, with Western tourists heading to countries like Peru, Ecuador and Brazil to experience an ayahuasca journey.

Listen to Pulse Radio. 

The World’s Deadliest Drug: Inside a Krokodil Cookhouse

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Photographer Emanuele Satolli did what must have been incredibly heartwrenching for a year in Russia. She went out and spent a year chronicling a group of Russians addicted to krokodil, a lethal opiate made with ingredients from hardware stores and pharmacies that causes skin to become scaly, rot and fall off the bone. You’ve probably heard all about the drug before, but watching this video clip really drives the seriousness of this drug home. Watching someone having fully accepted that it's the end, is a bit heavy. Don’t do drugs kids! Or at the very least...don’t do krokodil.

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Listen: Soundcloud User's Deviously Funny Piss Take On Martin Garrix's 'Animals'

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While the joke couldn't be more spot on, the reason you recognise this track might not have anything to do with having ever heard Garrix's EDM hit before. Listen here.

Soundcloud user McMaNGOS's rip of Garrix's 'Animal's' had us rolling with laughter, matching the plucks, bass and overall generic nature of the Dutch DJ's recent hit on Spinnin' Records perfectly. See the original below.

The fact that it goes one step further with a children's rhyme melody is just icing on the cake. It reminds us of this amazing take on Beatport's Top Drops, once again from the musically comedic mind of McManGOS. 

Keep up the good work, McMaNGOS.

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Jaunt 6th Birthday Part 2: Dixon: In Review

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After the success of their first celebration at Basing House in London with Octave One, the guys at Jaunt decided that for their sixth birthday, one party just wasn’t enough. It was only fitting to bring home some of the birthday love and hold Part Two in the town where it all started six years ago - Newcastle. With six great years of bookings, stand out nights and a nomination for DJ Mag’s Club Night of the Year, along with a Best Small Club nomination for Cosmic Ballroom (which was recently fitted with the first VOID Tri-Motion soundsystem in the UK), this was truly a night of high expectations - and there’s no doubt they were well and truly met.

As the Jaunt residents did a great job of warming up, the whole club started to pack out, with everyone eagerly awaiting the arrival of German Innervisions’ artist, and recent RA number one DJ, Dixon. He hadn’t played in Newcastle in years, and after the huge success and praise the Innervisions imprint received this summer, the tension in the air wasn’t surprising.

 

Dixon truly captures the soul of melodic techno. His sets are crammed full of harmonious soft synths and undulating basslines, and this time was no exception. His set, pulsing through the space’s brand new sound system, was a journey of unadulterated sensualism as he locked into a serious groove with cuts like the Redshape remix of Martyn’s ‘We are You in the Future.’ He led each listener on a journey through the most cerebral of electronic music, with tracks like Jeremy Greenspan’s ‘God Told Me To,’ and a heavy nod to the nascent days of Berlin’s vibrant clubbing scene as he teased each track to its climax. When he played Ripperton’s vibrant re-rub of new one-to-watch producer Baikal’s ‘Why Don’t Ya,’ the atmosphere was electric: no chin-strokers here, the crowd passionately jumped and yelled in delight at the tune’s drop.

 

Dixon is indeed one of house and techno music’s most incendiary talents. Always uniquely dressed (this time in a jumper with a print that, to my delight looked a lot like snowflakes), he continuously showcases an effortless versatility that many artists yearn to perfect, but from him, we have come to expect. After being crowned 2013’s Number One DJ in RA’s poll just yesterday, both Jaunt and Cosmic Ballroom can be proud to have housed this musical juggernaut for his penultimate gig in the UK for 2013. It seems they were ahead of the game on this one, which is why both DJ Mag nominations did not come as a big shock.

 

Jaunt and Cosmic have carved out a vibrant niche within Newcastle for those passionate for everything house and techno, and it’s safe to say that, six years on, this is still just the beginning for them. Happy Birthday Jaunt!

Listen to Dixon on Pulse Radio.

The Blend with Shadowclub

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Slightly left-field from the regular content or artist’s that we regularly showcase here on Pulse Radio, on Tuesday’s we run a series called ‘The Blend’. It’s that time again, and for this edition we spotlight South African 3-piece Blues-Rock outfit 'Shadowclub' and their latest album release ‘Goodbye Wild Child’. 

Just Music, mogul label that Shadowclub are signed to, have their own LIVE sessions showcasing their acts. Watch ‘Vegas’ from the group when they played the Just Music Sessions at the Yamaha Theatre. 

The trio that make up what has been labelled by so many industry heads, and avid Rock supporters here in SA as “the best Rock outfit hailing from South Africa” are Isaac Klawansky (Drummer), Jacques Moolman (Vocals) and Louis Roux (Bass). The energy of these three guys when they are on stage is somewhat mesmerizing; watching them tie together their roles in the band really is something special to witness. 

Take a listen to ‘Goodbye Wild Child’ (Studio Album) compliments of Just Music’s Soundcloud page. 

So now, following their debut album ‘Guns & Money’, as mentioned before, the band’s latest work dubbed ‘Goodbye Wild Child’ can be pre-ordered from iTunes SA. Check this band out, chances are you have already, if so, keep enjoying the music! 

Meet the band in action...

And this is where you can catch them on tour...

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Nights In Transition: Just Jack

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Beginning back in 2007 like just about every other homegrown party does, humbly, Just Jack has grown into one of the most recognisable brands in UK house music. Throwing parties at hotspots like Bristol's Motion, with guests that run the gauntlet of who's who in house, including Subb-An, Seth Troxler, Jamie Jones, James Holden and Claude VonStroke, this Bristolian success story is as ripe a tale as any. However, a carnival this wild wasn't meant to be caged in. So recently, Bristol's own feast for the senses has picked itself up by it's hefty boot straps, and with a little help, showed a few other corners of the world just who Just Jack was, becoming a night in transition.

Along with Just Jack, nights like Flux, Trouble Vision and Real Nice have pushed their unique brands across the country and pond to locales like Croatia, Ibiza and more in recent years. But making the leap from brand new night to hometown hero to international success doesn’t come without a few bumps and scrapes, along with some wild tales, unforgettable nights, and lessons learned. So as part of a four part series, we asked each of these four fiestas a series of questions to get all the dirt on what it’s like to take the party out of the city and into the wild. So as part of a four part series, we asked each of these four fiestas a series of questions to get all the dirt on what it’s like to take the party out of the city and into the wild. If you missed part one with Flux, check it out here, otherwise, read on for part two with founder and resident DJ for Just Jack, Dan Wild.

What's been the most fun party you've done outside of your usual club? There have been some amazing parties over the years that stick with me. We used to run after parties in a grubby little pub called the Old Fox Inn (nicknamed the ‘crackfox’) after our Motion events. These were wild, although they became a victim of their own success. We had to stop doing them when it became so busy that one morning we couldn't even get in to DJ! Other notable parties from last summer were our party at Barbarellas for Garden festival in Croatia, and hosting the Space Terrace for We Love... Both venues were a dream come true for us. Amazing sound and vibe all night long!

What lessons did you learn early on? Bunting makes a bland ting fun ting.

Is there a particular DJ or promoter that you'd recommend always having with you? I’m a bit biased really, but I have to say it is an honour to work with Tom Rio. He is a phenomenal and very versatile DJ. He always knows just how to play it. He can warm it up just right for anyone and tear the roof off it at the end of the night. Plus he knows how to put up a bit of bunting!

How do you differ your sets when playing outside that in the club? I think being a resident at Just Jack has made me more adaptable. Warming up and following a diverse selection of house DJs means you have to be able to adapt your style and think on your feet. With regards to records which have worked really well at a specific time, a couple spring to mind from the closing set at our Just Jack party at Garden festival in Croatia last summer. I was playing in an open-air club and the sun had just risen. The place was still going nuts, and I opened with Joe Montana’s ‘The Ship.’  

That was a very special moment I wont forget in a while.

What's been the most outrageous thing you've seen? Oh god, I’ve definitely seen some sights over the years. A personal highlight from last summer was going backstage after our set at Space to find my friend soaking wet (for some reason he had just had a shower with all his clothes on), crouching on a table and leading a group of people in some sort of mystical chanting. I took one look, closed the door and left them too it.

What are some of the experiences that make it worth it? I have met some amazing people, and great friends through this line of work! Oh, and getting to play in some of the worlds best clubs isn’t too shabby!

And any experiences that don't? Nope! It’s definitely worth it!

Head to www.justjack.org and nightsintransition.com for more info.

Listen to Just Jack on Pulse Radio.

Steve Angello Announces BBC Radio 1 Residency

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On January 9th, Steve Angello will kick off his new BBC Radio 1 residency! He will be joining the likes of other residents including James Blake, Heidi, Rockwell, Nervo, George FitzGerald, T. Williams, and Branko.

The group of residents, including artists from all across the dance music spectrum, was just announced yesterday. BBC Radio 1 Editor Louise Kattenhorn explains, “BBC Radio 1 has a rich history of programming for dance music lovers and we are excited to maintain this legacy by launching our new resideny with an amazing lineup.”

Steve Angello’s monthly residency will see some of the biggest names in electronic music. He shares his excitement for the new gig: “Since I was a kid, BBC Radio 1 has been the most important asset of dance music to what it is today! I am pleased to announce that I’ll be joining the family and I’m looking forward to an amazing show with some of the greatest music of today, tomorrow, and the future!”

Listen to Swedish House Mafia on Pulse Radio

 

Andy C: Confidence of Expression

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Longterm fans of drum n’ bass heavyweight Andy C, arguably one of the genre’s most polished, powerful and consistent DJ veterans, received a different kind of surprise from his "Haunting" single this year. He might be enjoying, in his own words, some of “the most defining, amazing moments of my DJ career,” after more than 20 years in the game. However, "Haunting" definitely showcases a different side of his musical personality that has been percolating in recent years.

While the tune’s drop is a characteristic tearout slice of Dn'B savagery, the harmonic chords and arpeggio that inhabit the breakdown are emotive and euphoric enough to be lifted straight off a trance record. For a man known for his particularly brutal approach to his DJ sets, "Haunting" represents somewhat of a new creative direction. It’s an evolution that has also been showcased to full effect on his new Nightlife 6 mix. It’s been extended into a three-disc format for the first time, and importantly, he’s also taken the opportunity to stretch his legs creatively across the extended format; something evident on the second ‘Green Mix’ in particular. It’s brimming with more mellow moments, softer vocal cuts, as well as a fair swag of expertly timed euphoric breakdowns.

Andy C tells Pulse that it’s a reflection of how at this later stage of his career, he’s being granted the luxury of expressing his versatility more via the longer sets he’s playing; and it’s a creative side that we’ll likely see him indulging more in the future. Pulse finds out more…

How’s your DJ schedule at the moment? We have a RAM Records at fabric, then we’ll have the RAM Records Christmas party, and then we’re in Italy, Belgium, Switzerland and then Dubai. And then back for New Years, so it’s all on the go. Nightlife 6 is finally out now, so I’m going to be focusing on the DJing for the rest of the year.

I imagine a massive three-disc project like that would have taken a lot of work?  The project started to come together back in April and May. It’s a long process, and we kept it under wraps for a while. We’ve been doing the Nightlife series for ten years, and I wanted to get to the right point where it really felt like I wanted to do another one. And all of a sudden, I was so inundated by amazing tracks that I decided to turn the compilation into three mixes. And there was the usual absolute chaos in terms of the guys in the office getting the whole thing together, licensing all the tracks and so forth. It’s a really big job, so I’m really glad that it’s finished. And the response to it so far has been phenomenal, I couldn’t be happier. It’s nice to have something out there, something exciting to shout about, to spread the word of drum n’ bass.

Like you say, it’s not like you put out a Nightlife release annually. What were the factors that convinced you the time was right to do another one?  You’re always dictated by the music. I’m not going to do a Nightlife if there’s no good music out there. I kind of felt in April that I had enough in my bag then, and I knew what was coming later in the year in terms of other artist projects and stuff. So it felt like the right time, it felt like three years had gone by and there was a lot of tunes to express; and I also wanted to put a few old tunes on this one. And once you get that vibe for it, it takes over and becomes all-consuming. I basically spent the whole summer getting the tracklisting right.

The tracklist is pretty crazy. There’s over 80 singles packaged with the release? There’s 80 individual tracks bundled with the release, but the actual mix encompasses 110 tracks. We were licensing tracks right up until the last minute, and I was pretty much well past my deadline. But I was calling up the office and trying to get them to license new tracks in because, you know, I’m a DJ and I always want the latest and greatest. I would have done more, I would have done 210 tracks if I could have, but the powers that be stopped me. You do have to stop somewhere though. The irony was that as soon as I’d finished it, my inbox was inundated with brand new tunes. But that’s the beauty of it too.

But it really feels that drum n’ bass is on an upward curve. It’s been an incredibly positive year, with the festivals and the club shows. We’ve done our biggest ever RAM shows, RAM takeovers of festival stages, played to 8,000 people at Glastonbury, the American tours. I’ve been doing this for a long time, and I know that music is cyclical, but it really feels that Dn’B is on an upward path right now. I really wanted to cap the end of the year with a project where I could look back at 2013 and what a great year it was, and going into 2014 taking it higher hopefully.

Drum n’ bass probably is one of the most consistent genres across the whole of dance music, and it matured quite a while ago. In my experience in the scene, there’s been a lot of fads come and go very quickly, while drum n’ bass has been one of the constants. There’s something unique about the tone, the vibe, the energy. This year, not only has there been a new influx of people who are inspired by the music that comes around, but you’ve also had a resurgence of the people that may have gotten into it a few years ago, and drifted away for whatever reason, but then they’ve turned around and gone, ‘you know what, I actually really bloody like that.’ For me, looking out on the crowds, at the different festivals and the different countries I’ve been to, it’s been noticeably larger this year. So that’s my theory; you’ve got your old people coming back to it, and you’ve got your new people coming into it. And it’s all swelling together.

Doing a project as broad as Nightlife 6 would have been a great chance to showcase the versatility of drum n’ bass. I’d say this is one of the really defining characteristics of the genre, though not necessarily one that people would always associate with it. It’s massively versatile. The good thing about Nightlife 6 is although there’s three different mixes, and the link with my style of DJing across them, they’re each different in their nature. If you look further afield in our genre, there’s people doing all sorts of stuff. The most beautiful and epic stuff, to the mellow stuff, across to the hard-as-nails driller stuff, and everything in-between. There’s something in there that everybody can find to have an affinity with in drum n’ bass.

I’ve always known you as a DJ that’s really worked with that versatility, but at the same time, you’ve always brought a particularly hard, brutal energy to your performances, it’s something that has defined your approach as a DJ. Listening to the different mixes on Nightlife 6 though, you’ve really opened it up in the past few years to stuff with perhaps a little more melody and other similar elements. That’s particularly true with the ‘Green Mix.’ The simple fact of the matter is I’ve been doing a lot of longer sets. Like I’ve always said, I love every single part of our music. If I’m at home having a mix, I’ll mix in all of it. If I’m in the studio, I sometimes can be mixing for six hours own my own, just enjoying the music. So it’s a beautiful thing that in recent years I’ve been able to express myself in the club environment, where I’ve been able to play the longer sets and show people what else I’m about, because you can only do so much in one hour. Don’t get me wrong, you can really smash it out and have a party, but there’s not a lot of room for expression. Because of the way that I DJ, I might need a few tunes to get from one place to another, and I want to go on a journey, I don’t want to just play one tune out of the blue for no reason. There’s got to be a rhyme and a reason for why I get somewhere. But I’ve been doing a tour of four-hour sets for the past two months, and I’ve been doing the occasional six-hour set, and they really afford you the ability to express yourself more. So that’s why on Nightlife 6 I decided to showcase that side. On previous Nightlife releases, I’ve maybe had sections where I showcased that side in amongst a one-hour mix, but this time I wanted to use a whole mix to express that side. But then you’ve also got the ‘Blue Mix,’ which is very techy and hard as nails. That’s not me broadening my sound, it’s just a matter of me showing who I am in my heart.

Maybe now I’m afforded the opportunity to express that as I grow older, as the promoters are up for letting me play for longer. And maybe that is part of growing into DJing. You have more experienced, and the confidence to wander off for half an hour. When you’re younger, you’re not that confident to express yourself, to take half an hour to go super mellow, or to go super old school. I played a longer set last week, and I think I played tracks from ‘91 to ‘93 for 25 minutes. That’s really cool, and the crowd went with it because it was in the context of a longer set, and you have the confidence to go there because you know you can dive in, pull it back out and then come back on yourself. That’s a confidence of expression thing. You don’t have as much to prove in terms of playing the latest and greatest. When you’re starting out, you only want to play the most upfront, uncompromising drum n’ bass, because you feel you have to prove a point.

Your single "Haunting" is definitely a strong example of that. You could even say it has really strong elements of trance in there; and that’s coming from a trance fan. I’m really glad that people liked that tune, a big cross-section of people talked to me about it. And it’s because I do feel the emotion in music. I was on a drive to Barcelona between gigs late last year, and I just wrote it on my laptop then. They must have wondered what they hell I was up to, I had my headphones on and my eyes shut, blissing out on the music, chord progression and the arpeggio line. It was just really special, and it kind of hung around on my laptop for a while, and I was like, I really want to turn this into a tune. It drops with some pretty uncompromising Dn’B – but I like to think that it gets the emotions going. My favourite parts are the breakdowns and the intro, there’s just something special about it. I’m always working on new tunes, so hopefully that’s an avenue that I’ll explore further in the future.

The fact that you were breaking to a degree from what people expected from you, did you feel any apprehension at all? I did actually feel apprehension playing it the first few times. I was road-testing a few different versions to get it right, and like you say it does a bit of a trance element to, in the breakdown. But for me, there’s a natural apprehension that comes in playing any of my new stuff. When one of my artists on RAM Records sends me a demo, I’ve got no apprehension whatsoever to play it in a club. But when it’s your own music, for some reason, even though nobody knows what it is, you just assume the audience knows it’s yours [laughs]. But with Haunting, I was very happy with the final result. It grew throughout the year, and I was seeing the response more and more.

Listen to Andy C on Pulse Radio.

Abstraxion: Searching For New Sounds

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28 year-old French DJ/producer Harole Boué, better known as Abstraxion, is currently based in both London and Marseille in the south of France.  Following his well-received 'Moon' EP, he released his full-length album, 'Break of Lights,' last month on HAKT Recordings.  His work has been supported by the likes of Erol Alkan, Simian Mobile Disco, James Holden, and Dan Snaith.  In addition being a DJ and producer, he also co-manages his label, Biologic Records, along with DC Salas.  We had a chance to catch up with Abstraxion to discuss 'Break of Lights,' the music scene in Marseille, his label, some of his favorite equipment in his studio, and what else he has been working on.

 

You said that you wanted ‘Break of Lights’ to take listeners on a “timeless spaceship.” What was your creative process in achieving this? I tried to build a system in my studio that allows me to improvise with my analogs synths. I record most of the time in a live session, recording multiple instruments at the same time to keep the feeling that was in the room. When I have an idea, I start to compose and create the melody with a poly synth, and sometimes I compose with my guitar or just with my voice and few effects. Most of the time, I'm searching for new sounds and experimenting with my analog and modular synths giving me many possibilities, and I'm excited when I get something that sounds new or similar to what I had in my head when I started to compose. This process is what defines my music.

You are based in both London and Marseille. We know that the scene is really strong in London but how is it in the south of France? Yes, 2013 has been a busy year in Marseille as we're the European capital of culture so there are many things happening right now. I've built my studio there and electronic music is becoming more present in the south of France. Of course it's still small if you compare it with London but being in both cities is a chance that gives me many possibilities.

You co-manage Biologic Records with DC Salas. Are there any forthcoming releases that you’d like to highlight that we should keep our ears open for? Yes, we signed a new EP from Gameboyz and new artists Frenchfire & Re-Feel. DC Salas is also going to release his next EP.

You’ve had a busy summer/fall tour hitting lots of different cities including Barcelona, Berlin, Brussels, and more. What have been some of the highlights? What cities are on your bucket list that you haven’t been to yet but would love to play? Yes, playing at Barcelona was great this year during Sonar. Now that my live show is ready, I'm looking forward to play in London, Marseille, New York, a city that I love, and many more next year.

I would love to play next year in Tokyo, Seoul, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Mexico, and Auckland for the big names, and Örnsköldsvik and Tromsø for a Scandinavian tour!

Your bio says that your studio is full of old analogic instruments. What are some of your favorite or most unique instruments/pieces of equipment that you’ve used in producing your music? Yes, I have many old pieces that I used to produce the album or got recently. I really like my console that is a Neve Kelso and the first synths that I had and used a lot are a Moog Voyager and Alesis Andromeda. I also have a Sequential Circuits Prophet 600 and a Roland Juno 60, and I recently got a Doepfer A-100 modular system. I especially like Analogue Systems modules.

What else is on the horizon for Abstraxion? A lot of exciting things - I finished some music videos, the live A/V is ready to tour, and another single from the album, 'Around Me,' is being released with remixes from My Favorite Robot and Fairmont. I'm also going to get back to my studio where I'm looking forward to producing new music that will be in the continuity of my debut album.

Listen to Abstraxion on Pulse Radio

Possible Undercover Scousers Take On DJ Sneak

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After managing to incur the wrath of just about every house fan in Liverpool over the weekend, two convincing, albeit fake, Tiwtter accounts commenced to troll DJ Sneak as Ricardo Villalobos and Dixon. 

After publically slamming Yousef's Circus and its home city of Liverpool, DJ Sneak has been getting a fairly strong taste of his own firey brand of Twitter medicine, as Scoucers have aparently been sending Sneak several nasty messages letting him know what they think of images like the one he posted to his Twitter account, below.  

 

Coming to the defense of Yousef and Circus was one of dance music's finest, or so it seemed. 

Though anyone who knows a thing or two about Ricardo knows he's not exactly one for social media, which had Sneak blaming the ensuing Tweets on the satirical music website, Wunderground.ie.

 

Even a brand new Dixon account joined in going after Sneak. Though it doesn't seem this bit of Twitter trolling will do much to slow the King of Beef's beliefs. 

 Listen to Pulse Radio.

OVERWERK: "My Plan Is To Be The iPhone of This Industry"

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OVERWERK's technical skills and true attention to detail have set him apart from the vast amount of electro DJs and producers making and playing music these days.  Only in his early-20s, Edmond Huszar, who hails from London, Ontario, has issued a series of well-received EPs including his latest, 'Conquer,' which was released last month.  We sat down with OVERWERK to chat about his new EP, working with brands, his passion for film, design, and motion graphics, what he likes to do in his free time, and everything else he's been working on recently.

Your ‘Conquer’ EP was just released and it stays true to your unique brand of electro.  What was the process like producing these tracks? When I produce a track, I like it to start with an idea or concept. I don’t produce songs just for the sake of making them; I try to evoke an emotional response or tell a story. For example, my track "Force" - it starts with a simple bell melody but it’s dark and foreboding. The beat kicks in like a clap of thunder that leads you on a journey. The song takes you in different directions eventually becoming triumphant. Every person will imagine a different narrative, so when I make a song, I want to create the soundtrack to the listener’s imagination.

What was your motivation for the release? The last two years, I’ve released EPs around the end of the year. It’s a trend that seems to fit with my schedule and now with my fan’s expectations I want to put out more than just singles. My EPs don’t have a lot of tracks, but I feel I put enough detail into each song for the listener to spend more time with them.

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Your music has been featured in videos for GoPro, Red Bull, and more. How do these projects come about?  Do the brands reach out to you? Referencing my first answer, I think it’s the narrative feel of my music that appeals to these brands. These companies have a message to convey and a one-note club banger doesn’t stir up enough emotion. Having dealt with so many companies reaching out, my impression is that there is a lack of inspiring music in the scene. This need for music with actual mood and character drives companies to artists like me.

You stated in your interview with Remix Nation that, for you, DJing is more of a “prevalent hobby” instead of a “career choice” and that you are studying motion graphics and film and hope to start an ad agency one day.  Can you tell us a little more about that?  What’s the key in balancing your time? I’ll answer your last question first. I don’t think there is a main key to balancing time; it’s something that you learn how to do over time. You have to get to know yourself and push your limits to understand what you can handle. I try to take care of all the current affairs and squeeze in some personal development if there is time left in the day.

In terms of that interview, I was only one year into OVERWERK. A lot has changed since then. It’s true though, I never chose to be in the music business. Music was just one of my hobbies, and it ended up becoming my career; it was never what I envisioned for myself. Once I automate some processes that eat up a lot of my time as OVERWERK, I’ll have the ability to incorporate other artistic endeavours into the project.

You told fans earlier this year that you wanted to use film, design, and motion graphics to make OVERWERK “an experience beyond just audio.”  Can you tell us a little more about this? Well, like I was saying, I’ve always been into many art forms, not just music. Music definitely touches people in a very visceral way, but I have goals of combining audio with imagery and other types of mediums that become an experience more than just listening. Many artists do things like this already: stage productions, music videos, etc, but I feel there are very particular combinations that create game changing experiences. Phones existed before the iPhone, but after the iPhone, phones never looked the same. My plan is to be the iPhone of this industry.

What are some of your dream gigs? My satisfaction in a gig is in direct proportion to the experience my fans receive. My dream gig would be one where all my fans were able to attend and share in the experience.

How else do you spend your free time when you’re not DJing or producing? When I’m not DJing or producing, I try to push myself in other fields. I constantly try to learn different mediums and methods. Currently I’m learning a lot of 3D and motion graphics. I’m trying to expand my knowledge of film compositing and post production. Outside creative things, I try to enjoy life and spend time with friends and family.

What else is on your horizon? I’ve set the bar pretty high with OVERWERK. That isn’t my pseudonym for no reason. I will continue to work and push things forward. I want the OVERWERK experience to reach more than just the fans I have now. I know there are many people who would enjoy what I have to offer, so I will be satisfied once I’ve reached them all. Then it will just be a matter of meeting and exceeding their expectations… we’ll see how I deal with that.

Listen to OVERWERK on Pulse Radio

Cocoon with Popof & DJ W!ld, Butch & Oliver $ at Sankeys NYC

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Gear up for another crazy weekend at Sankeys NYC! Sven Väth’s legendary Cocoon label is bringing their signature party to the concrete jungle this Friday with Popof, DJ W!ld, Markus Fix, Taimur & Fahad, and Simon Wish. Head back on Saturday and catch Butch, Oliver $, Daniel Dubb, Russ Yallop, and Vanjee b2b Nadav.

Cocoon Recordings was founded in 2000 by Sven Väth and is home to countless influential artists, such as Adam Beyer, Reboot, Loco Dice, and Ricardo Villalobos. The label boasts chart-topping releases and their signature soiree is celebrated around the world.

Hailing from France, DJ/composer/arranger Popof cut his teeth on the rave party scene. He will be headlining the event with a set of his blended minimal and techno and will be supported by another fixed part of the Cocoon family, DJ W!ld. A CircoLoco resident, W!ld’s energetic sets of dark, sexy, acid house have shot him to another level in recent years. German legend, Markus Finx, will also be tearing things up with his impressive techno pedigree. These Cocoon all-stars will be supported by Taimur & Fahad of NYC’s infamous Blkmarket parties, which recently had an installment at Sankeys Ibiza. Additionally, Italian Simon Wish is opening this special night.

After surviving the Cocoon jungle, head back to Sankeys on Saturday for some more action. With more than 100 releases in 5 years, Butch’s monumental success is credited to his dedication and passion. Voted ‘Producer of the Year’ by GROOVE Magazine, he has played at some of the world’s most renowned clubs and festivals, such as Time Warp and Fabric London. He played with Carl Cox at Space Ibiza and has been a fixture at the VIVa Warriors party at Sankeys Ibiza. Butch will be supported by Berlin born and based producer, Oliver $. He has experienced growing success in recent years. His track, “Doin’ Ya Thang” was #1 on Beatport for 5 weeks in 2011. He has gained acknowledgement through a series of solid releases on labels such as Play It Down, Rekids, and Front Room Recordings.

Listen to Popof on Pulse Radio


Catch Fabrizio Maurizi and Butch at Treehouse

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After smashing last weekend with an insane roster of talent from Get Physical, Cityfox, Supplement Facts, and Flying Circus, Treehouse and our friends from LINK & Miami Rebels are ready to regroup and do it all again with Fabrizio Maurizi (Minus, Momento) on Thursday and Butch (Visionquest, Hot Creations, Cocoon, Desolat) on Friday.

Hailing from Italy, Fabrizio’s interest in electronic music spawned from his interest in the Detroit techno movement. His sets are an energetic and unique mix of dark and funky techno. IN 2007, he co-founded the Momento imprint with his friend Idriss D. One year later, he joined the legendary Minus label, where he began to produce and perform with the family. Fabrizio has played all over the world at clubs like Output, Fabric, Rex, Womb, and Cocoricò. Catch him at Primary in Illinois and in his home country at Cocoricò after his stint in Miami.

With more than 100 releases in 5 years, Butch’s monumental success can be attributed to his passion and dedication. He has produced releases for influential labels such as Sei es Drum (Ricardo Villalobos’ imprint), Cocoon, and Rekids. In 2009, he and his friend/studio partner, Amir, joined forces with Sebastian Lutz and Caio Duncan to form a new collective called bouq. The label serves as a platform for innovative music, quality promotion, fun events, and bookings. Most recently, Butch earned a coveted spot on Resident Advisor’s annual DJ poll, coming in 62nd out of 100. You can also catch Butch at Avalon in LA and Watergate in Berlin.

Listen to Fabrizio Maurizi on Pulse Radio

Free Download: Flying Lotus Gives Away Zip File of Unreleased Music

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Flying Lotus is feeling the holiday spirit! The Los Angeles based producer is giving away a collection of unreleased material including demos, beats, and other tunes as a thank you to fans. The file, titled “Ideas+drafs+loops,” contains unheard music featuring the likes of Shabazz Palaces, Thundercat, DJ Mehdi, Yeezus, and more. Download it here.

Listen to Flying Lotus on Pulse Radio

 

Derrick Carter Joins Sydney Mardi Gras Party 2014

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House legend Derrick Carter will be joining the already announced lineup of Kim Ann Foxman, up-and-coming Australian DJ Dan Slater, self-proclaimed sneaker freak and hip hop junkie Yo! M.A.F.I.A and more for the 2014 Mardi Gras Party at Sydney's Hordern Pavilion on March 1st.

"We are so excited to have such an amazing roster of Australian and international DJs for the 2014 Mardi Gras Party," says Mardi Gras Party Creative Consultant Gary Leeson. "Derrick Carter is one of the original house music innovators, and we can’t wait to see what’s in his record bag for his first ever Mardi Gras set.”

 

Also joining the roster is French DJ Leomeo who'll be mixing up tribal, progressive and tech grooves.

Tickets to the party are on sale now here. For more information about Mardi Gras’ jam-packed calendar of summer events, head to www.mardigras.org.au.

Listen to Derrick Carter on Pulse Radio

Matmos: Our 10 Favourite Film Soundtracks

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True confession: We don’t really believe in the validity of Top Ten lists because so many clickbait online “listicles” seem to exist simply to drive web traffic rather than to reflect on the nature of canon formation in a critically self-aware manner, but...we do really love listening to movie soundtracks, and since we were asked to come up with a top ten of movie soundtracks that we love, here are the ten that came to mind in the order in which we thought of them.



Cannibal Holocaust [1980]
The score to this horrifically violent and unpleasant film is a weirdly schizophrenic affair that seesaws between lush, treacly orchestral love themes, oddly perky funk workouts, and sour synthesized drones. It’s a kind of personality test for the listener to figure out which is creepier: the idea that the music for Cannibal Holocaust was somehow supposed to be funky or the idea that the music for Cannibal Holocaust was somehow supposed to be romantic. Any way you slice it (sorry), this is a rough, sick ride, and we love it. The real appeal is this particularly tasteless Linn drum snare noise which makes a kind of “Piaooowww” like laser stab sound; it’s used as a rhythmic tattoo across the entire soundtrack and once heard, it can never be forgotten.




Paris, Texas [1984]
In the early eighties Martin used to listen to this soundtrack over and over, and it triggered his interest in steelstring acoustic guitar. Deceptive simplicity that conceals deep mastery; we’ve heard other Ry Cooder albums but this is the only one that we come back to with regularity. It’s probably a cliché to invoke the “high lonesome sound”, but it does really go awfully well with the desolation of the emptier parts of the landscapes around Las Vegas and into Southern California, the blasted wasteland of America that takes over wherever the irrigation runs out.




Rosemary’s Baby
[1968]
Obviously, there are a lot of clichéd horror movie soundtracks that feature little children’s voices. Which only makes sense - children are scary! While we can forgive “Children of the Corn” because it’s so damn catchy, most uses of childlike vocals in horror soundtracks are banal at this point. But before this tactic got played out, there was a magic time when this record was made by our mainman Krzystof Komeda. (I don’t know if he was actually first to do this - that’s for people who reduce life to lists to figure out?) At any rate, what gives it its bewitching power is precisely its relentless, repetitive, kind of moronically simple “la la la la la la la la la la” little girl vocal run, a fluttering riff that just hammers into your brain. There are some love themes, and some darker moments of satanic muttering and psychedelic chanting, but it’s the didactic use of child-like voices that really hits hard here. An undersung masterpiece.




Cul De Sac [1966]
As with Rosemary’s Baby, so too here: Krystof Komeda’s soundtrack for Polanski’s film is pretty much perfect in every way, but it has one big problem: at 25 minutes or so, it’s way, way too short! Every fleeting minute from this little jewel of a soundtrack is appealing, and when you listen to Komeda’s blend of cool jazz and electronic stylings (dig that unforgettable wiggly vibrato organ tone!) you will find that it can elevate even the most mundane tasks of your day until you feel like you’re starring in some kind of flawlessly cool advertisement for skinny neckties or whiskey. But we need to find some bonus cuts to thicken this bad boy because there’s just not enough of the good stuff to go around.




A Man and a Woman [1966]
Drew’s never seen this film, but at this point he knows the Francis Lai score so well that he’s already imagined all sorts of possible narratives that might connect the dots between this suite of sultry sambas and breathy French confections (though that one stressed out number is kind of hard to make fit with the overall vibe of Olympics-level smooching that this record gives off). When he did a year abroad in the UK and bought a record player this was one of only five thrift store LPs that he used to play obsessively, over and over, in between drum and bass and house 12”s. Bonus points for having that hot pink cover and for using the font Peignot, rounding off an experience that is easy on the ears and the eyes. No home is complete without a copy of this album.




Casino Royale [1967]
Do we even need to explain why this soundtrack rules? Do you live under a rock? Are you unfamiliar with the names Burt Bacharach, Herb Alpert and Dusty Springfield? Hello? Is this thing on? Seriously, every cut is a masterclass and words like “swinging” and “catchy” barely do justice to the stone cold musical genius going on here. Do yourself a favor and get with the program, people.




Barbarella [1968]
Instant mood elevation in vinyl form. You can’t listen to the Bob Crewe generation sing the title theme and not sing along with every preposterous word. All together now, “Barbarella, psychedella / There's a kind of cockle shell about you . . “ but the fun doesn’t stop there, because when things get freaky in the evil city of Sogo and Anita Pallenberg starts huffing on the “essence of man”, out come some truly gnarly fuzz guitars, echo-plexed percussive gadgets and ridiculous arrangement ideas. Obviously we’re intensely biased as the name of our band comes from this film, but don’t just take it from us. Ask Duran Duran.




Heatstroke [1982]
New York city electro and hip hop pioneer Man Parrish also spent some quality time during the crossfade between the late 70s disco era and the early 80s rap attack making soundtracks for gay porn, and the world is a better place because of it. Once you’ve heard those genderless vocodered sex-robots chanting “Pocket full of quarters and I’m going to towwwwnnnn” you will be a believer, and you don’t need a thick carpet of chest hair or a dodgy leather clone jacket to get into this party. Good times are guaranteed with this one.




Nosferatu [1922]
Popol Vuh made so many great soundtrack albums for the films of Werner Herzog that picking just one is really hard and feels really mean but if we’re going to play this list game then we’ll just suck it up and select this astonishing slab of primo Teutonic romanticism. It’s lush and moody and secretive and thrilling and fucking scary, like drinking an intoxicatingly final glass of red wine in a Transylvanian castle at sunset as the wolf howls echo off the hillsides and your host’s dirty yellow fingernails start to look awfully long and sharp. The record makes most of the genre known as “dark ambient” seem like reductive, pointless crap.



In the Shadow of the Sun [1980]
Throbbing Gristle’s soundtrack to this blurry, beguiling collaged overlay of Derek Jarman’s Super-8 home movies is a gauzy and mysterious transmission from some alternate plane of consciousness. It’s hard to imagine a soundtrack which more intuitively expresses the images to which it is wedded; the blown-out, phased and heavily spaced tones and billowing waves of audio-murk from the un-Fab Four seem to translate Jarman’s hypnagogic reverie with uncanny intimacy. Drew is a huge Throbbing Gristle nerd and wrote a book about them, and while this is not our favorite TG Lp, it’s right up there with the very best of them. Put it on, turn on, and drop out.

[Matmos perform their release 'The Marriage of True Minds' at the City Recital Hall as part of Sydney Festival on January 15. Tickets here]

Listen to Matmos on Pulse Radio

Ben Pearce Debuts In Australia In February

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UK producer and DJ Ben Pearce will be traveling to Australia for the first time this February, taking in five dates across the east coast.

Most will be familiar with Pearce's house anthem 'What I Might Do' which was pretty much unavoidable last year if you stepped into a club, drank in a bar or listened to a deep house mix. A worldwide dancefloor bomb, the track garnered support from the likes of Jamie Jones, Heidi, Pete Tong and went platinum in Europe. More than just a one hit wonder, Pearce is also gaining momentum as a remixer, and a DJ; having played alongside the likes of Seth Troxler, Eats Everything and Theo Parrish.

2013 Australian Tour Dates
07.02.14 - New Guernica, Melbourne
08.02.14 - Beach Bar (Day), Wollongong
08.02.14 - Chinese Laundry (Night), Sydney
14.02.14 - Trinity, Canberra
15.02.14 - Bowler Bar, Brisbane

Listen to Ben Pearce on Pulse Radio

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