drwex: (Default)
Here we go again. A couple of big names, a couple of new names, and lots of musical fusions you're unlikely to hear on genre-segregated radio.

http://audioporncentral.com/2012/04/seun-kuti-slave-masters-jacques-renault-remix.html
Now this is what we mean when we say an 'extended mix.' 8:48 of lush, gorgeous sound. Jacques Renault gives us his remix of Seun Kuti's "Slave Masters." This is equal parts African, vibe, jazz, and dance-electronica. The African vocals and drums meet up with some energetic jazz horns and dance rhythms with just a little bit of d'n'b thrown in for seasoning. Seun Anikulapo Kuti (http://www.facebook.com/seunkutiofficial) is the youngest son of Fela Kuti and if there is such a thing as music in the genes he seems to have it. Also (judging from the news articles I'm reading) he seems to have picked up some of his father's political activist sensibilities, too. It has to be hard to follow in footsteps that large, but this is good music in its own right.

http://rcrdlbl.com/artists/Chet-Faker/track/No-Diggity/
When I first heard Dre doing "No Diggity" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KL9mRus19o) some five years ago I assumed that it was a rap re-make of a traditional tune. It has the slow-drawl piano I associate with southern gospel tunes, and the do-wop male vocals of classic Motown. Now comes Australian "music for humans" maker Chet Faker (http://chetfaker.com/) with an excellent cover of the tune. Faker has heavy emphasis on the core sounds and the whole thing just slides smoothly over you. He's not trying to be Dre - he's got his own style and it's strong and sensual, giving us slow-dance material.

http://audioporncentral.com/2012/04/marbert-rocel-lets-take-off.html
Marbert Rocel (http://www.marbertrocel.com/) are an experimentalist quartet from the Netherlands. Their sound is part ambient, part jazz, part Euro new wave electronic, and part retro Andrew's Sisters-era smooth melodies. There are two tracks here and if you'd given them to me separately I'd be hard-pressed to identify them as being from the same musical source. That's not bad, just saying that Marbert Rocel have quite a variety of sounds on offer.

http://soundcloud.com/djimanos/dragonette-let-it-go
Dragonette's "Let It Go" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSL93KO2gnk) is another pop confection that's getting remixed, generally for the better. The original is pretty typical bop-electronic; the Faustix & Imanos remix linked above is like, "OK let's throw out all the kiddie pop stuff and put in some adult dance beats." It's got break and change-ups and although it's clearly a remix of a pop tune it's much more sophisticated than the original.

http://audioporncentral.com/2012/04/fun-we-are-young-party-ben-and-mykill-remix.html
I haven't heard anything from Party Ben in a while so this was a nice treat to get. it's his remix of Fun's "We Are Young". Unlike last time's Betatraxx remix this isn't so much about adding elements as it is mixing up and jazzing up what's in the original. It's got a little more of the electronica blippy-bloopy than I prefer, but it's still pretty good.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDku4-GEYZU
This one is a couple years old but it's fun to re-listen now and then and I figured I'd round out this set with it. This is nominally Elton John's "Rocketman" but redone by Inertia so as to be nearly unrecognizeable, except for the lyrics/vocal bits. The style is high-BPM electro-house and it's a fun and moving track even if it's many generations removed from its original. (h/t JJV for the original pointer)
drwex: (Default)
Yes, we got a meeting postponement and rather than do more political stuff I'm going to try to throw together a music post. I have a lot of stuff marked, and actually some things to say about them.

http://hypem.com/song/1h8tv
Hypem has started trying to get me to listen again. I got annoyed at their stupid mandatory login stuff and haven't visited the site for a while. Apparently this qualifies me for email enticements. This track, an extended club mix by Avicii & NERVO of "You're Gonna Love Again" is good working background stuff. It has several fun slow builds without being overwhelming once it's going full-bore. It's mostly vocal-trance but with heavy electronica influences. NERVO is the stage name for a pair of cute Swedish twins and Avicii is a local-to-them producer with whom they've teamed for this track. The collaboration works well, I think. Hope to see more from these guys this year.

http://audioporncentral.com/2012/01/jess-mills-silent-space-acoustic.html
Ah, Jess Mills. Could you get any more dark makeup on those eyes without going totally Cleopatra? Last year I kept hoping she'd do something stripped-down so I could really hear her voice without the overproduction that most of her tracks have and finally we get it. This is her "acoustic" studio version of "Silent Space". It's not what I'm used to calling acoustic - you've got synth effects and computer-generated beats in there, but at last it's toned way the hell down so she can sing. And Oh My God can this woman sing. Check out the transition around 1:08 in where her voice sounds like it jumps up two full octaves. I still think I can hear the producer's hand in how the notes are clipped, but at least she's fronting it, rather than being mixed into sappy strings or something.

http://audioporncentral.com/2012/01/buddy-holly-slippin-slidin-jacques-renault-remix.html
There are two basic ways to remix classics: with respect and without. Jacques Renault definitely falls into the former category as he remixes the Buddy Holly rockabilly classic "Slippin’ & Slidin’". Renault keeps the simple riffs and repeated vocals of the original, while weaving in a variety of modern electronic effects and instruments.

http://www.earmilk.com/2012/01/09/mashupmonday-week-46/
I think I have a new music blog to follow. Earmilk is an odd and interesting mix of commercial and anti-commercial remix culture stuff. This is one of their Mashup Monday entries with ten mashes for you to peruse. As with any collection there are winners and losers here. My preferences:

http://files2.earmilk.com/upload/mp3/2012-01/Filth%20In%20Paris.mp3
Basic Physics and 5 & A Dime (both new mixers to me) doing a fast-BPM megamix with several well-recognized entries. I rather like the way they chop-mix Skrillex and then dump the whole thing down to a single vocal track before going back into the mix again.

http://files2.earmilk.com/upload/mp3/2012-01/Relax%20Mode%20(Frankie%20Goes%20To%20Hollywood%20v%20Bingo%20Players).mp3
The White Panda (who I haven't heard from since 2010) doing a Frankie remix. It's a little bit standard techno-thumpy but I really like Frankie remixes, what can I say.

http://files2.earmilk.com/upload/mp3/2012-01/I%20Found%20Killmode%20Maximal%2076%20Right%20Here%20Right%20Now-%20AR3%203ootleg.mp3
AR3's mix is something of a demolition derby of at least five main tracks plus various samples but it hangs together pretty well and it's funfunkingroovin' which I badly need this week so it gets a special thumbs-up.

http://inahandbasket.livejournal.com/632389.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQThHZbCUJo&feature=related
[livejournal.com profile] inahandbasket posted this amazing set of links to performances of Leonard Cohen's classic "Hallelujah". The song has been done a million times - sometimes badly and sometimes someone captures what I think is the tragic beauty of the track. A good rendition of this can leave me weepy and it probably won't surprise anyone who reads my music posts regularly that the Imogen Heap cover is far and away my favorite, with the Regina Spektor second.

The second link is one of those things you stumble across following YouTube recommendations. It's Stromae and Klaas doing a techno-house French Hallelujah and though it's a many-generations-removed descendant of the original in another language it's still one of the best modern interpretations I could find. But in the end I agree with inahandbasket - go back and listen to Leonard himself again. Excuse me, I need a tissue.

Profile

drwex: (Default)
drwex

July 2021

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
1819 2021222324
25262728293031

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 30th, 2025 09:46 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios