Today’s Track: Oneohtrix Point Never (feat. The Weeknd) – “No Nightmares”

The star of 2020’s Super Bowl half-time show makes a 180° point turn. New post time!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke and – like always – it’s time again for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, and that’s because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! A veteran of the Experimental Electronic music genre and a mainstay of the iconic Warp Records label since 2013, Oneohtrix Point Never – aka Daniel Lopatin – has been in the game for the long haul. Exploring the vivid styles of kitschy MIDI production and pushing the boundaries of sample-based music cliches, his ninth studio album, “Magic Oneohtrix Point Never”, was released last October, and it draws from the psychedelic aesthetics inspired by the Magic 106.7 radio station. It’s an ambitious project for the well-reviewed Brooklyn-based producer, who has worked with artists such as FKA Twigs, Anonhi and Ishmael Butler previously. One of his most frequent collaborators, however, is the “Man Of The Moment” in the media – The Weeknd. Joining the contributions of Arca and Caroline Polachek for the recent album, The Weeknd (aka Abel Tesfaye) and Lopatin’s history goes way back. Lopatin and Tesfaye have traded in the favours for numerous guest spots on each other’s records in the past, and Tesfaye also appeared in 2017’s “Uncut Gems”, a critically acclaimed film that Lopatin scored, and it became the highest-grossing film at the box office for it’s distributor, A24. Paired by a hallucinogenic video, check out “No Nightmares” below.

Lopatin’s latest long-player reached the best-of-year end lists from a breadth of reputable publications, and the cinematic-inspired video was also conceived by Tesfaye and the madcap producer as a trilogy of short clips – The “Midday Suite” – that are influenced by postmodern art and film, and if you hadn’t been sold on their friendship yet, it also turns out that Lopatin was also the musical director of The Weeknd’s huge performance at the Super Bowl Halftime Show, which millions turned in droves to watch on their TV sets just a short while ago. Paired by a fictional universe of CGI monkeys and trippy Avatar visuals of the two musicians, “No Nightmares” sits between the multiverse of retro and futuristic in it’s approach. Opening with highly processed vocals and a thick layer of slowly dissipating synths, the production feels oddly comforting. The gradually dropping drum beats and the thick reverb of the synths give off a soothing feel, which are accompanied by the gradual revealing of the backing vocals and the chirping bird sounds. The vocals are almost unintelligible in most cases, with lines like “I’ve been missing from my own dream” and “It’s what happens so close” feeling artificial and otherworldly. The most recurring line is “Wait, in time, no nightmares”, which glides softly below the unsullied, experimental percussion of the nifty synth work. The arrangement seems suitably animated, with robotic vocal harmonies and long vocal notes from Tesfaye, who also shares a co-production credit for Lopatin’s latest album. His performance is good here, with an intriguing blend of vocal tones that suit the methodical synths and the Psych-Pop feel of the overall package. As far as mainstream artists go, I quite like The Weeknd and I think he’s a good stage presence in the role of his fame. Through his collaborations with Lopatin, such as “No Nightmares”, I think it gives him the platform to show some credibility as a true artist. “No Nightmares” is a decent example of this, with a good synergy between the two artists, where either man doesn’t feel like they are outshining the other. When all is said and done, I dig this track. Not necessarily everyone would “get it” – but it’s a unique spin on the heavy synth sounds of the 80’s, and it feels well-suited for the mantra of Warp Records, and with growth through repeated listens, it could potentially join the essential suite of Lopatin in becoming another of his most innovative productions of electronic work within the past decade.

Whew – time for a breather! There’s another day promptly catered for, but I’ll be back tomorrow, to add yet another entry into our long-running “Scuzz Sundays” series of featured posts tomorrow, where I’ll be throwing you back to the stuff of the lost Scuzz TV channel yet again. Tomorrow’s artist is pretty difficult to guess because it was a fairly short-lived burst of fame for it’s Norweigan Rock quartet. However, they still managed to upsell 55,000 albums worldwide for their two LP releases after being formed out of the ashes of two former outfits: Explicit Lyrics and Squid. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Way Back Wednesdays: Orbital – “The Naked and The Dead”

On gut reaction, I’d rather be in the former situation than the latter. Let’s go Way Back!

Good Morning to you – my name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time again for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, because it is routinely my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! I’m pretty suprised that I’ve not covered any of Orbital’s work on the blog before, since the Kentish DJ brother duo of Phil & Paul Hartnoll are very much within my alley of 90’s electronic dance music releases. Yet, here we are – and it’s taken our weekly archive dig to get me there. A lost cut from the “Halycon” EP, which was released in the UK as the “Radiccio” EP here for us in the UK, and in Japan too, “The Naked And The Dead” is one of those deep dives Orbital tunes that time forgot, as is naturally the case with these projects. This EP barely managed to crack the Top 40 of the UK Singles Chart, but “Halycon” is still one of the better known tunes from the Hartnoll brothers, especially in the mainstream, and Orbital remains to be one of the most critically acclaimed groups from the 90’s peak of IDM and Acid Techno music. Known for their improvisational style in live DJ set performances, and the photographs of atomised Orbitals on their cover sleeves, Orbital took their name from the M25 orbital motorway of Greater London, which was central to the early rave scene in the South East during the early days of Acid House music. Let’s check out their deep dive below.

Orbital were mainly active between the very late-80’s and 2004, but they have reunited twice in the 2010’s since, with new albums each time to boot. According to the Hartnoll brothers, this old tune represents: “Consumer goods are tending to lose all use-value. Their nature is to be consumable at all costs”, elaborating on this,”Which is to say: Non-values or empty, fictitious, abstract values, you are no longer as old as you feel, or as new as you look, but as old as what you buy” in the original archives of the EP’s press notes. Touching on consumerist values and adapting lifestyles to fit social stereotypes as contextual themes, “The Naked and The Dead” gives me a somewhat dystopian vibe, because it’s simply one of the heavier releases that I’ve ever heard to come from the creative minds of the two Hartnoll brothers. Struck by an unrelenting Jungle influence, the drum beats sound tribal and the bassline hits a fast tempo. The vocals are a sample taken from Scott Walker’s version of the track “Next”, which, in turn, is a cover version of an old pop tune originally sung by Jacques Brel. The inspiration behind the “Halcyon” EP also revolved around Hartnoll’s mother’s addiction to the drug Triazolam for many years, which is obviously known as Halcion otherwise. This darker variation of tones, especially compared to past Orbital hits like “Chime” and “The Mobius”, feels reflective of that matter. The repeating hook is sporadically layered under a polished Drum sequence, while the Synths give off a viably more strobe lighting-like effect that was a good fit for late-night festival sets. While retaining it’s dance-oriented roots, the layering of the synths and the drums is quite merticulous, with the ethnological drum beats and the trickling Synth sequences replacing old Drill ‘N’ Bass production with the West African-influenced percussion. After the sweat dries, the track likes to keep itself afloat by repeating the opening sequences and incorporating the Scott Walker sample to add a slightly soulful quality. It would ware a bit thin by the end of the long 12 minute remix also found on the EP, but it works for the short version. It wouldn’t be classed as one of their greatest hits, but it’s worth a tad more recognition than it gets.

And… we’re back in the present! Join me tomorrow, where I’ll be contrasting these ancient throwbacks with some brand new music that I’ve recently discovered through the Bandcamp app. Join me again then – for an in-depth look at a single from the sophomore album to come from a Danish indie Post-Punk Revival band, who have just released the new LP on Fat Possum Records. Boasting a decade of experience, the 21-year-old frontman has previously been a part of his local indie rock band Cola Freaks, and has ran two indie music labels under his wing – Shordwood and 100 Records. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Avalon Emerson – “Rotting Hills”

Inspired by Richard Curtis & Hugh Grant… Oh wait, that’s Notting Hill. New post time.

Hello, and a Good Morning to you! I am Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time again for me to get typing up for your daily track on the blog, because, if you haven’t read the blog before, it’s routinely my day-to-day pleasure to get writing up about a different piece of music every day! A 32-year-old female software designer-turned-electronic music producer, Avalon Emerson has more or less done it all in her explorations of IDM, Techno and Post-Industrial music. She’s now based in Brooklyn, New York – but she’s also spent time in Berlin, where she was a regular at the Berghain nightclub. Emerson has also performed a full set at Coachella festival, and she has put out remixes for the likes of Robyn, Slowdive and Four Tet over the years. She broke out in 2016 with her single, “The Frontier”, which was ranked among Resident Advisor’s Top Ten Tracks Of The Decade that year. Also known for her series of DJ-Kicks mixes, Emerson’s latest formal release was the “043” EP which housed the single, “Rotting Hills”, which dropped on the AD 93 label in December, and it gained a spot on the A-list of BBC Radio 6Music. This projects followed a road trip that she took with her girlfriend from LA to New York last summer, where the two filmed videos that, as Pitchfork describes it, “blurs the line between the ecstatic and the anxious”. Let’s take a listen to it below.

Pre-existing fans of Emerson’s work may find that an earlier mix of “Rotting Hills” appeared on her latest “DJ-Kicks Mix” back in September, and in an interview with Dazed, Emerson explained the inspiration behind the moods and tones of the track as “a study in contrasts, both tonally and emotionally. Mixing feelings of hopelessness, while also trying to enjoy what we have now in the present”, which she further elaborated on in the EP’s press notes. We’re going to move swiftly forwards, however, and we’re going to think about the reflective nature and the child-like qualities of the electronic beds. Starting off with an element of Afrobeat with a joyous Conga beat, the Synths soon come rumbling in and creating a luscious effect with the shimmering synth patterns that end up flickering on and off. A two-step disco beat is briefly noticeable, while the bright 80’s sounds manage to create a very retro and nostalgic emotion when the synths break to reveal an upbeat bassline. The drums veer away from the comforting feel of the synths and contrast the uplifting qualities with some classic Drill ‘N’ Bass production, adding a more aggressive silver lining to the theme. We continue to build to a clean breakdown, where the tempo of the synths increase and the ferocity of the drums remain, and we reach the conclusion of the trickling synth lines introducing the more old-fashioned sound to the fray once again. It’s reminding me of the vintage Warp Records stylings of the 90’s IDM era, with old-school ambient textures and child-like samples heading into the picture, while the slow-building ambient influences of producers like Photay and In Love With A Ghost give it a forward-thinking coat of paint. It is mostly 80’s and retro however, with global influences like Peggy Gou also drawing my mind. I may be biased as this type of music typically really is right down my street, but it’s another lack of disappointment for me. The influences never lose my attention, and the balancing of throwback and experimentation is smooth. It is another solid performance from a talented producer.

There’s my daily challenge fulfilled for another day. However, it won’t be long until the clock ticks and I’m here again. It’s not just any old post tomorrow, though, because we’ve got our weekly “Way Back Wednesdays” pick to look forward to. We’re going to be taking an in-depth look at what could be, perhaps, one of the lesser-known mixes from one of the most prolific electronic dance music acts to emerge from the 1990’s. I’m suprised that I haven’t actually covered this Kent-ish DJ brother duo on my little website before, with the cover art of three of their albums famously showcasing stylised atomic Orbitals. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Way Back Wednesdays: Visage – “Fade To Grey”

A melancholic classic from a band who you could say were… Strange. New post time!

Good Morning to you – My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for a brand new installment of our weekly Way Back Wednesdays feature, where we recover a gem that holds up today, yet pre-dated the 2000’s. This is just the second edition of the feature, and so if you could give me a like and a follow, I would really appreciate it – because it’s my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! “Fade To Grey” was released way back in 1980 by the English Synthpop act Visage, via Polydor Records, and it’s still one of the few Non-Pet Shop Boys or Non-Erasure 80’s Synth-Dance tracks to have really survived in the mainstream public’s conscience since that era of futuristic Pop and Kraftwerk-inspired Electronica. Although it failed to make too much of an impression the first time around, it became much more popular when it was re-released in 1991, a time which saw it reach #8 on the UK Singles Chart. As well as making a huge impact for the group in the 80’s LGBT culture, it saw extended success on the European club circuit, reaching #1 in Germany and Switzerland. Steve Strange was the lead vocalist, who kept the act going until 2015, where he tragically passed away from a heart attack. Looking upwards, Visage were significant to the blossoming New Romantic fashion movement, which I wish that I was born to see, during the 1980’s. On “Fade To Black”, Strange wrote the lyrics, while the French vocal sections were written and composed by Rusty Egan’s Belgian love interest – Brigitte Arens. You could still check out the original music video below.

“Fade To Grey” was certified as Silver in UK sales in 1981, and the music video was particularly significant for another key reason, in that it was one of the first music videos to be directed by the team of Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who went on to direct very famous videos for The Police, Duran Duran, Herbie Hancock, Ultravox, Yes, and several others of 80’s fame in popular culture. It starts off as soft and gentle, before a sweeping Synth line and French backing vocals set the scene. Strange croons: “One man on a lonely platform, One case sitting by his side, Two eyes staring cold and silent, Shows fear as he turns to hide” on top of off-kilter keyboard keys, and the repeating Synth groove. The electronic beats feel flat in a sense, heavily inspired by the technological views of Kraftwerk and David Bowie as a potentially tyrannical force. The lyrics of the refrain, where Strange sings: “We fade to grey”, create a fairly uneasy atmosphere, whilst the verses play on introversion and Gothic themes. The mood is enigmatic and hostile, yet it’s sold with the calm tones of it’s cinematic quality. The synth instrumentation is cerebral, yet melodic enough for the Post-Disco sounds and the industrial pop elements to create a danceable atmosphere. Although I can’t understand the French vocal interludes because I’m a roast beef dinner, as the Frenchfolk may say, they add a suited sophistication to the methodical, artsy style. Pretentious in the best way, I still feel that the track manages to sound contemporary and futuristic. The Synth riff is iconic, and the detailed production goes a long step in the way of exuding an atmosphere to fill a dim-lit dancefloor with mascara-running teens. Yet, it’s exotic. For a minute, it feels like the gloom of the AI-age future to come.

That’s all for today! I’ll be back again tomorrow, and wouldn’t you know it, I have finally got some brand new music to share with you. Tomorrow’s track comes from a Hertfordshire-based English indie folk trio of three sisters who began their musical journey by performing together at open mic nights in Watford hosted by their local pub, and they were scheduled to perform a live set at Glastonbury festival last year before, well, you know what, to mark the end of a four-year hiatus. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Tycho – “Outer Sunset”

Better keep my grammar in check on this one. Nobody wants a ‘Typo’. New Post time!

Good Morning to you – my name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to – once again – fulfill my daily duties of typing up your daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write to you about a different piece of music every day! A little bit like Boards Of Canada, Tycho is an ambient electronic music producer (currently based in San Francisco) who loves to blend multiple aspects of media tools within his disposal to fully realize vital themes of Nature and Environment within his compositions. From taking samples of weather broadcasts and pre-recorded dialogue, Scott Hansen usually creates a luscious set of rural soundscapes to allow his elements of downtempo guitar and analogue production to breathe. In fact, you may also know his work already – as the graphic designer ISO50. “Outer Sunset” was the lead single from his most recent album, “Simulcast”, which was released back in last February as a co-distribution between Ninja Tune and Mom + Pop Records. This work is connected to “Weather”, Hansen’s previous LP record, of which Hansen has removed the vocal sections, and Hansen had decided to expand upon the ambient instrumentation instead. It’s a very timely record to hear during Lockdown – a time where one of the few positives has been the re-positioning of nature and birdsong as one of the world’s beauties outside of our windows – and it sadly fell under my radar a bit beforehand. That’s about to change. Let’s have a listen to “Outer Sunset” below.

Many critics have attributed that “Simulcast” finds Hansen strip down his futuristic technology for a dip back into the dreamy, lo-fi electronica that originally bought him to the dance. Hansen said of the LP: “A Simulcast is the transmission of a program across two different mediums and two different languages”, expanding with, “With these two albums, I wanted to present the same ideas in two languages, one more literal, and the other more open to interpretation”, before explaining, “Simulcast expands on the concepts laid out in ‘Weather’, but shifts into the abstract, with instrumental soundscapes in place of lyrics, opening up a visual space and translating the message into a new language”, in his press notes. “Outer Sunset” fuses hazy guitar lines with a chilled-out electronic synth loop, although I feel the melodies are beat-driven enough to sustain an indie, ‘pop’ flair. The beats aren’t entirely off-kilter, but they feel serene and simple. There is a palpable sense of stillness about it, with some sun-licked guitar tones to add a fair rumble of bass, and a merticulously layered sequence of shuffle beats that are carefully plucked beneath them, to an almost DJ Shadow-ish degree of subtle Hip-Hop breakbeat influences. The melodies present a feeling of coming-of-age and nostalgia to me, and this leaves me cutting off from the outside world for a few minutes and delving into my own thoughts for a little while, this showing a visual effect of the mellow Indietronica stylings. These elements of Synthwave, modern Chillout and 10’s Vaporwave are upbeat enough to carry the airy Pop beats all of the way through, although the tone is still fairly laidback, and the chord progression remains simple. It shapes up to be perfect “In The Bathtub” music.

Thank you for checking out today’s post – It was better late than never, eh? It’s already going to be time for a new entry in our Scuzz Sundays series tomorrow, and we’re going to be making up for the lack of notable new releases with a “big name” post from the past instead. It’s a less obvious pick from the band in question though, even if it is that legendary Grunge trio who used to feature now-Foo Fighter Dave Grohl in the drumming seat amongst the famous line-up. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Bent – “Friends”

The Sample-Delia duo who see nothing wrong with bending the rules! New Post time!

Top ‘O’ The Morning to you – I’m Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to fulfill my duties of typing up about your daily track on the blog, because it is routinely my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! As we see out the last year and enter the new one, it’s nice to look back at some of 2020’s lower-key releases that you might have missed. Unfortunately, Bent’s “Friends” falls under that category, and I don’t mean it lightly – because this one has really grown on me. Bent are the Nottingham-based Sample-Delia duo of Neil Tolliday and Simon Mills, who released “Up In The Air” last November, which marks their first LP release in 14 years – since 2006’s “Intercept”. When I first discovered “Friends”, I sadly did not know very much about the duo, because when you type up “Bent friends” into a Google search, it obviously came up with some questionable results. However, I have now learned that Bent were pioneers of the Chillout music genre, and I have also learned they are very influential to Electronica, and gained critical praise from major publications like NME, The Quietus and Mixmag. Their music has frequently been used in advertising, and they would sell copies of their records in the hundreds of thousands. Collectively, Bent have also become known for their sense of humor, which displays quirky ‘crate-digging’ results on their concept albums, including 2000’s “Programmed To Love”, 2002’s “Everlasting Blink” and 2004’s “Ariels”, and they have remixed artists including Dolly Parton, Hall and Oates, Faithless, and Morcheeba. Let’s stream “Friends” below.

Bent was conceptualized through Neil and Simon’s dis-satisfaction with the state of the electronic dance music genre in 1997, and they felt it wasn’t meeting their expectations. Released in November, “Up In The Air” has a rural, countryside vibe to it – through the transformative sampling production and the incredible promo art – which depicts nature and farm animals. Like a fresh cider on a summer’s day, “Friends” proves to be a slightly more upbeat ending to the chilled, gentle sounds of the rest of the album. Created through a sample of a track that was recorded way back in the 1930’s, the Bent duo manage to put a tropical, breezy spin on the recording. The album was recorded remotely from Neil in his UK studio in Sherwood, and Simon created four of the LP’s tracks in his rural Ireland studio, and I think that the album’s themes of countryside and farm life manages to feel timely and profound, in a time where many of us are isolated. “Friends” feels joyous and cheerful, with an old-fashioned female vocal crooning: “Just friends, we’re not lovers no more/Just friends, not like before” and “To think of all that’s been/Not to love again, It’s like pretending, this is our beginning” over the top of a slowly moving, but comprehensively layered, sequence of gently sweeping String sections and the cinematic, vintage set of Disco instrumentation – with lightly reverberating Synths. Oh yes – and there’s plenty of Bongo drums as well. The chorus is lightly catchy, but it still manages to sound pretty relaxed, opening up the gap for a slightly downtempo, sadly emotive quality to the vocals – While the mid-tempo drum beats and the summer-inspired bass rumbles veer the track just a little into Space Disco territory. I read some negative reviews for the album on places like Album Of The Year, with some users calling it “Spa music” and felt the “Background music” feel of the album was disappointingly dull. At first, it didn’t really quite manage to grip me, because the album is certainly not going to be the most visceral or quick-paced record that you’ll hear all year around, but with the frequent set of re-listens, it’s managed to connect with me. It makes for some greatly thematic listening, and it has an ethos of taking obscure, vintage material – with the clever uses of sampling to extract some more transformative and absorbing moods. It might be that it’s because I’ve spent a lot of life growing up in The Fens myself, and so it has almost been like revisiting my own wilderness. In any case, I definitely feel that it’s worthy of your time and a fair chance.

Thank you for checking back with me on the blog today! Tomorrow’s post will be an exciting one – because it’s the first entry of a BRAND NEW weekly feature – right here on the blog! I bet that suprised you, right? This is “Way Back Wednsedays” (See what I did there?) – the time of the week where we dig our music collection for something which made it’s mark before the date of the 2000’s. Our first entry comes from an Alternative Hip-Hop trio originally led by an Experimental Trip-Hop/Funk artist who is now known as “Shabazz Palaces”. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Boards Of Canada – “An Eagle In Your Mind” (1998)

David Attenborough would be all over this bird of nature! It’s time for a new blog post!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for me to repay my promise of typing up about your daily track on the blog today, as it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! An interesting classic IDM record that I’ve been listening to over the last few weeks is “Music Has The Right To Children”, an ambient record from 1998 which was self-produced by Boards Of Canada, a Scottish electronic music duo, on the Warp Records label. The piece of material went down as a landmark in electronic music work, and it has appeared on many best-ever lists from music publications like Pitchfork and Mojo. While the bulk of electronic music sprawls from Industrial and futuristic technology from urban environments – the intriguing case of Boards Of Canada is that the duo grew up in a very small urban community in Scotland, where they have since remained very reclusive from their fanbase, hardly ever taking part in any press interviews or live performances. For “Music Has The Right To Children”, the brothers of Marcus Eoin and Mike Sandison decided to create experimental sounds from outdated analogue software and samples taken from 1970’s public broadcasting children’s programmes to invoke themes of early childhood, nostalgia and nature. The duo have shrouded themselves in secrecy, and started making music by sending Casettes of their work to their friends and family. Let’s see a fan-made video for “An Eagle In Your Mind” below.

Fan-made videos have played a significant factor in keeping the Boards Of Canada’s fanbase active over the years, with long gaps of years between the subsequent album releases, and the band managed to pull off an elaborate “Easter Egg Hunt” in the highly-anticipated marketing push towards 2013’s “Tomorrow’s Harvest”, but that’s another story for another day. “An Eagle In Your Mind” is the third cut on the track listing for “Music Has The Right To Children”, and it perfectly sums up the basic key elements of the album, for my two cents. As you’ve probably noticed, it’s not really a track that is very accessible from a dancing point-of-view – despite being labelled as an “IDM” release. Instead, we’re given some meditative textures and peculiar sounds that feel rooted in degraded synthesizer hardware and 1970’s-inspired Hip-Hop break-beats. The track begins with a slowly fading synth line that soon washes over the top of a scratching, downtempo turntable beat sample. The sound, although entirely instrumental, manages to feel very rich and fresh because it sounds emotionally mature and hallucinatory, to a degree. Ideas of early childhood memory and adolescent behaviour peek their head in at a midway mark, when the tempo of the Syncopated backing beat increases and a very abrupt vocal sample of “I Love You” cuts into the picture, and it signals for a whistled backing vocal sample and an emerging synth line that comes into full force later on, with a harsh ambience that seems very dense. There may not be very much going on here, melodically – but the lo-fi beats have been layered in a hugely calculated and meticulous manner. The ideas of early childhood memory develops very smoothly, as a result, with cut-off samples and resonating synth work managing to evoke emotions which are ever so slightly strange and peculiar – and – for me – this is what manages to make the record stand out as a truly fascinating and unique project. It feels as if you’re a child, sitting at the TV, watching old advertisements fly by, or like you’re riding a bike with your friends around the countryside as your mind wanders to an imaginative, fantastical place. In a nutshell, it plays out like an adult’s reflection of their nostalgia – as you’re left with fragments of memories at this stage of your life and it’s hard to filter what is real and what is fantasy as a child anyways – and the record is bizarrely accurate in doing so. An album that would take time and perseverance to connect with you, but – depending on your upbringing as I was a strange child myself – it will slowly reward you with a payment of nostalgic, intricate sounds which are unrivalled. Go and listen!

Thank you for reading my new post! Please feel free to join me tomorrow – where we’ll be making a change of pace with an in-depth look at the latest album from one of the most legendary African-American Hip-Hop groups of all-time, who were inducted into the Rock and Roll Fame in 2013, and critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine named them as “The most influential and radical band of their time” for AllMusic in 2017. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Bonobo & Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs – “Heartbreak”

You’d better not break my heart – My achey, breaky heart! It is time for your new post!

Good Morning! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and I’ve just arrived to write up about your daily track on the blog since, in case you hadn’t figured it out by now, it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to get typing up about a different piece of music every day! “Heartbreak” is a new collaborative single created by two exceptional talents within the International EDM club scene. In one corner, we have Bonobo – aka Brighton-born but Los Angeles-based dance music composer Simon Green – who has attained a cult following, with his material being performed by a full-scale touring band during his live DJ sets. In the second corner, we have Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs – a London-born dance music producer best known for his UK Top 40-charting album “Trouble” from 2012, and we covered his work on the blog just recently due to the release of his incredible “I Can Hear The Birds” EP during Lockdown. Although the single is available to download or stream digitally right now, it is also set to come out on a physical 12″ vinyl format, come November 13th. The release of “Heartbreak” is also very notable because it marks Bonobo’s first material to be released on Bonobo’s new independent label, OUTLIER. These two producers have been friends since 2015, collaborating both behind-the-scenes and by regularly supporting each other on-tour. Bonobo elaborated on their work together, via press release, saying: “Orlando (Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs) was playing me a fairly stripped back idea he had for something last year,” later adding, “We spent a few afternoons in his studio trying ideas out and eventually, ‘Heartbreak’ was the end result.”. Their new single comes accompanied by an official visualizer music video – and it includes a heavy STROBE warning. You have been warned! Let’s take a listen to their collaborative single below.

“Heartbreak” mainly plays out as a tribute to the heavy disco scene in New York City during the 1970’s and the 1980’s, with the main sample being used from “Weekend”, a track by Class Action. The liner notes that will come with the 12″ physical single will feature an essay by author Tim Lawrence on the lasting impact of the original track. You’re getting some more bang for your buck, then. “Heartbreak” was reportedly also the catalyst for Bonobo’s indie label, as he explained: “[It] seemed like a good starting point and was the track that became the catalyst to start the label. One for the dance floors in a time when they’re dearly missed”, via a press statement. A light New-Rave element proves to be the modern twist to bring the old sample up to a bit of a contemporary speed. It also sounds quite breakbeat-driven, with a heavy acid strobe line that wraps around Christine Wiltshire’s original vocal hook of “I can’t take the heartbreak” from the sampled 1983 dance anthem. The introspective, but rumbling, synth melodies feel noticeably Higginbottom, a comforting element that sounds a lot like his previous work, but they never feel simplistic, as Higginbottom takes inspiration from the 90’s street rave scene in the UK to create some rolling percussion beats and some fluttering synthesizers that feel vibrant and emotionally-driven, if a little bit safe. The other side of the sonic palette sees Bonobo experimenting with a decadent, spiraling bass melody that permeates through the duration of the track with a solid cohesion and weaving the drum parts throughout the interchanging textures of Higginbottom’s Nu-Disco synth work. Together, they make up for a very fluid listening experience overall. I think that just a little bit more variety in the vocal sample could have taken things up to a slightly higher level, but those are just my two cents. You’ve got to remember that, at the time of the NYC dance scene of the 70’s and 80’s that the sound is harkening back to, no-one had mobile phones and people were truly on the dancefloor, in a club, to connect, socially and without much technology, with inclusivity and fun. So, I feel that Green and Higginbottom have done a fantastic job in pulling this track together with the resources that they had. A great throwback.

As I’ve mentioned just now, I have also covered a track (“Los Angeles”) taken from Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs’ recent EP, “I Can Hear The Birds”, which he pulled together using collaged field recordings of birdsong sounds that was gathered, and sent, to him by some of his friends across the world. Make sure that you take a listen to the track here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/08/05/todays-track-totally-enormous-extinct-dinosaurs-los-angeles/

Thank you very much for reading my new post! Tomorrow, I’ll be listening to a new track from a North London-born experimental electronic producer who was recently featured on KEXP’s Song Of The Day podcast, and played on a recent episode of 6Music Recommends by John Ravenscroft. The artist has just released a new EP on the innovative Hyperdub music label, and she has previously released her music on the New York Haunted record label. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Andy C & Shimon – “Body Rock” (2001)

Right. That is it. It’s time for us to quit the ‘Clowning’ around! It’s time for a new post!

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke and I am writing up about your daily track on the blog, as always, because it is routinely my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! 2001, in September to be exact, saw the release of a polarizing little club track of the title “Body Rock”, which was a collaboration between Andy Clarke, the co-founder of RAM Records, and his RAM Records signee Shimon. Clarke, best known as Andy C, is a Wasall-based English DJ and electronic producer who was a pioneering staple of the Drum-and-Bass genre of EDM music. He was a part of the RAM three, a circle of artists who raised prestige for the Drum-and-Bass genre through this specialist record label, which also includes Shimon and co-founder Ant Miles. Most popularly, the likes of Chase & Status, Sub Focus and Wilkinson have found chart success through releases on the RAM Records label. “Body Rock” reached #28 on the UK Singles Chart, and it was divisive because of it’s unusual sound, which we’ll get to in a bit. For now, let’s have a listen to it below.

Just in case you hadn’t realized, “Body Rock” divided most of Andy C’s more hardcore fanbase because of the “Clown-ish” sequencing effects used as the sampled hooks, which combines with a swinging pendulum rhythm to form an oddly patterned loop of synthesized melodies. As a matter of fact, some listeners even went so far as to give it a derogatory term of “Clown-Step” as a phrase to describe similar tracks that arrived soon after “Body Rock”, as it was obviously a huge commercial success, so other producers who were just looking for hits were started to follow the sound as a commercial trend. One fun theory that has circulated around the internet is that Andy C and Sub Focus used a sample of Rocky Horror’s “Timewarp” to fit the tune when mixing the track live to form the beat, but it’s unclear whether there is any evidence to prove this to be the truth. In whichever case, “Body Rock” starts off with a swinging triplet rhythm that precedes a few strange vocal parts. It gets more off-kilter and bizzare when the Snare Drum kicks in, and hits on the recurring Synth loops. This is followed up by the introduction of a really Staccato-heavyweight bassline that calls upon Acid Techno and Alternative Jungle influences to create a fluid, fluctuating synth beat which feels acidic and meandering in it’s continous, skittering nature. A brief interlude of odd, slowed ambient wind samples follows up on the main bassline drop, before an eclectic Kick Drum beat and Hi-Hat snare drops make the proceedings a little more percussive and progressive in it’s textures. Overall, it’s certainly rather unusual for an experimentally layered Drum-and-Bass track such as this to reach the mainstream – with single CD/Vinyl sales of 38,000 copies in shops (Yes… Physical Shops!) to boot. However, I believe the most important point to take away from this is that whether different groups of music lovers loved it or not… It gained a strong reaction. For me personally, although I can see where most angles of the nitpicks of criticism were coming from, I think that it’s innovative and a lot of fun. It was something very different at the time, and it still retains a unique ring to it today.

Thank you very much for reading my daily blog post! I’ll be back tomorrow with a switch of gears, as we move from Experimental Drum-and-Bass to a more Alternative form of Post-Punk and Industrial-Rock. Tomorrow’s track comes from a Japanese 4-piece Math-Rock and Noise-Rock group formed in London, England who have performed collaboratively with Savages, Damo Suzuki and Faust. They are currently signed to Stolen Recordings and they are licensed to Sony Music Associated Records. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/

Today’s Track: Disclosure – “ENERGY”

If you thought The Chemical Brothers were the space and time of British electronic dance music – these two are actually brothers. It’s all relative! It’s time for a new post!

Good Morning! I am Jacob Braybrooke and I’m writing up about your daily track on the blog, as per usual, since it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Fittingly releasing on a Friday, which is today, in time for the underground raves you can’t go to, is “ENERGY”, the third studio album from the Surrey-raised real-life Brother DJ duo of Howard and Guy Lawrence, as Disclosure. It marks the end of a very long and grueling wait for their fans (Including my friend Grace, in particular), since this is their first proper album release in half a decade. They have kept their fans busy in the gap with a recent string of live mixes, new EP’s and the odd collaboration or two, along with mixtapes and regular live-streamed sessions, of which many of the obscure tracks appear on the deluxe version of their new album. It has a promising guest line-up, with the likes of Kelis, Slowthai, Fatoumata Diawara, Mick Jenkins, and several more involved. Disclosure have some mainstream hits under their belt with the likes of Sam Smith and Khalid, along with two Grammy Award nominations for Best Dance/Electronica Album for 2013’s debut “Settle” and for 2015’s follow-up LP “Caracal” too. Let’s stream the titular track below.

If I’m completely truthful with you, I’m not quite as familiar with Disclosure as more alternative British EDM acts like The Prodigy or Aphex Twin, because I’ve usually dismissed them a little bit as “Just Pop DJ’s”, seeing as they have worked with my current least-favourite Sam Smith for goodness sake. But, I’m now going to give up the cynicism and openly admit it. I LOVE ENERGY! I think this is a really, really, REALLY good track, and I’ve been streaming it on repeat a few times. Let’s start off with the opening, as a nice element of Deep House gets immediately established through the heavy West African drum melodies which the brothers borrowed from some samples they took from an album of Brazillian library music. These get layered out to the beat of a strong vocal performance that preaches mottos like “Right now, you should feel invincible, powerful, strong” and “If you are alive, I know you ain’t reached your best yet” with Acid synth sections and grooving Conga drum patterns. These vocals were recorded by Eric Thomas, who provided vocals for Disclosure’s early track “When The Fire Starts To Burn”. Thomas signals that “Now, we gon’ take it to another level” as the brothers unleash a cooled sequence of flickering Synth rhythms and light stabs of Acid Techno beats. They feel upbeat and moving, but they also have a calming effect. It leads up nicely to a startling finale of diverse, world-based instrumentation and Preacher-esque lead vocal sections from Eric Thomas, whilst the drum beats keep repeating and the Synth sections keep pushing-and-pulling the pacing up, with a polished sheen that stitches everything together with excellent flow and a faultless cohesion. The results make “ENERGY” feel vibrant and fresh, with a very exciting sound and a diverse sonic pallete that takes influence from a surprising range of Earthly sources. Based on what I have heard from Disclosure before, this is absolutely one of their best, and I cannot recommend it highly enough, and I’m glad it sounds as though Island Records, the major label of which they’re signed up to, hasn’t seemed to get their hands on the creative direction very much, at all. It just rocks my socks off.

Thank you very much for reading this post! I’ll be back tomorrow, as usual, with an in-depth look at a recent rework of a cult classic single recorded by an Australian Experimental Electronic Dance duo who have seen countless lineup changes throughout the years, and have performed many comeback gigs in recent years, including a gig at The State Library Of Victoria as part of Melbourne Music Week in 2016, and a one-off double gig with Snog at the Corner Hotel in Richmond, Victoria during 2017. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/