house
Late Sun 豆瓣
Kerala Dust 类型: 电子
发布日期 2017年2月15日 出版发行: Laut & Luise
Like a memory you can’t remember having, surely lost to the past but resurfacing at the hit of the first steady note. So sudden and unexpected it curiously scratches the shell of your inner self. As he himself states: Kerala Dust makes music for a desert he’s never been to.
Once again, we have a new addition to the family, once again, like finding the piece of a puzzle you didn’t know was missing - three pieces to be more precise. Carefully crafted music from the head and hands of this one plus two project, completed by a mesmerizing remix from the walking understatement DWIG.
我在想着你 豆瓣
7.1 (7 个评分) 张蔷 类型: 流行
发布日期 2020年8月7日 出版发行: 北京力群芬芳
张蔷2020年第三张专辑我在想着你呢……集合了电子,city pop,爵士黑炮,抒情摇滚四种风格。是一张很丰满的专辑!尝试和更年轻的音乐人合作
2020年9月4日 听过
这张是真棒。走之前的路子的话就越走越窄了。往其他路走走,这风格对路。前几天听了一遍,最近工作时又翻出来听,很舒服,不会分心。轻晃。喜欢的:1 Someone loves you ,2 Are you wake up,3 I'm thinking of you,6 We are no longer friend,9 Dance with you
chillout city-pop electronic house lounge
Independent Dancer 豆瓣
Kalabrese 类型: 电子
发布日期 2013年4月26日 出版发行: Rumpelmusig (Groove Attack)
Kalabrese is a curious tastemaker and bold musical force that dares to tread the murky waters between indie and electronica, playfully emphasising vocals on song based productions and presenting an album that pushes the limits and portrays dance music in a peculiar and natural way. Inspired by blues, funk, and all those beautiful dancers and tragic heroes of the night, ,Independent Dancer’ is laced with curiosity and fever inducing productions
2020年7月8日 听过
Independent Dancer。非常棒,值得多次听。
electronic house
Like this 豆瓣
박혜진 Park Hye Jin 类型: 流行
发布日期 2020年5月19日 出版发行: Ninja Tune
Park Hye Jin’s 2018 debut EP, If U Want It, knit together sleek, understated house and brusque hip-hop to great effect. She sang and rapped in both English and her native Korean, throwing out jabbing, chanted phrases in blasé monotone over stubby keyboard loops and no-frills drum programming. Songs like “ABC” and “I Don’t Care” served to demonstrate how much a gifted producer can accomplish with very few ingredients.
Hye Jin was a previously unknown, YouTube-tutorial-taught artist releasing music independently. But her hip-house merger — a combination that has also boosted producer-DJs like Galcher Lustwerk in recent years — quickly earned her fans; three of Hye Jin’s songs now have more than a million streams on Spotify, a sign that her music might be able to reach beyond an underground club audience.
On Tuesday, she released her first new solo single since 2018: “Like This,” which sounds like an army of wind chimes on a shuffling, double-time march. “This lead single has no English lyrics in it at all,” says Ashley Yun, a project manager at Hye Jin’s label, the electronic-focused Ninja Tune. “It’ll be a really good benchmark for how ready society is to hear music that isn’t in English. That prospect is really exciting.” “Like This” precedes Hye Jin’s second EP, How Can I, due out next month.
She taught herself to produce on Ableton, working on the songs that became If U Want It alone at home. “My producing was fucking baby skills,” she says. But she came up with a few songs that she thought displayed variety. “‘ABC’ was more poppy; ‘If U Want It’ was more house, ‘Close Eyes’ was more similar to techno, ‘Call Me’ was ’cause I like hip-hop.” “I Don’t Care” was her crown jewel, a carefully layered track that blooms into a dance-floor missile.
“The way that she sings and raps sounds so accessible, even for people who aren’t Korean,” Yun says. “I am Korean, so I found that extra intriguing. I couldn’t get enough of it when it first came out.”
Yun was not alone. Hye Jin’s music was played by Imran Ahmed, the former A&R for XL Recordings who now has a label with AWAL, on his monthly NTS radio show; her songs briefly popped up on Pollen, a Spotify editorial playlist with an active following. Hye Jin moved quickly to transform that buzz into something more solid by playing numerous gigs around the world.
She was so in demand that when Yun tried to book the producer for a Ninja Tune event last year, there wasn’t any room on her schedule. But the two stayed in contact, and Yun helped spearhead Hye Jin’s signing earlier this year. Hye Jin fits next to labelmates and fellow producer-DJs like Bicep and Floating Points — acts who have managed to win over both committed electronic-music fans and more casual streamers who may only make room for one or two club-wreckers on their playlists.
Hye Jin’s rapid ascent didn’t come without issues. She has been forced to part ways with two managers, firing the second one in January due to the way he handled her finances. “I don’t have money from my first EP,” she claims.
The other challenge stemmed from Hye Jin’s brutal touring schedule. “Tour, tour, tour, tour — it’s not good for me every week,” she explains. “The last place I played I remember [feeling], ‘I can’t play well. I’m fucking exhausted.’ ” Much of her new EP was written on the road “in airports, airplanes, trains, taxis,” a necessary side effect of being a sought-after performer.
But Hye Jin remains cheerfully committed to stardom — “I’m gonna be fuckin’ famous,” she promises — and buoyant about the prospects of How Can I. “When my new EP is released,” she says, “there’s new shit coming to me.”
BIG FUN 豆瓣
8.4 (5 个评分) TOWA TEI 类型: 电子
发布日期 2009年2月4日 出版发行: コロムビアミュージックエンタテインメント
Towa Tei (テイ・トウワ(鄭 東和), Tei Tōwa, born Dong-hwa Chung (Hangul: 정 동화); September 7, 1965) is an artist, record producer and DJ born in Yokohama, Japan. Towa debuted as a member of Deee-Lite, from the US label Elektra Records in 1990 and shot to fame via their international hit single, "Groove Is In the Heart". He made his solo debut with the album Future Listening! in 1994. He has since relocated back from New York to rural Nagano prefecture in Japan
2017 - 2019 豆瓣
7.9 (16 个评分) Against All Logic 类型: 电子
发布日期 2020年2月7日 出版发行: Other People
Last week, Nicolas Jaar signalled that Against All Logic had performed a hard left turn, releasing an onslaught of a mix and an EP that made the older, warmer version of the project seem outmoded. Even so, the power and violence of 2017 - 2019, this new LP, is shocking. "Because if you can't beat 'em, kill 'em / If you can't kill 'em, fuck 'em," growls Lydia Lunch on "If You Can't Do It Good, Do It Hard." A booming electro rhythm re-enters and she catches the beat, chanting the track's title as if playing drill sergeant. Jaar has frequently asked that we move our bodies to his music, but never in this way. This is straight-up fight music. 2017 - 2019 isn't quite this lairy elsewhere, but most of it is jagged, hard-hitting and seriously over-driven. The change has Jaar sounding artistically replenished.
Some time away has maybe heightened the album's impact. Jaar's last major release was in February 2018, the Against All Logic album 2012 - 2017, where feel-good, sample-driven house, soul and disco were the prevailing moods. At the time, Andrew Ryce used words like "pastiche" and "generic" in a review, confirming the feeling that we'd come to expect, or even demand, a level of innovation from Jaar. He's an artist who, since getting his break as a teenager, had become a headline act off the back of strange, singular and often downbeat music. This seemed to stem from an uncommon curiosity. Away from the main tides of the international music scene these past couple years, Jaar has pursued a dizzying array of projects, including an artist residency at Het HEM in Amsterdam, a soundtrack for the famed Chilean filmmaker Pablo Larraín, and principal production work on the incredible FKA twigs album MAGDALENE. What appeared to plenty of people as a time of inactivity was, it seems, an intense period of creative development.
That Beyoncé is the first voice we hear on 2017 - 2019 is instructive of the bold new direction. Hers and Sean Paul's vocals are lifted from "Baby Boy" and layered over a crackling broken beat, an uncanny string-like instrument and inviting synth chords. A sample of Luther Ingram's 1972 soul song "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right" appears on track two, a degraded house cut, thus establishing a template of sorts: 2017 - 2019 is an album of stylistic leaps, radiant melodies, difficult-to-place sounds and red herrings. Back-to-back opening tracks with instantly recognisable sample flips, for example, sets up an expectation of many more to follow. Instead, there are none. That is unless you can spot the source of the hip-hop loop on "With An Addict." Jaar casually filters it into the arrangement to create a half-time contrast with the main drums, a rolling footwork/jungle-style pattern that features percussion reminiscent of the "Apache" break. The poignant, daybreak melody caps a track that bundles the album's strongest qualities.
The stylistic leaps I mentioned are actually a bit of an audio illusion later in the album. Perhaps you could describe "Alarm," "Deeeeeeefers" "Faith" and "Penny," which appear consecutively, as all being house and/or techno. Each features a four-on-the-floor kick pattern and is made for the dance floor. But there's a significant scope of differences and ideas between them. The two-minute-long breakdown/build in "Deeeeeeefers" might be dismissed by some EDM artists as being OTT, with Jaar ballooning his damaged synth lines until the whole thing plops back into place as though nothing has happened. "Faith," on which he flexes the choral range of his voice, could have been signed to Innversions were it not so weird. The fantastic "Penny," meanwhile, is a 142-BPM techno track that less dogmatic DJs should be into—its chargrilled timbre, matched with groovy percussion and emotive melodies, is unlike most modern techno productions. Along with the buckled drum cut "Alarm," these tracks seem to gain inspiration from the subversion of templates that in the past Jaar himself has worked with.
All of which returns us to the idea of replenishment. The military man on the record's artwork, the copious levels of distortion, the brazen use of samples, the warping of genre tropes—on the surface it all feels like a "fuck you," perhaps at the state of things, perhaps at Jaar's own artistic history. If there is anger here, though, it's complicated, and it's almost always offset by hope or damaged beauty. Perhaps, instead, the noise is an alternate means of expressing something that before found a different form in Jaar's music. The hazy peculiarity of the past is now manifested in different materials and through some force. Maybe it's an idea to consider during the record's only moment of relative calm: "You (Forever)," the closer. The tender vibe here is reminiscent of Space Is Only Noise, the 2011 album that established his name, but the sounds are of a far-off time and culture. A decent sign of an artist evolving, in other words.
Robots in Lilac Spaceships 豆瓣
Landhouse / Raddantze
发布日期 2016年1月1日 出版发行: Serafin Audio Imprint
2020年5月8日 听过
啊好听!!!https://serafinaudio.bandcamp.com/album/robots-in-lilac-spaceships。传了一份存在某云上了
electronic house techno
Corona Mix 2020 豆瓣
haircuts for men 类型: 电子
发布日期 2020年4月26日 出版发行: Self-Released
a little mix to comfort everyone staying at home. the mix isn't perfect but that's ok. a bunch of my favorites from the past year or so and a few unreleased gems. enjoy.
2020年4月27日 听过
chill,更喜欢 side-A, https://haircutsformen.bandcamp.com/album/corona-mix-2020
chillout electronic house
WAKING UP DOWN 豆瓣
Yaeji 类型: 电子
发布日期 2020年3月10日 出版发行: Yaeji
After releasing the infectious ‘Raingurl’ back in 2017, the NYC-via-Seoul producer went on to produce remixes of pop icons Charli XCX and Robyn. Now, she’s announced a brand spankin’ new mixtape with a track to tease.
‘Waking Up Down’ is her latest bubbling number, seeing the artist switch between English and Korean dialects as she weaves a story reminiscing on the simplicity of childhood.
Yaeji celebrates the little things in life: staying hydrated, cooking nourishing meals, listening to others and staying on top of those pesky to-do lists. The track also comes with a technicolour animated video, inspired by classic anime opening sequences.
The bright, bold and totally mesmerising visuals are Yaeji at her most creative.
‘Waking Up Down’ is the lead single off Yaeji’s newly announced mixtape, WHAT WE DREW 우리가 그려왔던: a collection of songs that is “so much about friendship, family, gratitude and support - support that I've felt, that I've given, and that we all share."
Recorded in Brooklyn, WHAT WE DREW 우리가 그려왔던 sees a return to the producer’s past musical loves, particularly 90s and early 2000s hip hop and R&B.
WHAT WE DREW 우리가 그려왔던 is set to be released on April 2.