Monday, 26 December 2011

TEA 2011 Albums in Review

2011 may well be looked back on as the year where the techno LP broke free from the shackles of mediocrity that continue to hold back many a genre from fulfilling their full potential. Nowadays a well received techno album needs to be more than a handful of dancefloor friendly productions bookend by and intro an outro and middled by a token ‘experimental track’. Narratives and concepts are more prominent then ever before with political, humanitarian and historical undertones making themselves as known as the productions themselves. Perc’s Wicker & Steel intentionally or not soundtracked this years London riots, whilst Legowelt’s The Teac Life made from malfunctioning, cheap and retro analogue equipment was released free digitally, only to see a successful vinyl release due to its hugely positive response, baffling scores of net-labels in the process.



UK electronica influences run deep within the productions of Lucy and Xhin, specifically when the two distance themselves from an EP format. Both are rewriting techno’s current rule book and in doing so have further blurred the lines between techno and everything else. After Lucy’s deep and meaningful Wordplay For Working Bees which draws parallels with the architecture of Le Corbusier and the groundbreaking electroacoustic experimentations of Karlheinz Stockhausen, Xhin released his own personal reflection Sword, the Singaporean’s third full length and Stroboscopic Artefacts second, seeing both artists share in nods of appreciation toward modern day luminaries Aphex Twin and Surgeon.



Luke Slater’s emphatic Planetary Assault Systems project saw Ostgut Ton release one of this years most played albums The Messenger, which unlike some of the aforementioned albums could essentially be a club and dance floor orientated classic. Had it not been for Slater’s ability to reinvent himself, his latest admission could have easily passed over us like Robert Hood’s Omega Man released last year, but it didn’t. Slater’s The Messenger saw a new (and younger) allegiance of fans join the hordes of Slater faithfuls who still stand strong (even after his leftfield 2002 pop dance album Alright On Top). Fellow established notable Anthony Child aka Surgeon is yet another UK act to this year push his music to the limit and as his latest offering Breaking The Frame suggests through tracks like Radiance, Child is ready to put even the hardest of trained ears to the test, a technique seen with his remix to Xhin’s Foreshadowed also.




Dub techno is often criticised for its lack of evolution since the first blue prints were drawn up by the likes of Mark Ernestus, Moritz von Oswald and Monolake. A genre firmly set in its practiced orientation, the past 10 years has seen the likes of Rod Modell, Quantec and Mikkel Metal keep Kenneth Christiansen’s Echocord on top of the dub techno pops. Mokira aka Andreas Tilliander’s sub aquatic and verging on beatless dub techno dream Time Axis Manipulation pushed dub techno even deeper (if that’s possible) via the Swede’s uber dub masterpiece. Bredon Moeller made similar in roads with his Subterranean LP released under his Ecologist moniker via his own Steadfast, but it struggled to maintain the emotive and narrative flow of Mokira’s Time Axis Manipulation.



Rastor Noton boss Alva Noto this year unveiled his Univrs LP, an upside down sequel to his 2008 Unitxt. Univrs featured one of this years most fascinating collaborations with French poet Anne James Chaton, who also released a 2011 long player on Rastor Noton called Événements 09. The Emptyset made up of James Ginzburg (aka Ginz) and Paul Purgas released their Demiurge LP on Bristol label Subtext, following up from their 2009 Caravan Recordings self titled. The two were introduced to a wider techno audience in January via their Altogether Lost collaboration with Underground Resistance vocalist Cornelius Harris, released on CLR which featured Ben Klock’s tantalising Glowing Clap Mix.



Mancunian imprint Modern Love produced a hat trick of outstanding pieces with Andy Stott’s Passed Me By / We Stay Together double package and Demdike Stare’s Tryptych, a release on par with the unrivalled talents of Tropic Of Cancer and their The End Of All Things released on legendary UK imprint Downwards. Wrapping up a year which seemingly belongs to UK producers is Dave Huismans’ aka 2562 Fever released on When In Doubt. Like Stott, 2562 combines his take on dub techno, broken beat and crackling ambience with smudged vocal scares and post industrial noise. If we begin our techno timeline with the precedent set by labels like Planet E, Warp and Axis, techno is now 20 years old. Young enthusiasts and hardened veterans now eagerly await a slew of celebratory rereleases and gift wrapped anniversary packs that will no doubt descend upon 2012, and as electronic music slowly recovers from a hangover of a poorly engineered DIY productions and blase label management, 2011 is making the first steps in setting a new precedent for the next 20 years.

Sunday, 25 December 2011

TEA TOP TRACKS FOR 2011

Locked in my suburban Melbourne home with only my records, laptop, turntables, monitors, an endless supply of tea I managed to compile TEA's top 100 tracks that made their way into my record bag, inbox or download account. When I did surface I was looking more like pale and famished internet gamer rather than a pale and famished internet blogger.


After the days of soul searching I was mystified by the amount of tracks that I'd missed last year and no doubt history is about to repeat itself.


Attached are the corresponding links to the tracks available to be viewed on youtube.


Happy Hunting!


99.Databoy78 - Thursday [Running Back]
98.Conrad Van Orton - Shattered [Key]
97.Cosmin TRG - Izolat [50 Weapons]
96.The End Of All Existence - Only Darkness Remains [The End Of All Existence]
95.Eduardo De La Calle - Flamenco Sketches (Present The Good Bye Song) [Analog Solutions]
94.Myles Sergé - The Crazy Neighbor [RE(FORM)]
93.Dadub - Metropolis [Stroboscopic Artefacts]
92.Eduardo De La Calle - Untitled A1 [Analog Solutions 003]
91.GHL - Slow Good [Electric Minds]


90.Martyn & Mike Slott - All Nights [All City Records]


89.Julio Bashmore - Battle For Middle You [PMR Records]

88.Shifted - Control [Mote Evolver]
87.AnD - A Brother From Another Mother (Tom Dicicco Late Night Dub) [Project Squared]
86.Steven Porter - Deed [10 Label]
85.MD2 - MD2.3.2 [MD2]
84.Delta Funktionen - Minds Into Meltdown [Ann Aimee]
83.Unbalance - Untitled A1 [Unbalance#2]
82.Roman Lindau - Crasse [Fachwerk]
81.Planetary Assault Systems - Black Tea [Ostgut Ton]

80.Bleak - Fall [Sudden Drop]




79.Shifted - Untitled B2 [Avian]

78.XDB - Bakfom [Harbour City Sorrow]
77.Unbroken Dub - Untitled B2 [Rawax]
76.Sailor Mood - RM12.4 [Retrometro Records]
75.Resoe - Redlightsareflashin [Echocord Colour]
74.Jeroen Search & Markus Suckut - JSMS 2.0 [Figure SPC K]
73.Roman Lindau - Sub Suggestion [Fachwerk]
72.Conforce - Desolate Ground [Delsin]
71.Third Side meets ND_Baumecker – Burning [Restoration Records]


70.Xhin - Foreshadowed (Dadub Remix) [Stroboscopic Artefacts]


69.Skudge - Void [Echocord Colour]

68.Endian - Two Chords Deep [Electric Minds]
67.Wbeeza - Coast Spotting [Third Ear Recordings]
66.Reno Wurzbacher - Julischkaa [Fachwerk]
65.Burial – Street Halo [Hyperdub]
64.Axel Boman – Europa [Studio Barnhus]
63.Marcel Dettmann - Translation One [Ostgut Ton]
62.Mike Dehnert - Sonderbar [Clone Basement Series]
61.Roman Lindau - Avide [Fachwerk]


60.K209 - Going Forward [K209]


59.Emmanuel Top - Addiction [Planete Rouge]

58.Cio D'Or - Magnetkries (Shifted C.I.S remix) [Prologue]
57.Jobody - Aspect 3 [Apologue]
56.AnD - Resistance [Black Sun Records]
55.The Black Dog - Heavy Industry [Dust Science]
54.Tom Dicicco - Night Erosion [Stockholm LTD]
53.John Swing - the Live Experience [Relative]
52.Mokira - Time Track [Kontra-Musik]
51.Planetary Assault Systems - Kray Squid [Ostgut Ton]


50.Rivet - Running (edit) [Naked Index]


49.Unbalanced - Mad Loop [Red Indeks]

48.Dadub - Biophesis [Stroboscopic Artefacts]
47.Jeff Derringer - Exit Sound [Perc Trax]
46.Donato Dozzy & Neel - Voices From The Lake Drop 2 [Prologue]
45.Mike Parker - Subterranean Liquid [Prologue]
44.L.B Dub Corp - Lurchers Dub [Mote Evolver]
43.Conforce - Vacuum [Delsin]
42.Northern Structures - 9 - 5 [Sonic Groove]
41.Max_M - Kidnapper Bell (Shifted remix) [M-Rec Ltd]


40.Disco Nihilist - Greasy Grind [Running Back]


39.Kowton - Keep Walking [NAKEDLUNCH]
38.Truncate - Truncate.21 (DJ Hyperactive Mix) [Truncate]
37.Northern Structures - Rotations [Sonic Groove]
36.Shifted - Drifting Over [Mote Evolver]
35.Mike Dehnert - Rgs2 [Echocord Colour]
34.Marcel Dettmann - Planning [Ostgut Ton]
33.Planetary Assault Systems - Wriss [Ostgut Ton]
32.Vril- V5 [Giegling]

31.Norman Nodge - Homology [MDR]


30.Zadig - Reflection [Sino]


29.Roman Lindau - Lyrica [Fachwerk]

28.Xhin - This Is What You Drew While You Were Half Asleep [Stroboscopic Artefacts]
27.Carter Bros - I Didn't Need You [Black Catalogue]
26.Shifted - Polaron [Mote Evolver]
25.AnD - Horizontal Ground Vision [Black Sun Records]
24.Blawan – What You Do With What You Have [R & S]
23.Benjamin Brunn – No Kicks [Third Ear Recordings]
22.Gerry Read - Roomland (Youandewan Remix) [2nd Drop]

21.Blawan - Vibe Decorium [R & S]


20.John Beltran - Nephila's Oneiric (Sven's Glorify Tribute To John Beltran) [Delsin]


19.Tommy Four Seven - Track 5 (Robert Hood Remix) [CLR]

18.Floorplan - Baby Baby [M-Plant]
17.Milton Bradley - Diffusion [K209]
16.Mike Parker - FWD (Donato Dozzy remix) [Prologue]
15.Efdemin & Kassian Troyer - Blount [Curle]
14.Aardvark - (Just Washed) That Pig (Extended) [Rush Hour]
13.Aux 88 - Soul Of Black (Arthur Oskan Beat Remix) [Puzzlebox Records]
12.Sascha Rydell - SR2 [Fachwerk]

11.Dense & Pika - Bad Back [Dense & Pika]


10.SVN - Track 2 [Sued]


SVN's Track 2 borders on what could be classified as acoustic house. It's meaty baseline rumbles and woofs around a syncopated drum pattern caressed by the deepest of blue and moody looped piano chords. Little is known about SUED other than the label established itself this year with two joint releases from the equally unknown SW. & SVN.


9.Dadub - Hadean [Stroboscopic Artefacts]


RA forum member Mamam made the comment on my review of Dadub's Monad VIII "How dance music will sound in 2043… Fantastic". That pretty much sums it up. As it stands Dadub's music is so far ahead of its time Detroit's first wave are scratching their heads. Dadub's production and mastering prowess is something to be reckoned with and Hadean is the best example of this.


8.Furesshu - Lucid [Project Squared]


Bristolian Furesshu has successfully produced one of the most functional techno tracks of the year, which comes with one of the most functional remixes of the year thanks to 2011's white hot Shifted. For any lover of a dub techno chord, or in this case stabs (which I'm sure counts for a lot of us), this is a must have and absolute gem from trailblazing London imprint Project Squared. The fact that the tracks waveform is shaped like a bomb also might have something to do with it.


7.Anthony Shakir - Travellers (MRSK Remix) [Rush Hour]


Silky smooth 'n' streamlined techno. MRSK's remix of Anthony Shake Shakir's - Travellers is one of the years most polished production, played, charted and supported by a full spectrum of house and techno artists. Besides MKSR's reconstruction of Makam's - Home 2 Home (alongside remixes from Delano Smith and XDB) on Berlin imprint Sushitech Purple, the housier sub label of Sushitech, the Swede has a modest discography with his Black Keith/Close To Me EP released on Rush Hour being his only solo work. MRSK has featured on The Best Of Rush Hour compilations for the past two years highlighting the Scandinavian as a one to watch in 2012.


6.AnD - Non Compliant [Inner Surface Music]


Alongside Shifted, AnD have been the most prolific newcomers to the world of techno in 2011. After knuckling down in 2010 the Manucian and Greek duo this year released on Horizontal Ground, Black Sun Records, Project Squared, Idle Hands, Jonas Kopp's Krill Music as well as their own Inner Surface Music imprint they run with partner Tom Dicicco. Non Compliant from the same EP is pure, stripped back and no nonsense techno, with an injected silence to stun any club.


5.Surgeon - Radiance [Dynamic Tension Records]


Never have I heard people say someone has played too hard at Berghain, until Surgeon's most recent visit, not a mean feat. Besides the odd remix, Surgeon's releases of late have moved at a glacial rate and like that glaciers when they hit we know about it. Radiance from Surgeon's - Breaking The Frame LP is a wall of noise backed by Anthony Child's thunder kicks and violent undertones that only an industrial obsessive (associated with Regis) could only be capable of.


4.Zadig - Re-Form [Contruct_Re_Form]


A relative newcomer Zadig aka Slyvain Peltier’s 909 workouts look soon to become folklore if the ramshackling Re-Form is anything to go by. Its stormy introduction soon swirls into heavy duty dub techno hit with many a techno cliché included. 2010 saw Kenny Larkin’s remix of Zadig's Dark Nebular tilt a few heads in the the Parisian's direction, but it has been his most recent release on Technasia's Sino and the launch of his own CONSTRUCT-RE-FORM imprint that has fast tracked the Frenchman as a one to watch. Zadig's 'new classic' sound is a traditional yet engaging approach to producing techno and one that he says is inspired by such luminaries as Surgeon, Luke Slater and Robert Hood.


3.Anne-James Chaton - Evenement27 [10 Label]


And the award for the scariest cover art goes to - new Japanese imprint 10Label. The Japanese do scary well and not surprisingly the music is as sinister as the artwork. The record itself gives away no hints as to what is the A or B sides, but it's not long before hearing some typically rapturous Ancient Method loops that I was able to figure it out. Partnering Ancient methods on the A side is ex Vault Series stalwart Sawlin, a producer once associated with the Berlin basement sounds Subjected and Moerbeck. The flip is a little more avant garde than side A, opened by Steven Porter's - Deed, a production not to dissimilar from Milton Bradley's - The End Of All Existence but it's Raster-Noton's Anne James Chaton glitchy exorcism that shocked us most at TEA.


2.Eduardo De La Calle – Untitled [Analog Solutions – EDITS 001]


Spaniard Eduardo De La Calle may well be one of the hardest working and most dedicated to the cause electronic music producers there is. This year he launched his Analog Solutions imprint which saw a whopping 16 releases in total, all of which untitled and quality. The B side to EDITS 001 is the ultimate deep house production that would laugh in the face of many that have been tagged as deep house by either Juno or Beatport. With a male vocal to make your spine tingle Eduardo De La Calle has set the bar for future 'deep house' producers.


1.Planetary Assault Systems - Rip The Cut [Ostgut Ton]


I commend all of those who have compiled a favourites list this year who managed to not include Planetary Assault Systems - The Messenger's 12 tracks in their top 12. Bell Blocker (a DJ's favourite), Wriss, Kray Squid and Black Tea were all good enough to fill this spot. I gave top spot to Rip The Cut not because of its sheer brutality, crawl into the speaker cone qualities and Luke Slater's never mind the bullocks attitude to producing Rip The Cut, but the response I've seen when hearing it played and the stories I've heard from others hearing it played or playing it themselves.