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Showing results for tags 'Lee Gamble'.
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Hyperdub - HDBCD037 releases September 15, 2017 01. Insta Centre 02. Istian 03. East Sedducke 04. 23 Bay Flips 05. Swerva 06. Quadripoints 07. You Hedonic 08. UE8 09. Locked In 10. Ignition Lockoff 11. A tergo Real 12. Ghost 13. Déjà Mode Snippets + visuals http://mnesticpressure.leegamble.net/ https://leegamble.bandcamp.com/album/lee-gamble-mnestic-pressure-hdbcd037 https://twitter.com/GambleLee https://twitter.com/Hyperdub
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Douglas is on a roll with his own releases, and now we get this nice look into his electronic taste (which is interesting because his own music is hard to fit into any style/scene). So many things I've never heard though! If anyone can ID any tracks, please do so. I'm especially curious about the first and second track, assuming the heavy dark beat marking the beginning of a new track. Ever since I've heard Andy Stott's We Stay Together, the beat-track at the beginning of this Dalglish mix is what I've always hoped any future Stott albums to sound like. I was always disappointed. Now I'd love to know what this is.
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New album out in September on PAN and an EP, Kuang, in August. I really enjoyed his last couple of releases. Bit more info here Listen to "Untitled Reversion", an exclusive track from the London producer's forthcoming album KOCH
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1. 004 2. For Infernomatics 3. Knematics 4. Cnull https://boomkat.com/products/chain-kinematics
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enjoy. http://www.residentadvisor.net/podcast-episode.aspx?id=433
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This is how it's done, thumper on the A-side, ambience on the flip. http://boomkat.com/vinyl/1081347-lee-gamble-kuang-ep?utm_source=Boomkat+Production&utm_campaign=88fbf7710c-New_from_Lee_Gamble_Kuang&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f7c1f6eb34-88fbf7710c-130499893 Free digital copy included with vinyl.
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Brilliant release! Some of it reminds me of Burials beatless tracks. Heres what boomkat says Well, this could very well be our favourite record on the PAN label yet. It has a concept so brilliant and simple we can't quite believe it hasn't been done before, taking the burning embers, breakdowns and ambient interludes off classic Jungle mixtapes and re-assembling them into a ghostly ambient-not-ambient mix that's at once hugely nostalgic and totally forward thinking - so so good* 'Diversions 1994-1996' is Lee Gamble's chimeric recollection of jungle's golden era. Using samples sourced solely from his cache of jungle mixtapes accrued as a raving teenager, Gamble creates a richly evocative, serotonin-depleted suite of morphing, diffuse and dusty moments, choosing to largely focus on the sensuous interzones between the rhythmic torque, rendering those sharply contrasting fragments of euphoric diva vocals, angelic techno pads and jazz fusion-aping chords as tantalising, ghostly immersions. However, while hypnagogic in effect, the processes behind Gamble's manipulations owe far more to his background in academic computer music - he's a founding member of Brum-via-London's CYRK collective and has previously released on the equally high-brow Entr'acte imprint - applying tactile, de/reconstructive software programming to emphasise the grain and weft of the source material, in turn yielding nano-fine layers of microtonal dissonance, fathomless amounts of space and timbral quirks that were always there, yet practically imperceptible in original form. It's effect is visceral, starkly compelling, bound to send shivers up the spine of anyone who's stood with their ears ringing at the end of a warehouse party and returned home in a state of near-shellshocked delirium after disengaging the soundsystem. Listen to tracks in full here http://www.junodownload.com/products/diversions-1994-1996/2068421-02/
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there is a track on the new album by lee gamble, dutch tvashar plumes, which is clearly a cover of overand from tri rep. i haven't seen any liner notes, so i don't know if it is acknowledged explicitly as a cover, but both the title and the audio make it pretty obvious. it doesn't stray too far from the original, but it's an interesting take. worth checking out if you like ae and lee gamble. it seems like covers are relatively less common in electronic music than in other styles (except for the phenomenon of acoustic bands covering electronic acts). remixes are common enough, but covers much less so. is that right? can anyone think of other cases of electronic artists covering others, autechre in particular?
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- Lee Gamble
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