Tag Archives: John Digweed

MUSICA, NYC’s rising House & Techno hub, pronounces upcoming schedule

MUSICA NYC, Manhattan’s largest nightlife vacation spot, just lately reopened its doorways with enhanced audio-visual options and a calendar brimming with a few of home, techno, and dance music’s most in-demand acts. Following a standout New Year’s Eve / New Year’s Day double function with Layton Giordani and Victor Calderone, the venue has welcomed a various array of expertise from beneath the digital dance music umbrella, together with the likes of Tita Lau, Louie Vega, GORDO, Danny Tenaglia, Nora En Pure, Wax Motif, Green Velvet, and extra. Now, venturing into the hotter months, MUSICA is thrilled to announce its stacked upcoming spring and summer time lineup.

Boasting top-tier names from all corners of the globe, reminiscent of Chris Avantgarde, Cristoph, Dombresky, Eli & Fur, Ferry Corsten, John Digweed, Korolova, Sam Paganini, and lots of extra nonetheless to be introduced, MUSICA prepares to welcome club-goers and underground marauders alike for its largest season but.

 Continuing to construct upon an already spectacular season of highs, MUSICA plans to proceed increasing its domination with weekly occasions tailor-made to each sort of dance music aficionado. Its upcoming season boasts upcoming performances by Italian techno maestro Sam Paganini on March twenty fourth, enigmatic hardstyle phenomenon GRAVEDGR and dubstep don YDG on March twenty fifth, adopted by French home star Dombresky on April 1st. The following week, globally famend duo and Anjunadeep favorites Eli & Fur, whose melodic pressure of home and techno will grace MUSICA’s partitions on April eighth. Also in April, Taiwanese EDM, hardstyle, and psytrance sensation Pei Pei will make her NYC debut behind the membership’s decks on April twenty first. Per week later, on April twenty eighth, international progressive and trance veteran Ferry Corsten will probably be curating a high-energy evening for previous and new followers alike, adopted by rising Ukrainian DJ and producer Korolova on April twenty ninth.

Melodic trance extraordinaire and Anjunabeats mainstay Ilan Bluestone will make his MUSICA NYC debut on May fifth, adopted by the highly-anticipated NYC debut of rising Afterlife Recordings star Chris Avantgarde on May nineteenth. Globally beloved Bedrock Records head honcho John Digweed, whose ties with NYC nightlife run deep, is slated to take the stage on May twentieth. Finally, internationally celebrated expertise Cristoph will take over the soundwaves along with his signature mix of techno and progressive home on June third.

MUSICA NYC is powered by a seasoned workforce of nightlife and advertising professionals – JonPaul Pezzo (Trust Us Events), Mario Danza (TTYL), and Real Talent Management – decided to revive town’s home and techno ties and convey the beat again. Originally established within the Seventies, 637 fiftieth Street, the constructing that homes MUSICA NYC has a colourful historical past, with its roots firmly planted within the metropolis’s ever-evolving nightlife and underground dance music scene. Its multi-level dance ground, VIP balcony, and state-of-the-art sound system present an immersive ambiance that goals to offer its friends with intimate clubbing experiences soundtracked by a few of dance music’s top-billed artists.

The sprawling venue gives fully completely different experiences and limitless prospects on every ground of the venue. Donned as The Whisper Room, the bottom ground gives an opulent stage, a personal inexperienced room, non-public luxurious cubicles, and state-of-the-art lighting and sound. An enormous versatile occasion house, the Main Floor consists of two bars, a VIP lounge, a cocktail lounge, an clever lighting and sound system, and a newly-installed immersive video wall. Bringing custom and attraction to the sting of Manhattan, the illustrious venue gives attendees one-of-a-kind occasions that may’t be recreated, solely skilled.

As home and techno choices proceed to increase in Brooklyn, MUSICA goals to bridge the hole for Manhattan club-goers who’re on the lookout for a extra native and accessible expertise, with out diluting the essence of what the underground nightlife scene has to supply. Setting itself other than some other venue or nightclub in New York City, MUSICA’s upcoming calendar will present an immersive musical affair fairly not like something ever seen earlier than. For extra details about MUSICA NYC and its Spring and Summer lineup, go to https://www.musicanewyork.com/

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Review: Tokyo Fan Club – We Live Electric

“We Live Electric” is an exciting must-listen debut from new electronic band Tokyo Fan Club. Whilst the band maybe new, the trio are no strangers to the scene; veteran producers and DJs Luke Brancaccio and Gai Barone have been working both as independent artists and collaborating together for several years (despite never having met in person!) with popular releases on labels including Renaissance, Lost & Found, Selador and Platipus, with a beautiful rework of the 1996 Air classic “All I Need” on Music To Die For earlier in 2022. 

Luke and Gai were first joined by vocalist Kiki Cave in 2020 for John Digweed’s seminal Quattro compilation with “Monsters”, after which it’s alleged the Bedrock boss asked for a full album – in this day and age of TikTok attention spans and disposable electronic music with a shorter shelf-life than ever, this really tells its own story. Luke himself is no stranger to Bedrock with numerous previous releases on the label; fitting that this full album is a triumphant return to the label as a trio with “Tokyo Fan Club”. 

“We Live Electric” is a moody nocturnal double-album (more on the double aspect later) with a distinctive synth-laden sound throughout that would be a fitting alternative score and soundtrack to the cult movie “Drive”. Driving basslines and huge synths reminiscent of Vangelis’ iconic Bladerunner contribute to the cinematic feel, giving off “film noir” vibes throughout. Tokyo itself is presumably a nod to futuristic electronic worlds, however, balanced with retro 80s sounds there is also an air of nostalgia; the Tokyo of Ridley Scott’s underrated “Black Rain” perhaps. 

The title track “We Live Electric” is a lengthy 8 minute opener that introduces a lush Bladerunner-esque brassy synth, joined by rhythmic processed and chopped up vocals reminiscent of One Dove’s “Fallen” (produced by the late great Andrew Weatherall) until half-way through, when the drums kick in and they make way for Kiki’s vocal. So far so good, the Fan Club is in stellar company in terms of a sound that is both nostalgic yet current.

“Seasons”’ distinctive snare is another intentional and successful attempt to continue the retro vibes. Not usually the sound or instrument that one would associate with a particular era, there is an undeniable familiarity, whether or not the listener is familiar with Roland drum machines of the 80s. Dancing plucks bear similarities to previous productions by Luke and Gai, but this time it’s less about the dancefloor and more about a listening experience, with chopped up spoken words sounding like broken radio transmissions in a sci-fi movie. If there was another word for cinematic that does it justice, I’d be using it here! 

The most “Drive” track of the album with definite Kavinsky vibes, “You Say” is a radio-length track on which Kiki makes a full return with a pained vocal in a verse and a chorus affair. Angsty lyrics including “why am I feeling this way?”, contribute to the melancholy of the album. 

The track that started it all, a remastered “Monsters” is a downtempo effort continuing the anguish with Kiki singing about cracks appearing and monsters in her head, accompanied by a slightly lazy kick and snare. If the album WAS a movie, this would be the dream sequence with anime dreams depicting imaginary monsters. 

“Horses” is the most dancefloor-friendly track so far, with an arp-like melody and slightly more conventional track structure with just a couple of repeating lines from Kiki. No surprise this one was teased first by Bedrock with a remix by The Echnonomist (picked up widely by too many A-list DJs to mention!) ahead of the full album release. 

In case there was any doubt whatsoever on the cinematic aspirations of “We Live Electric”, “Wasted Heroes” opens with footsteps conjuring up imagery of a dark shadowy scene before a beautiful synth melody and a slow simple kick brighten things up. They say you should never meet your heroes… you’ll only be disappointed… 

“Seven Days” is a bit of an interlude. Some sci-fi like snippets of voices heard in “Seasons” echo around. It’s as if the main character in the film slowly realises they only have seven days left and hurries to meet a deadline as the track builds and crescendos and then breaks into a simple old piano filled with regret; perhaps they failed! 

Back into slightly more familiar territory with “Heavens Sun”. Some signature sounds from Luke and Gai accompanied by a filtered vocal from Kiki with a soft dancing arpeggio and driving bassline make for a slightly more uplifting and certainly more energetic effort. Although the repeating “Yeah you see right through me” lyrics suggests we’re not quite in the clear yet! 

“Buttons” continues with dancefloor-friendly beats; looks like we’ve made it out of the sadness and melancholy of earlier tracks. The “We push buttons” spoken vocal has an air of confidence about it; the monsters have been banished for now. 

Closing out the main album is “Circles” with Kiki singing “Counting circles. Circles in my mind”, so it’s not a completely happy ending. A slightly trippy finale with beeps and bleeps, slightly jarring with their independent rhythms and waves of dissonance, eventually settling down for moment of a peace. 

“We Live Electric” is a release comprised of two full-length albums (traditionally a double album, if you remember CDs or even cassettes!). A “reprise” album follows, with beatless versions of most of the tracks and several additions, cementing the cinematic nature of Tokyo Fan Club’s debut. It’s a soundtrack ready and waiting for a Ridley Scott sci-fi movie set in the near future to accompany it. 

If you were expecting dancefloor bangers, you’ll be sure to get plenty of them in the form of remixes in future (as has been proven already with “The Echonomist”’s remix of Horses). But “We Live Electric” is something a little different from the norm, a brave double album with every chance of standing the test of time, cleverly incorporating retro elements throughout and a beautifully produced ambient album in accompaniment. 

9/10 – Review by Gus Fraser

Available via Bandcamp

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Tokyo Fan Club (Luke Brancaccio, Gai Barone, Kiki Cave) release ‘We Live Electric’ LP mixed by John Digweed on Bedrock

Tokyo Fan Club – the new collaboration from acclaimed producers Luke Brancaccio, Gai Barone, and vocalist Kiki Cave – present their debut album ‘We Live Electric’, released on John Digweed’s Bedrock Records.

Following the remix of Tokyo Fan Club ‘Horses’ from renowned Greek producer Echonomist, as supported by Dubfire, Andhim, Super Flu, Jimi Jules, and Adana Twins, ‘We Live Electric’ showcases Tokyo Fan Club’s hypnotic and unique sound, presented over two parts as mixed by Bedrock label boss, John Digweed. 

Part 1 is a dancefloor focused, ‘80s / ‘90s influenced half, whilst Part 2 presents more of a soundscape, ambient album to highlights both sides to Tokyo Fan Club’s sound. 

Tokyo Fan Club said: “We Live Electric started as an idea, a concept for outpouring all our favourite electronic music influences into one cohesive sound which grew into something that consumed us through lockdown. It’s emotive, it’s delicate, it’s unique and our most honest mature work to date. An amalgamation of three people’s visions perfectly rounded into a soundtrack for our time.”

John Digweed said: “Amazing album from Tokyo Fan Club which the guys have worked really hard on over the past two years, resulting in a futuristic album with a hint of nostalgic sounds that just works so well. The addition of the more electronic based reprises just adds an extra dimension to the album that will be a wonderful soundscape to those blissed out nights and days.”

‘We Live Electric’ Album buy / stream link: https://ingrv.es/we-live-electric-br1-w

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Mix of the Week – Transitions with John Digweed and James Zabiela

This week’s ‘Mix of the Week’ is John Digweed’s Transitions show 947 which features a guest mix from the technical wizard, James Zabiela.

For extra exclusive content, improved playback options, the ability to download and listen offline and most importantly support the incredible artists financially whose music John Digweed plays on the show, subscribe to his Mixcloud Select.

Produced and syndicated worldwide by theradiodepartment.com

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John Digweed announces ‘Quattro III’ album project featuring David Morales, Pig&Dan, Frankey & Sandrino

Bedrock Records’ acclaimed Quattro mix series returns on 3rd December with ‘Quattro III’, featuring four eclectic mixes compiled and mixed by label boss John Digweed of new and unreleased music, presented across five CDs, on vinyl, and downloadable formats.

‘Quattro 3’ will include an exclusive artist album from UK house and techno DJ/producer Miles Atmospheric. With its warm synths, intelligent production and programming of electronic techno soul, the album will fit perfectly alongside the other CDs.

Artists featured across ‘Quattro III’ include David Morales, Pig&Dan, Farnkey & Sandrino, Dino Lenny, Robert Babicz, SOEL, Quivver, Sasha Carrassi, and Aubrey Fry.

Presenting over 50 exclusive new tracks, spanning luscious soundscapes to more club-focused beats and Redux remixes, ‘Quattro III’ also includes a specially curated album of outstanding atmospheric breaks.

For vinyl lovers, Bedrock has produced a very special 5 x 12” collectors vinyl pack featuring 20 tracks from the ‘Quattro 3’ release. The limited edition signed, and numbered vinyl and CD packs have all previously sold out of their full runs.

“It has been a year and a half since ‘Quattro II’ and I have spent many months searching out some incredible music for the latest edition. For me, these albums seem to get better with each edition. I have always been about finding new and exciting music from fresh up-and-coming producers. This time I have added an additional CD full of incredible breaks that really add an extra dimension to this series, alongside an artist album from Miles Atmospheric who has delivered some quality warm deep ethereal techno that is a breath of fresh air and perfectly complements the other 4 CDs.” – John Digweed

On his artist album, Miles Atmospheric said listeners can expect: “Ancestral communication. An individualist original artist album of deep ethereal electronic techno soul”.

Pre-Order/Buy HERE

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