Finn Johannsen – Tanzdiele, Kiel, 1999

Posted: June 1st, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

 

Romanthony – Hold On
DJ Spinna – Ladbroke Groove
Metro Area – Atmosphrique
Tiny Trendies – The Sky Is Not Crying
Freaks – 2 Please U
Gemini – We Are The Future
Andrés – Reality
Armand Van Helden Feat. Roland Clark – Flowerz
Nick Holder – Summer Daze
Derrick L. Carter – Dreaming Again
Isolée – Beau Mot Plage
Dino + Terry – Moon Dub
Sound Stream – Good Soul
Norma Jean Bell – Friday Nite
Ghost – Bodyguard
Eddie “Flashin” Fowlkes – Oh Lord
Blumfeld – Status Quo Vadis
LoSoul – Brother In Love
Octave One – Burujha
Nick Holder – Fill Your Dreams
Moodymann – Shades Of Jae
Terry Callier – I Don’t Want To See Myself (Without You)
Masters At Work Feat. India – To Be In Love
Kimara Lovelace – When Can Our Love Begin
Rick Wade – Show-U-Love
Mutabaruka – Dis Poem ’99
Pépé Bradock & The Grand Brûlé’s Choir – Deep Burnt
Kerri Chandler – Digital Love Affair
Herbert Meets Them Rednail Kidz – I Think Of You
Jamico Feat. Jackie Cohen – This Luv Is Real


Finn Johannsen – To The Bone Guest Mix

Posted: January 26th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Mix recorded for to the bone. Check here for tracklist.

Peter Kruder – Verspertilio
Stablo 9996 – A
Spekter – Pipe Bomb
Container – Rattler
Dresvn Feat. Sensational – Bliss (DJ Sotofett’s Orgel Versjon)
STL – Mindbender
Helium Robots – Jarza (Theo Parrish Translation 2)
Mike Huckaby – Baseline ‘87
Terrence Dixon – The Parkhurst
Arttu Feat. Jerry The Cat – Get Up Off It
Bernard Badie Feat. Muphan – Bones
A Made Up Sound – Take The Plunge (Beat Mix)
Answer Code Request – Reflected
Gerry Read – Roomland
Ike Release – Outrun
Wax – No. 40004 A
Photek – Sleepwalking (Falty DL Remix)
The Exaltics – One Circle
Auto – Ms. Minnie
Philipp Quehenberger – Uffuff (Patrick Pulsinger Out Of The Box Remix)
BMG & Sal P – Credit Card
Brandt Brauer Frick – Bop (Pépé Bradock Geoduck Dive)
Soundstream – Just Around
Reel By Real – Untitled
214 – Drift Divin’
Legowelt – Poverties Paradise
Peter Kruder – Xenomorph
Simoncino – Inga’s Creme (Chez Damier Morning After Mix Part 1)
Norm Talley – Tell Me (Late Night Creeper Version)
Drivetrain – Driven
Gerd – Palm Leaves (Mr Fingers Afropsycojungledub Instrumental Mix)
Cosmic Metal Mother – Time Is Now (Fingers Dub Mix)
Aggy – 808 Vybzin
June – Lost Area (DJ Sprinkles’ Lost Dancefloor)


Playing Favourites: Soundstream

Posted: May 18th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

> Love Unlimited Orchestra – Welcome Aboard (1981)

I found it interesting that this record sounded already a bit like what Metro Area were doing later on.

It is a very unusual track, especially for the time it was produced. There was not a lot then sounding like this. It almost has a housey touch, and a very beautiful atmosphere.

The track title is very telling, it is the perfect way to start a set.

Exactly, we did a show for betalounge.com once with Smith N Hack and used this as the first track.

The sound is very romantically space-like. Is this something you look for in disco? Some kind of futuristic touch?

Well, here it is a feature that definitely attracts me. I also like that it is so reduced. I like tracks that are special and unusual, like this. It is very straight, there is not too much happening in it.

Barry White kind of transformed his symphonic kitsch into something completely different with this production.

The beat almost sounds like it was sampled, very strange. I think it is a warm up bomb.

Your productions are normally not associated with sounds this mellow.

Yes, but this has this certain straightness to it, and I always like that. They hold this sequence for the whole track and just add strings and vocals, and the beat just goes on.

> El Coco – Cocomotion (1977)

This goes right back to your first Sound Stream 12”. I found it interesting that you just used a tiny weird loop, instead of its catchy bassline.

Yes, I often just get hooked on single parts and sample them. “Motion” was more like an edit. It is just a loop which then gets chopped up a bit. I like the loop because it holds the tension for so long, it’s very trippy.

But it is a very special approach to editing. You certainly were not aiming for authenticity or better DJ use.

It is kind of how it started. The first re-edits in Chicago for example. They looped bits and extended them until they developed a hypnotic quality. I think Ron Hardy initiated that. He rode a loop for several minutes and after a while it just sucked you in. This repetition also goes back to James Brown. His band played a riff for a while, then a break came on, and then it started all over again.

So you decidedly edit music to achieve a track-like quality?

Yes, definitely. With nearly all my productions I try to last long with little, and it is the same with other music I like. Simple tracks that don’t need much to hold attention for quite some time, instead of losing that after half a minute.

I remember hearing a Ron Hardy set a while ago, where he extended just the break part of Isaac Hayes “I Can’t Turn Around” for ages.

Yes, they reissued that tape edit recently. It sparked early house, like “Love Can’t Turn Around”. It is basically the same, they took the tape loop and replayed it with synthesizers, and some additional bassline and piano.

What do you think of edits that keep the arrangement of the original and just tweak the beats?

No. Something new has to be created in the process of editing. And as a DJ, I’d rather take a real drummer and fight my way through the timing. It’s funkier than a streamlined edit. That makes no sense to me. It’s okay if you have track with a wonderful part in it and then a break follows with guitars or something else you just don’t want to have. But an edit ultimately has to lead to something new.

Do you make edits for your sets?

I did a few. But they are secret. Read the rest of this entry »


Finn Johannsen – Sweatlodge Show April 2009

Posted: April 5th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English, Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Peter Kruder – The Law Of Return (Macro)
Red Sparrow – That’s The Way Of The World (United States Of Mars)
Santiago Salazar – Arcade (Stefan Goldmann Mix) (Macro)
Technose Distrikt – Untitled (Rush Hour)
Katelectro – Plug (Ultradyne Remix) (Mighty Robot Recordings)
DJ Sneak – Fear The World (Defiant)
Reggie Hall – I’ll Keep On Workin’ You (Urgent Music Works)
The Pig – Are You…? (Rush Hour)
Aaron Carl & Benjamin Hayes – The Struggle (Remix By The Plan) (Wallshaker)
DJ Sprinkles – Sloppy 42nds (Glorimar’s Deeperama) (Mule Electronic)
Raudive – Tul (Macro)
Pépé Bradock – 100% Coton (Kif Recordings)

As a respected journalist, in many ways you educate your readers. Would you say that this comes across in your DJ sets as well?

To a certain extent. In the days before the internet made all sorts of musical knowledge easily accessible it was more important, because apart from what you could gather in the print media and some specialist TV and radio programs, the DJ at the club was the one to offer the glimpse of what was going on. I have benefited a lot from the skills and taste of DJs like Klaus Stockhausen and others back then, who knew what music really mattered and who also knew how to best spread their knowledge as an intense party experience. If that works, it is the perfect way of learning about music. I was always interested in the historical context of culture and I like to connect the dots between prototypes and later developments and so in the past I felt the need to adopt that, playing a lot of records I felt missed out on the deserved recognition along better known stuff, in order to make people wonder and dance at the same time. I still do that, but now a lot of the rare records I would say are worth discovering are very likely to be discussed on specialist boards anyway, and you can easily gather the information with a few clicks that once took quite a while of digging and research. But this inevitably led to DJing with a mere collector’s approach, which often results in a showcase of rare items and not in a good party. I also don’t like when such sets are presented like the real deal and authentic, as I have been around clubs for a long time now and DJs playing whole nights of just obscure music were the absolute exception. I am very aware of the privilege of having been there when some the music people still dance to today was in early progress, and so I like to play older records like I remember them being played at the time they were introduced. And of course I use the web myself to learn how pioneering DJs played certain records in certain clubs. That is not obliging for how I choose the records for the night, but it satisfies my curiosity. I always make a few steps forward and a few steps back with what I play, and I reserve the specialist program for radio shows and mixes I make or get asked for. For gigs, the way I put my record box together has always been the same, I just pack the tracks that I would like to dance to if I was attending the club the same night, and that’s it.

Tell us a bit about Macro and the label’s plans for the future.

Macro was conceived by Stefan and me to be both a platform for his productions and other music we like, with no artistic and stylistic restrictions apart from a high quality standard. We just wanted our label releases and identity to stand out via artwork and concept from other output we deemed interchangeable and risk-free. Thankfully our ideas caught on so quickly that we got approached by other artists and producers we admire who like the idea of releasing on a label that is laying emphasis on individuality and some lasting impressions instead of just exploiting the trends of the season. You can hear some of the results in this mix. There is a track from our first release this year by Oliver Ho as Raudive, Stefan’s stunning remix of Santiago Salazar’s “Arcade”, which is about to hit the shops, and a track from the forthcoming 12″ Peter Kruder produced for us. Furthermore Stefan’s edit experiment with Stravinsky’s “Le Sacre du Printemps” is going to be released in early June and later this year we will unleash a very special album project with an accompanying series of 12″s, the preparations of which have kept us well busy and buzzing with anticipation since last year. We think it is quite a sensation.

You are known for fusing Disco and Classics in your DJ sets. What changed in your approach for the Sweatlodge set?

I still play a lot of sets where I combine Disco and other related older genres with modern electronic music, but I don’t want to do so per se. I like to treat every set as a new position, be it topical, stylistically or based on a certain purpose. This is basically an excerpt of some favourite sounds I play at the moment as a DJ representing Macro. A hopefully coherent mix of old and new. On another day it could have turned out to sound completely different, but this is how I felt it should be at the time I dropped the needle on the first record. Generally, I have a lot of records to choose from and I try to make good use of that.

Where have you played in the past that you would really want to re-visit again?

We just had our first label night at Panoramabar, and that was predictably an experience I very much look forward to repeat. I also did a nine hour plus back-to-back Disco set with Hunee last Summer at Picknick’s yard which was quite immense and shall happen again. Berlin is buzzing with great clubs, partys, DJs and devoted dancers at the moment, but I have no preferences but a good night out, and I have no doubts I will have some of that for the rest of the year. I’m also looking forward to some gigs lined up beyond Berlin, because I like to travel around and witness some other cities and the according scenes. We’re also working on taking the label out for some dates, and I happily await some fine experiences lying ahead of me with that.

Your message to the world?

Love is the message, of course!


Finn Johannsen – Rule Model

Posted: March 12th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

Mix with some record purchases du jour, ranging between techno and house.

Santiago Salazar – Arcade
Scuba – Ruptured (Surgeon Remix)
Sound Stream – “Live” Goes On
Equalized – Equalized 002
Raudive – Khaki
Future Funk – Rhythm
DJ Qu – Somethin’ Ta Feel
Levon Vincent – Early Reflections
Wireman – Armour
André Lodemann Feat. Nathalie Claude – Searchin’
Portable – Release
Quarion – A Night At The Zukunft
Basic Soul Unit – Dank
V.A. – Music Institute Anniversary Pt. 1 Track A2
International Pony – Bubble In The Bottle (Pépé Bradock RMX)
DJ Sprinkles – The Occasional Feel-Good


Namlook – Subharmonic Atoms

Posted: May 5th, 2008 | Author: | Filed under: Macro | Tags: , | No Comments »

MACRO M04 Namlook – Subharmonic Atoms


Finn Johannsen – Big League Complex

Posted: April 1st, 2008 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

I do not remember why I did this mix, but after a string of mixes revisiting my past days, here at last was one with then (mostly) new music I played in clubs. I recorded it for Ali Tillett’s Warm booking agency. I do not recall if there were talks about me joining them of if it was just one of many favours I did for friends and friendly people asking me for mixes. If you think I tend to care more about recording mixes than my actual DJ career you are probably right. The mix title is probably me making fun of that. Contained here is Tuomi – The Expense Of Spirit, the third release of the label Macro which I co-founded with Stefan Goldmann a year earlier. I just wanted to mention that.

Snoop Dogg – Sexual Eruption (Instrumental)
Phatt Pussycat – Hold It Down
Netto – Like Ghosts
Mad Imbecile – Waiting For A Brain
Mujaba – Fuelta
I:Cube – Prophetization
Syclops – Where’s Jason K
2020 Soundsystem – Scott Sounds
Namlook – Subharmonic Atoms (Pépé Bradock Remix)
Omar S – Psychotic Photosynthesis
Tuomi – Expense Of Spirit
Contra Communem Opinionem – Dreamin
21st Century Body Rockers – Ease Into The Dance
Hercules And Love Affair – Blind (Frankie Knuckles Vocal)
Osborne – 16th Stage


Roy Ayers – Mystic Voyage / I Am Your Mind Part II (BBE)

Posted: November 7th, 2005 | Author: | Filed under: Rezensionen | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Dies ist der dritte Teil der EP-Serie zum anstehenden Remix-Album im Frühjahr 2006 und er klingt formidabel. Für die Drum And Bass-Gemeinde bauen Marky & XRS exakt den Vocal-Clubhit, den man von ihnen erwarten konnte. Auf diesen sonnendurchfluteten Flow haben sie quasi ein Abo, dass geht ihnen flugs von der Hand, ist aber auch immer noch sehr schön anzuhören. Etwas gewagter sind die restlichen Adaptionen. Jeremy Newall gelingt ein 1A spaciger Boogie, der an die guten Tage von Clubsoul erinnert, steht wohl wieder unmittelbar vor der Tür. Mr V macht aus “In Your Mind Part II” zwei schöne TechHouse-Versionen, die sich rechtmäßig im Umfeld der guten Seite von San Francisco Deep House und Londoner Boompty niederlassen können. Pepe Bradock geht auch in die Tiefe, aber wesentlich weiter, bis er schon dunkel-psychedelische Gefilde vorstößt, in denen der Groove mit allen Bauteilen reduziert und seziert wird, um als kühner Entwurf wieder an die Oberfläche zu kommen. Beeindruckender House-Dub, in großen Buchstaben. Lobenswert bei allen Beiträgen ist zudem die fehlende Scheu vor den originalen Vocals, das wird nach Bedarf auf Ayers selber oder auf die Gastsängerinnen konzentriert, aber immer smart.

De:Bug 01/05


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