The Blow Monkeys – This Is Your Life

Posted: March 17th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Rezensionen | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

Die Blow Monkeys waren sicherlich eine der eigenartigsten Bands, die im Windschatten des großen britischen Musiksommers 1982 zu Ehren kamen. Der Haupt-Blow Monkey Dr. Robert war ein archetypischer Popper, und nachdem er und seine Jungs erst nicht so recht vorankamen, stellte sich schnell heraus, dass er wie kaum ein anderer für die Pose des distanzierten Synthpop-Blue Eyed-Soulers geschaffen war. Er war nicht der erste Sänger dieser Zeit, der seine Liebe zum schwarzen Soul- und Discoerbe mit seinen stimmlich begrenzten Mitteln auslebte, aber er pflanzte sich einfach zwischen ABC und Style Council, passte sich deren Kleidungsstil an und auch deren Haltung, pflegte eine smarte Arroganz und wartete den Zeitpunkt ab, an dem er die Konkurrenz mit den eigenen Mitteln schlagen würde. Zur Hilfe kam ihm dabei ein guter Instinkt für Clubkultur. Schon bei „Digging Your Scene“ von 1986, einem der wohl wunderbarsten Midtempoklassiker der Ära, holte er die Latin Rascals an Bord, und als ABC ein Jahr später mit dem Album „Alphabet City“ und den dazugehörigen Singles noch zaghaft die ersten Vorboten der House-Bewegung umgarnten, ging er 1988 den entscheidenden Schritt weiter, und landete im Duett mit Kym Mazelle mit „Wait“ den ersten großen Welthit, der sich zwar song- und produktionstechnisch noch voll aus der Synthpop-Tradition speiste, aber im Groove trotzdem schon House war. Plötzlich war er nun die Speerspitze, und während Style Council mit ihren House-Experimenten schweren Schiffbruch erlitten, und die Pet Shop Boys mit ihren House-Verbeugungen einfach zu weit von der Clubrealität entfernt waren, ging er auf diesem noch weitgehend unerforschten Terrain den Schlaglöchern aus dem Weg, indem er einfach auf die richtigen Insider setzte. Bei seinem Soloausflug „Wait“ ließ er sich noch von Juan Atkins und Kevin Saunderson helfen, aber der wahre Meisterstreich folgte kurz darauf mit „This Is Your Life“. In der originalen Langversion, produziert Stephen Hague, einem wahren Säulenheiligen des Synthpops, ist der Song bereits ein großer Wurf. Eine brillante Mischung aus Hi-NRG-Sequencer-Disco-Restspuren, Camp-Saxofonen, melodramatischen Flächen, pompösen Pop-Pianos, die auf groovige House-Pianos treffen, und einem sich streng himmelwärts dehnenden Spannungsverlauf, der sich natürlich in einem erschütternden Popsong entlädt, dessen Hymnenhaftigkeit erst durch die lakonischen Vorhaltungen Dr. Roberts die wahre Durchschlagskraft erlangt. Denn Hymnen, die nur Hymnen sein wollen, sind nicht immer welche. Aber wenn man den Gesellschafts- und Sozialrealismus schnöseliger Inseldandys mit einer guten Melodie und einem hemmungslos opulenten Arrangement kreuzt, ist man schon gleich auf die Zielgerade eingebogen. Damit nicht genug, Dr. Robert ließ dieses Wunderwerk auch noch auf mehrere 12“s verteilt von Ten City remixen, und die Jungs um das lange Zeit einzig gültige Sylvester-Nachfolge-Falsett von Byron Stingily machen natürlich genau die schwarze Sonntagsmesse daraus, die ihm wohl bei der Idee vorgeschwebt sein mag, und die mit unmittelbarer Wucht den Geist nur so durch die Luft wirbelt, wie eben die besten Tracks Marshall Jeffersons zu dessen Glanzperiode. Ich bin mir sicher, Dr. Robert konnte noch Jahre später in seinem Songer-Songwriter-Balearen-Exil regelmäßig abrupt über diesen Kunstgriff in begeistertes Lachen verfallen, als nun auch ihn die Treffsicherheit jener Tage verlassen hatte, die noch jede vermessene Tat gerechtfertigt erscheinen lässt. Da muss man aber eben auch erstmal hinkommen.

de:bug 03/10


Rewind: Hendrik Lakeberg über “True Faith”

Posted: October 26th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews Deutsch | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

Im Gespräch mit Hendrik Lakeberg über „True Faith“ von New Order (1987).

Wie bist Du auf „True Faith“ gekommen? Was war der erste Zusammenstoß mit dem Stück?

Ich bin ja gerade auf dieses Stück gekommen, weil das Stück mich eben nicht schon seit Jahrzehnten bewegt. Es war eher eine Intuition. Mir ist der Moment eingefallen, als ich das zum ersten Mal gehört habe, und der illustriert ganz gut warum ich es ausgewählt habe. Ich war ungefähr 20 und kannte das Stück nicht von der Zeit als es herausgekommen ist, da war ich 9 Jahre oder so und hatte es zu dem Zeitpunkt also nicht gekauft. Ich habe es im Radio gehört und mochte es, wusste aber nicht, wer das war. Dann war ein Tag, wo ich die Straße lang gelaufen bin, und dieses Stück als Ohrwurm im Kopf hatte, und es kam genau in dem Moment aus irgendeinem Auto, ich glaube es war sogar ein Cabrio, das an der Ampel stand. Das war seltsam, und es war das erste Mal, dass ich es ganz bewusst gehört habe. Und ich habe gedacht, dass ich herausfinden muss, was das für ein Stück ist und habe mich darum gekümmert. Und seitdem ist es immer wieder eins meiner Lieblingslieder gewesen. Es gab es eine Zeit, da habe ich es gar nicht gehört, dann wieder, dann habe ich Platte mal verloren und wieder gekauft. Das Stück hat mich irgendwie begleitet.

Und das immer noch?

Ja, jetzt gerade nämlich wieder. Ich weiß nicht genau warum, aber es hat wieder mit dieser Intuition zu tun. Ich glaube, dass Pop bzw. Musikhören ganz viel damit zu tun hat. Nicht mit einer bewussten Entscheidung, sondern mit dem Empfinden, dass dir irgendetwas an einem Stück gefällt, und du weißt gar nicht warum. Es ist wie etwas Vorbewusstes. Das Stück hat textlich ganz viel damit zu tun, das etwas zu Ende geht und etwas Neues anfängt. Vielleicht liegt es daran, aber ich kann es Dir nicht sagen. Es ist nur so ein Gefühl. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Philip Marshall on “Introspective”

Posted: September 6th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Philip Marshall about the album “Introspective” by the Pet Shop Boys (1988).

There is plenty to choose from in the history of the Pet Shop Boys, why did you pick this album?

It’s all about time, and my personal trajectory. In late 88 I was 16, going on 17… And life was unfurling before me. No longer trapped in suburbia, I was spending increasing times in London Town, growing up, and learning all about myself – clubbing and all that entails included. I dug deep into London’s rich vein of “equity culture”, and quickly discovered my late teenage was perfectly in sync with the most exciting of explosions in music culture since post-punk. At this time, lines were blurred. I made a commitment to myself, and sold off hundreds of indie vinyl down the Notting Hill record & tape exchange in order to fund my new-found love of nightlife and the music coupled to it. No mop-headed moaning guitar drivel would ever sully my collection again (or, so I thought back then…). An end to teenage angst, sold by the crate-load. Out with the gloom. In with 808 State, Electribe 101 and never ending weekends… But, the electronic pop I had loved when young stayed with me…

I think it is safe to say that they wanted to do something different from their first two albums. How do you place this in the output of the Pet Shop Boys?

It’s all about timing – “Introspective” was released that November, when my introspection first ended. A thread – from a pop past, to a future life. For them, it was a definite embrace of the then fresh house culture that Europe had plunged into – a relatively brave move for an established pop act and before others, such as ABC, jumped that train… As far as placing in their personal timeline, well one of the things I love about this album is its single-minded stance. Although the songwriting and lyricism is as strong as what went before and what was to come, its formatting, arrangement and structure was wilfully, almost arrogantly, other. Here was a group having number one hits in Europe and the USA, coming off the back of two consecutive number ones, and returning with a release that 1.) was six tracks long, 2.) comprised of extended mixes, 3.) didn’t have their image on the cover, 4.) was oblique, lyrically, in parts… The confidence and, presumably, freedom from EMI’s meddling that their earlier success lent them, afforded them the space to make an other statement. A few weeks ago, I was tearing through the English countryside with Jon Wozencroft , on our way to a Suffolk performance. His car had a cassette player, and we were rifling through his old tape collection. “Introspective” was played. We agreed; it is the “Sgt. Pepper” of house – the sound of a band at the peak of its popularity stretching and flexing its remit without fear of a crash. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Terre Thaemlitz on “Dazzle Ships”

Posted: August 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Terre Thaemlitz about the album “Dazzle Ships” by Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark (1983).

A lot of interesting electronic music was produced in 1983, the year “Dazzle Ships” was released. What drew you to Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, and this album in particular?

To be honest, I don’t recall exactly how I came to own this record. I think it was probably the usual budgetary situation where I had heard about OMD, I wanted to buy a record to check them out, and “Dazzle Ships” was the cheapest album to buy. As a teen, my record collection was built on unpopular records from the $1.00 bin. This was economically unavoidable. It also meant my point of entry for a lot of bands was through their “commercial flops”. And as an “outsider” who did not fit in with others and was therefore a flop of sorts myself, I found resonance with these failures at assimilation. Gary Numan’s “Dance” is a brilliant example – thinking back, to be 13 years old in Springfield, Missouri, and really into that album, it really signifies a kind of social isolation. A “normal” or “healthy” 13 year old could not be into that album. Impossible. So I believe this entire process of arriving at an album like “Dazzle Ships” must never be reduced to a simple matter of taste. It’s tied to issues of economics, class, socialization… in the US it is also tied to race and the divide between “black music” and “white music,” etc.

With this album, OMD experimented with elements beyond their Pop abilities, like shortwave recordings, sound collages and cold war/eastern bloc imagery. How would you describe the concept of this album?

I think “Architecture & Morality” already introduced a lot of those elements. I don’t know for sure, but as a producer myself I imagine this is partly related to the emergence of better sampling technology. They could use samplers to play back all kinds of sound elements, rather than being limited to synths and multi-track recording. I also imagine, drawing from my own experiences, that “Dazzle Ships” (like Numan’s “Dance”) represents a crisis in their relationships to their record labels and Pop music generally. A crisis with capitalism, the demand for sales, demand for audio conformity… and in this way the socialist imagery of the album is perhaps a reflection of their struggling against these processes. I remember reading some article – which I have no idea if it was trustworthy or not, but – it talked about the tremendous pressure labels put on OMD to become more Pop. I believe they were asked to finally decide if they wanted to be the new “Abba” or not, and if so, to change their style accordingly. This was a brutal trend in UK new wave. It destroyed the Eurythmics, The Human League, Gary Numan, OMD, Depeche Mode, and on and on… These are all UK bands, all extremely influential, and all totally boring in the end. Very few groups came out of these struggles for the better – one exception being Talk Talk, who did abandon their synth sound but became something marvelously unmarketable in another way. All of these New Wave bands had to become Rock bands capable of penetrating the US market, blah, blah – dumb American Dreams. Techno-Pop was dismissed as a fad by industry, and the artists seem to have gotten swept up in the hype of possible “success”. Ironically, of course, even if they got a brief flash of super-Pop success they alienated their core fans who had been drawn to them as other than Pop. I know I felt extremely betrayed. I still do, at age 41. When I was young, it was a personal betrayal, now it strikes me as a cultural betrayal. I could be totally wrong, but I guess for me, all of this feeds into the concept of “Dazzle Ships”, the title being a reference to massive battle ships. The idea of sending this album afloat in the marketplace, poised to attack and conquer as the label wants – but stylistically it also clearly sabotages any prospect of popularity. I think it was OMD’s attack on the labels that released it – a final kick in resistance before transforming into the Pop band that produced “Junk Culture” (although it could have also been a tremendous extension of A&R pampering in which the label let their artists run amuck – but that is so much less inspiring to me). And you have to forgive me, coming from the US, I have no idea how these records operated in Europe. I can imagine they got radio play. But not in the US. So my view is slanted by this. In the US these were all anti-Pop albums with no airplay, except in a few major cities. They had to be hunted down. And this camouflaged cover, in a way, also carried this metaphor of a product hidden in the marketplace, hard to find, elusive. But present. I like this metaphor – it predates the queer motto “We are everywhere” by a good number of years. Read the rest of this entry »


Druffmix 32 – Shooting Stars Never Stop

Posted: May 2nd, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

If the D.H.S. or any other member of D*ruffalo should drop whilst in the club from contamination, put them outside, but remember to tag them first for identification purposes.

Ours is the last mix that you will ever hear. Do not be alarmed.

ABC – Overture
Philip Jap – Save Us
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – War (Hide Yourself) (Excerpt)
Propaganda – Duel (Bittersweet)
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – One February Friday
Marc Almond – Prelude
Marc Almond – Jacky
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Two Tribes (Annihilation)
Pet Shop Boys – Left To My Own Devices (The Disco Mix)
Pet Shop Boys – It’s Alright (Extended Version)
Pet Shop Boys – The Sound Of The Atom Splitting
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Well…
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Welcome To The Pleasuredome (Real Altered)
Propaganda – p:Machinery (Polish)
The Art Of Noise – Egypt
The Art Of Noise – Beat Box (Diversion Two)
The Art Of Noise – Close-Up
The Art Of Noise – Beat Box (Diversion One)
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Relax (International) (Excerpt)
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Relax (Sex Mix)
Malcolm McLaren – D’ya Like Scratchin’?
Malcolm McLaren – Duck Rock Cheer
Malcolm McLaren – First Couple Out (Extended Mix)
Malcolm McLaren – Merengue
Propaganda – Frozen Faces
Dollar – Hand Held In Black And White
ABC – The Look Of Love (Part Four)
ABC – The Look Of Love (Part One)
Spandau Ballet – Instinction
Marc Almond – Trois Chansons De Bilitis (Extract)
Marc Almond – The Days Of Pearly Spencer
Propaganda – Das Testament Des Mabuse
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Rage Hard (+)
Malcolm McLaren & World’s Famous Supreme Team – World’s Famous (Radio ID)
Dollar – Videotheque
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Black Night White Light
Propaganda – The Chase
ABC – All Of My Heart
Dollar – Give Me Back My Heart
Anne Pigalle – Why Does It Have To This Way…
The Art Of Noise – A Time Of Fear (Who’s Afraid?)
Propaganda – Dream Within A Dream
Godley & Crème – Cry (Extended Remix)
Grace Jones – The Crossing (Ooh The Action)
Grace Jones – Don’t Cry-It’s Only The Rhythm
Grace Jones – Ladies & Gentlemen: Miss Grace Jones
Marc Almond – My Hand Over My Heart (Grit And Glitter Mix)
The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love (Beaten)
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – The Power Of Love (Leave The Rest To The Gods)


Druffmix 31 – The Up And Down Default Pt. 2

Posted: March 17th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

“For whoever is lonely there is a tavern.”

Terry Hall – Sense
Stereolab – Miss Modular
The La’s – There She Goes
Elvis Costello & The Attractions – Opportunity
Superpanzer – Geheimer Star
The The – Heartland
Spandau Ballet – I’ll Fly For You
The Waterboys – The Whole Of The Moon
Lewis Taylor – Say I Love You
XTC – The Loving
Tears For Fears – Sowing The Seeds Of Love
Tex & Erobique – People Of A Destimate
Prefab Sprout – Electric Guitars
Jack Peñate – Every Glance
Tuxedomoon – In A Manner Of Speaking
John Cale – I Keep A Close Watch
Glenn Gregory – Perfect Day
The Monochrome Set – Goodbye Joe
David Sylvian – The Ink In The Well
It’s Immaterial – The Better Idea
Thomas Dolby – I Scare Myself
The Special AKA – Racist Friend
The Beat – Drowning
UB40 – The Earth Dies Screaming
Carmel – I’m Not Afraid Of You
Matt Bianco – More Than I Can Bear
Human League – Louise
Pet Shop Boys – Hey Headmaster
Osymyso – Fiver To Bigwig
Saint Etienne – Hobart Paving
The Style Council – Changing Of The Guard
Robert Wyatt – At Last I Am Free


Druffmix 25 – Shoulder Pads To Lean On

Posted: December 18th, 2008 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Bridging the generation gap right here, the Druffalo Hit Squad lends a helping hand with a heads up call to the hopes and dreams of boys and girls anywhere, anytime, anyplace. You might feel disillusioned, disenchanted, shattered, heartbroken, isolated, ignored, left over, left out, misunderstood, mistreated, underestimated, unwanted and unloved. We’ve been there. We suffered. We nearly dropped. But we draw conclusions. And we reached out. And we set in motion. And we found what we were looking for. This is for the survivors…

The Colourfield – Castles In The Air (Chrysalis)
Heaven 17 – Let Me Go (Virgin)
Mike Francis – Survivor (RCA)
Chris Rea – Josephine (Magnet)
David Bowie/Pat Metheny – This Is Not America (EMI America)
Laid Back – Fly Away (Metronome)
Madness – Yesterdays Men (Virgin)
The Pale Fountains – Unless (Virgin)
ABC – All Of My Heart (Neutron)
Culture Club – Romance Beyond The Alphabet (Virgin)
Icehouse – No Promises (Chrysalis)
Tears For Fears – Advice For The Young At Heart (Fontana)
The Dream Academy – The Love Parade (Blanco Y Negro)
Talk Talk – It’s My Life (EMI)
Bryan Ferry – Don’t Stop The Dance (EG)
The Stranglers – Always The Sun (Epic)
Electronic – Getting Away With It (Factory)
The Lotus Eaters – You Don’t Need Someone New (Arista)
Spandau Ballet – Gold (Chysalis)
Danny Wilson – Mary’s Prayer (Virgin)
The The – Uncertain Smile (Epic)
Pet Shop Boys – Being Boring (Parlophone)
The Go-Betweens – Bachelor Kisses (WEA)
Blancmange – Waves (London)


Druffmix 20 – Qui Sème Le Vent, Recoulte Une Tempête

Posted: September 3rd, 2008 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

The Druffalo Hit Squad with yet another hurricane session for the party boys (and girls) who only come out at night. We own your lonely hearts, and we show you images of heaven. Yes, it is love, and we don’t move away from it, darlings. We got the gloves on, we dream electric, and we don’t stand back. Reason? No. Boredom? No. Orchestras? Yes. To a Debussy beat, the city waits forever. It shines like destruction, it lives inside us. We can make you see it. And we think hard about the weather, too. We’re pretty sure it must have rained. We dress for action, and howl at many moons. Who do you love? Is it us? Is this a test?

Kim Carnes – Hurricane (EMI America)
Foxy – Party Boys (T.K. Records)
Peter Brown – They Only Come Out At Night (CBS)
Local Boy – Thriller/Owner Of A Lonely Heart (Profile)
Peter Godwin – Images Of Heaven (Polydor)
Gang Of 4 – Is It Love (Warner Bros. Records Inc.)
Culture Club – Move Away (Virgin)
Visage – Love Glove (Polydor)
Giorgio Moroder With Philip Oakey – Together In Electric Dreams (Virgin)
Stevie Nicks – Stand Back (WEA)
John Farnham – Age Of Reason (RCA)
Leonard Cohen – First We Take Manhattan (CBS)
Andrew Poppy – 32 Frames For Orchestra (ZTT)
Pet Shop Boys – Left To My Own Devices (Parlophone)
Yello – Call It Love (Vertigo)
Eurythmics –Love Is A Stranger (RCA)
Data – Living Inside Me (Virgin)
Cut Glass – Alive With Love (Ear Hole)
New Order – The Perfect Kiss (Factory)
Blancmange – The Day Before You Came (London)
Steely Dan – Glamour Profession (MCA)
Chas Jankel – Glad To Know You (A&M)
Greg Phillinganes – Behind The Mask (Planet)
Elbow Bones & The Racketeers – You Get Me High (EMI America)


Playing Favourites: Daniel Wang

Posted: August 29th, 2008 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

> Ennio Morricone – Rodeo

This is from an old French movie soundtrack, „Le Casse“. I picked this for the string arrangement, because it puts a lot of emphasis on build-up, thus linking to the way Disco producers arranged strings for climactic dancefloor moments.

To be honest, I muss confess I don’t know Morricone’s works so well. I don’t think I have been a really big fan, partially because I don’t know it so well. My first impression of this track, which I didn’t know, was that it’s a formal composition. In my head I make a distinction between pop music, which has almost very definite rules, and people following it like Abba. It’s not formulaic, but there are very basic chord progressions that are based on Blues and Jazz that you can do in pop music and that have their own logic and their own progression. Many pop songs are actually the same song. “Good Times” by Chic is one kind of groove and twenty other songs sound exactly like it. It could be “Rapture” by Blondie or something. That’s pop music writing. And then you have soundtrack music writing and it has a different logic. It doesn’t have to follow a certain progression like in pop music, which has a reason and an impulse that keeps on pushing the song forward. When I heard this I thought it is a very good example of soundtrack music writing where you don’t really have to explain the logic of the chord progression, it just sets a mood. It makes an ambience. I think this is probably from 1967 to 71.

Good guess, it’s from 1971.

Because from 1972 on you start getting the big multi-track stuff, like Philly Disco and the more sophisticated pop, and this still sounds relatively simple. My first impression was it’s like a slightly cheaper copy of Burt Bacharach’s “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head”, but with more drama. It has some very formal devices, like it’s basically a minor key. But at some points he plays the same theme but he opens it up with a major key.

Lately all this beautifully orchestrated obscure library music back is popping up again and people scan back catalogues for songs groovy enough to suit a Disco context.

Yeah, that’s interesting, and I think there is a good reason for that. There is such a thing as real music, in the sense that there were people who did music for films, like Ennio Morricone, or Giorgio Moroder, with a more naïve use of the rules, or the very sophisticated Henry Mancini, or Alec Constandinos, or Vangelis, or Jean-Michel Jarre. All these people were obviously classically trained and they followed the rules. It doesn’t really matter if it’s a Bossa Nova, 60’s GoGo or a Disco beat, the rules of the music don’t change. I think that is why everybody is going back now to find real music. When people like Masters At Work appeared in the 90’s, people who didn’t know anything about the basic rules of music started making music. That’s why it sounds so awful, haha. A lot of the DJ produced music doesn’t have its own intrinsic logic and sense. And chords, progression and melodies have that intrinsic logic. That’s what’s been missing. So everyone of this generation who wants to find out what is really musical has to go back to the 60’s and 70’s, and there you find it everywhere actually.

> Carter Burwell – Blood Simple

This is from the soundtrack of the Coen Brothers debut film “Blood Simple”.

It’s from the 80’s I suppose.

Yes, it’s from 1987. It’s a mood piece with a synthetic feel to it.

I found the orchestration is simpler, but it’s similar to the previous song. Again, it’s not a pop song with intrinsic deep logic. Like Bach’s “Air On The G-String”, that is also some kind of pop music because it has a very definite logic. This one has a formal piano theme that sounds a bit like Erik Satie. Simple chord, simple melody, a little bit like Mozart’s “Eine kleine Nachtmusik”. It is not original, it is a formal piece, it follows a form that other people have created.

You could maybe alter its logic by just putting a beat under it, and by not adding much you would have a really moody dance track.

Yeah, actually this is the thing. To be honest, and many people are going to hate me for saying this, I’m not a big fan of Portishead. It’s very easy to make a mood piece. Anybody can do it. All you have to do is take a minor key and play some stuff over it, doesn’t really matter what. I think Portishead never even use a major key (laughs).

They don’t have to, really.

Yes. I think anybody writing good music should move between major and minor keys, that’s part of the magic. Since we now accept that some people make mood music, you can have a whole album of just melancholy. Personally, that doesn’t move me at all and I don’t find it very interesting. I think a lot of people in this generation think that this is a valid way to do music, for me it’s not enough. Salsoul records only have two or three keys but they do it so well, there are so many nuances.

I think the problem is that many people think they can only sound deep by using minor keys.

Yes, you’re right. That’s very true. If it’s not melancholy and it’s not moody then it’s not deep. Which is not true. That’s very profound what you just said. Read the rest of this entry »


Druffmix 11 – It Could Be Like This Forever

Posted: March 13th, 2008 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

It’s been too long, but now the Druffalo Hit Squad decided to skip the distractions (and there are so many!) and get back to duty. The result is a most exquisite invasion of your audio senses, laden with strings, drama and a thorough analysis of today’s society and the detours of love.
We dedicate this Druffmix edition to Katherine Hamnett and Super Hector.

Liza Minnelli – Tonight Is Forever
Marc Almond – My Hand Over My Heart (Grit And Glitter Mix)
Heaven 17 – And That’s No Lie
It’s Immaterial – Happy Talk
Bronski Beat – It Ain’t Necessarily So
Pet Shop Boys – My October Symphony
Thomas Dolby – Cloudburst At Shingle Street (Edited Version)
ABC – Ocean Blue (Atlantic Mix)
Propaganda – Dream Within A Dream
Spandau Ballet – Through The Barricades (Extended Version)
Madness – One Better Day
The Walker Brothers – My Ship Is Coming In
Frankie Goes To Hollywood – The Power Of Love (Leave The Rest To The Gods)
The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love (Intro)
Ryuichi Sakamoto – Before Long


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