Posted: March 28th, 2016 | Author: Finn | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: Finn Johannsen, Mix, Uncanny Valley | No Comments »
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Starkey – Stars
Rustie – Tempered
Shlohmo – Out Of Hand
Joker – Mahogany
2000F & J Kamata – You Don’t Know What Love Is
Slackk – Bells
Spokes – Mutations
Starkey – Neck Snap
Dong – Suzuran (LV & Quarta 330 Remix)
Throwing Shade – Once
Spokes – Ritalin (E.M.M.A. Remix)
Joker – Milky Way
Lauren – Struck (Guido Remix)
Terror Danjah – All I Want
Joker – Lost (Instrumental)
Lil Silva – First Mark
Joker – Electric Sea (Instrumental)
Mr. Mitch – September
Kelela – Gomenasai
Nomine – 99 Aachen
Wiley & Zomby – Step 2001
Chemist – Blocks Still Kold Remix
Mssingno – XE2
Taz – Gold Tooth Grin
Starkey – Playing With Fire
Banks – This Is What It Feels Like
Björk – Lionsong (Kareokieijd Remix)
Björk – Lionsong
Rapid – Licence
Hyetal – Neon Speech
Macabre Unit – Juggernaut
Morgan Zarate – BHC
Brokenchord – Bluestar
Cassie – Call You Out
Starkey – Paradise
Taz & Akka – Illusory
Georgia – Digits
Ital Tek – Violet
Pixelord – Polygon Fane
Sugababes – Stronger
Björk – All Is Full Of Love
Kelela – The High
Posted: March 26th, 2016 | Author: Finn | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: Finn Johannsen, Mix, Uncanny Valley | No Comments »
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Strict Face – Alice
Mssingno – Brandy Flip
Myth – Lonely
Okmalumkoolkat – Allblackblackkat
Lamont – Pondering
Acre – Blood Artist
Cooly G – Landscapes
Kelela – All The Way Down
Kuedo – Mtzpn
NxxxxxS – Adventure Time
Rabit & Myth – Lonely Backseat Love
Wen Feat. Riko Dan – Play Your Corner (Kahn & Neek Remix)
Akka – Eye Of Zohra
Tala – Alchemy
Fang Lilies – Color Crop
Ikonika – Praxis
d’Eon – Foxconn II
Grown Folk x Main Attrakionz – I.C.E.
J.G. Biberkopf – Weakness
Sharp Veins – The Seeing Palm
Cid Rim – Charge
Darkstar – Aidy’s Girl Is A Computer
Myth – Evaporate
Surgeon – Golden
Anstam – I Stopped Counting
Burial – Come Down To Us
J.G. Biberkopf – Spirit
Mssingno – Skeezers
Starkey – New Cities
Starkey – Ok Luv (Instrumental)
S-X – Woooo Riddim
Guido – Flow (Instrumental Version)
Damu – Ridin
813 – The Whaler
Torus – U R
The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love (Beaten)
The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love
The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love (Caspa Remix)
Mr. Mitch – It Might Be
Sharp Veins – Water Logged
Cas – Drugs Don’t Work
Posted: March 26th, 2016 | Author: Finn | Filed under: Features, Mixes | Tags: Finn Johannsen, Mix, Uncanny Valley | No Comments »
How come you did 3 mixes for our podcast series?
The original idea was to record mixes for my wife to listen to in the car on her way to work. She loves anything UK and bass & breakbeats related, but I have not made a mix for her before with the styles contained here. It was meant to be one longer mix at first, but then I found too many tracks in the shelves I just had to include. It was the same with a 90s Deep House retrospective I did for Modyfier early last year. I’m afraid I cannot portion myself anymore. And I hope it does not become a habit, it really messed up my weekly schedule.
Can you tell us something about the concept behind every mix?
The concept is really simple. Mix 1 starts with 80 BPM, Mix 3 ends with 150 BPM, halftime though. The pace gradually increases in between, and the mixes are more sequenced then mixed. Predominantly for listening purposes, but feel free to move if you want to move. The music is a diverse mix of Grime, Hip Hop, R&B, Dubstep and affiliated sounds. As mentioned, the reason I chose these sounds were mainly motivated by my wife’s preferences, but recently I was also getting really fed up with the current high level of pretentiousness in club music. Every day I hear House and Techno music and I see designs and read track titles or concepts that are desperately pretending something but there is actually not much going on beneath the surface. There is some longing for intellectual weight and diffuse deeper meanings, but there is a considerable discrepancy between creative intention and creative result, and a disappointing display of conservative ideas in the process. I think a lot of the music you can hear in these mixes is not afraid to use commercial elements and turn them into something that is innovative and more forward-looking than other club music styles that want to be advanced, but in fact just vary traditional formulas. You may argue that lot of the tracks I have chosen sound similar to each other as well, but I would like to think of the listening experience as a whole, and that for me presents a much appreciated alternative. I do not think it is better than other music I am more associated with as a DJ, but for me it helps to look elsewhere as soon as routine creeps in. I usually regain patience with the sounds I am normally occupied with if I do so. But apart from a regular change of perspective, I also cannot listen to 4/4 club music more than I do for all my work commitments. That is more than enough. I like to reserve my little leisure time for music I do not know as well.
You’ve been heavily influenced by Hamburg’s legendary club Front. Do you think that a club nowadays can have such massive impact on local and even nationwide music scenes like back in the days when dance music was born?
I don’t think so. At least not until you can present a sound that is new. In that aspect Front is a good example. It existed from 1983 to 1997. Just think of all the new club music styles that occurred in that period of time, and then compare that to the last few years. Apart from Grime and Dubstep most new music played in clubs now is a variation of the music that came into being in said period. I am very grateful that I belong to the generation that could witness that directly on the floor. Pioneering days are always easier. Of course the combination of extraordinary DJs, a dedicated crowd and a unique location and interior will always work, but I think that in recent years a lot of clubs did not become widely known for paving the way for crucial musical developments. They became widely known for good bookings that make a difference and for being an outstanding attraction as a club itself. Clubs and DJs can still inspire new ideas and even change lives, but I doubt this now happens on more than an individual scale. I welcome the next lasting musical revolution in club culture though, it is overdue.
Macro has always been a very versatile sounding label covering new and almost forgotten releases. Who does what at Macro?
Stefan Goldmann concentrates on the manufacturing, mastering and administrative side of the label, I concentrate on how we communicate what we do to the outside world and the digital and virtual part of our catalogue. But we both decide what we want to release and with what artwork. And we are in constant touch with each other about every aspect running a label requires. There is no other way, at least not for us.
What are the future plans for the label?
We are constantly looking for new talents that we feel can add something other to the canon. Thus we signed the band KUF, whose first single is out while you are reading this. They are also working on their debut album, due later this year. And then we always appreciate new material by artists we already worked with. Elektro Guzzi for example are also working on a new album, others to be confirmed will follow suit. There will be new material from Stefan as well, which will probably draw from recent commissioned works. And there will be another album with compositions by Stefan’s father, the late Friedrich Goldmann. For the rest of the future, we just try to keep going as long as we enjoy to keep going.
You’ve written for the highly acclaimed but now gone German print magazine De:Bug. Do you miss it? What do you think of today’s dance music journalism?
I actually do miss it, yes. De:Bug offered content that other German music magazines do not offer, or do not want to offer. Every defunct print magazine takes away something that is not necessarily replaced. Not by other magazines, and also not by web media. And there are not enough websites in Germany that reach a wider readership. I can remember a lot of people sneering at the demise of De:Bug, they felt a print magazine was outdated anyway. But every media outlet passing away also diminishes the reach you can have with what you do. And in times when it is quite a struggle to make a living from whatever profession within the music industry, this is a problem. Unfortunately this struggle also changed today’s music journalism. For the worse, in my opinion. There is more clickbait controversy than well researched discourse. Occasional thinkpieces are presented as something exceptional, when they should be the norm. I notice a worrying increase in factual mistakes when I read print or web media these days. There probably is not enough budget for sufficient editing, but even if the small budget only allows freelancers and interns and only a few journalists on a monthly payroll, thorough supervision should be a must. Otherwise you can hardly justify that people should still buy a print magazine for example. And too much online music journalism is just a newsfeed. I get a lot of PR mails on a daily basis, and a lot of them I will find on websites only shortly later, too often without any own words added. Music journalism should offer individual perspectives and opinions, based on individual research. Else there is not enough to learn from it. I think it is a bit sad that a lot of interesting debates about music happen on social media, and they are not even sparked by interesting features in other media. A good music journalist should try to lead the way, and not vice versa. And in any case the traffic obligations should not lead the way either.
Back then journalists were always one step ahead and everyone relied on their reviews. Now you can stream everything via Soundcloud or preview via the shop websites. From your record shop buyer perspective: are record reviews still relevant for you?
Not really. I mostly order releases for Hard Wax weeks in advance before the according reviews are published. Web is usually quicker than print, but still most reviews are connected to actual release dates. The rest of the texts sent my way want to sell their product, they are not reviews per definition. But I always choose to remain as neutral as possible. I listen to the music first, and then I may read the accompanying text about it. In my experience as a buyer it is very advisable to follow your own instincts. I register the opinions of distributors, labels and early adopters, particularly if I think they are reliable. But they do not really influence my decisions what to buy, and in what quantity. That is a different reality.
Lowtec told us that they were calling Hard Wax from their telephone booth back in the 90s and that one of the sellers previewed them the tracks via phone. When and where did you started buying music and how did that change over the time?
I bought my first records in the mid 70s, when I was about six years old. And then I never stopped. You only learnt about new music from friends, record stores, magazines, books and radio. Sometimes it took me quite a while to figure out certain tracks I liked in clubs, sometimes I never succeeded. The internet of course changed all that dramatically. You can learn about anything in a short time, and then you can purchase it a few clicks further. I also called up Hard Wax to buy records in the early 90s, holding up the newsletter leaflet with highlighted picks. That always felt a bit awkward, compared to just browsing through the crates of a well selected record store. But however convenient it is nowadays to gather knowledge about music and then acquire it, it is not necessarily more exciting to do so. The process almost completely neglected the element of surprise and there is a linear way to what you want. Still, whenever I find a record in a store I was not aware of before, it feels much more satisfying than finding music online. Store finds beat web finds, and I like surprises. And I do not want anything to fall into my hands, I do not want to feel lazy. And I will probably never value an audio file in the same way I value a record. I think you lose the respect for the music you are listening to if you do. But all that is a generational thing, even if a lot of people way younger than me are getting into vinyl. It is the privilege and imperative of youth to question the habits of the previous generations. I certainly did the same. But now I gladly act my age.
We’re always wondering how do you manage the flood of new releases as Hard Wax buyer?
You have to organize yourself cleverly and you have to know what you can ignore and when. And you have to develop ways to keep being interested. If you lose your curiosity, you have a problem. Personally, the minority of records that I find interesting outweighs the majority of records I do not find interesting.
Will there ever be a book about those famous one-liners?
We are aware of the cult status our comments have, but for us they are more a means to an end than anything else. But if someone rises to occasion, I hope it is highly recommendable to the point of being killer, and not just writer tool literature.
Finally, what do your children think about what you do?
I have a wonderful five year old daughter, and she knows exactly what I do. She likes to listen to music, either on her little cassette or CD players, or when I play records to her. She thinks I have too many records, but she also likes them. Especially since she brought some of her Kindergarten friends to my room and none of them had ever seen a record, or a turntable, and jaws dropped. She copes with me being away on weekends or working at night by thinking I am at least a little bit famous, and that what I do makes some people happy. She might even be a bit proud of me when she hears or sees me play on the web, or when she sees photos of me somewhere, or flyers and posters, or articles I wrote. But it is not too important for her and she does not want to do my job later on either, because she likes to sleep at night, and have her weekends off. Her favourite tracks are “Die Roboter” and “I Like To Move It”.
Finn Johannsen – Uncanny Valley Podcast 40.1 by Finn Johannsen on hearthis.at
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D The Koreatown Oddity – Title Sequence
Jhené Aiko – To Love & Die
Kid A – BB Bleu (Original Demo)
Nosaj Thing – Let You
Mr. Mitch – Dru
S-Type – Lost Girls
Banks – F**k Em Only We Know
Lil Silva – Don’t You Love
Hudson Mohawke – Ryderz
Jam City – Crisis (Special Mix)
Cassie – About Time
Cid Rim – Red Ocean
Jhené Aiko – Lyin King
Morgan Zarate – SP
KUF – Odyssee
Dolor – Our Number
Cassie – Just One Nite
Hudson Mohawke – All Your Love
Mr. Mitch – Padded
NxxxxxS – Ice Cold Ocean
Shriekin – Red Beach (Strict Face’s Starfall Edition)
Silk Road Assassins – T
Morgan Zarate – Pusher Taker
KUF – Wildlife
Blood Orange – You’re Not Good Enough
Fhloston Paradigm – Chasing Rainbows
Carby – Speechless
Rosie Lowe – Right Thing
Gent Mason – Eden
Kuedo – Memory Rain
Throwing Shade – Mystic Places
Plata & Glot – Ghosted
Cooly G – He Said I Said
Snoop Dogg – Sensual Eruption (Instrumental)
Blood Orange – High Street
Tala – On My Own In Hua Hin
Kingdom – Goodies Remix
Hudson Mohawke – Indian Steps
LHF Vs The Ragga Twins – Street Wise
Dizzee Rascal – Strings Hoe (Wen Refix)
Kuedo – Whisper Fate
The Range – Two
Kuedo – Vectoral
Epoch – Windmill
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