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1
Hi Tech Dreams (reissue)
Cat: UR 071. Rel: 26 Mar 24
Hi-Tech Dreams (6:47)
Hold My Own (4:41)
Lo-Tech Reality (4:37)
Review: First released back in 2007, UR's 'Hi Tech Dreams' is widely regarded as one of 'Mad' Mike Banks' most perfectly formed EPs - in part because its blend of optimistic techno futurism with dancefloor darkness offers a neat summary of the 'dreaming of utopia, living in a dystopia' message at the heart of Underground Resistance's militant ethos. But analysis aside, it's simply a terrific record - as this timely reissue proves. A-side 'Hi Tech Dreams' lives up to its promise, with far-sighted melodies, tactile riffs and soulful vocal samples rising above a loose-limbed Motor City techno beat. In contrast, 'Lo Tech Reality' is a moodier and more melancholic chunk of breakbeat-driven techno, while 'Hold My Own' is a murky, hip-hop influenced downtempo head-nodder.
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Played by: DJ Mau Mau
! low stock ¥113.24
2
Wonderland
Cat: FRO 016. Rel: 21 Mar 24
Wonderland (5:45)
Running (5:07)
Review: Shadowy techno talent Daniel Avery has been associated with playing killer sets at fabric for more than a decade now. He was entrusted with warm up duties at a very early stage in his career and now carries on his relationship with a second release via fabric Originals which is part of the iconic clubs's ongoing 25 year anniversary celebrations. Says the man himself about this new two-tracker, "as with every club record I ever make, [this one] has Room 1 coursing through its veins. I know that room like the back of my hand and this is how the room sounds in my skull."
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 in stock ¥103.66
3
Ultra Dynamic Information
Cat: LDR 30. Rel: 26 Mar 24
Circular Mosaics (5:57)
Opti Chrome (5:21)
Substractive Variability (5:48)
Ultra Dynamic Information (5:44)
Review: Here's a welcome link-up between stalwarts of the electro scene, as Lunar Disko welcomes Spanish artist Annie Hall for what is sadly the Irish label's final release. It's a strong note to go out on, continuing to platform the freshest ideas within the much-mined electro magnetic field. Hall's sonic vocabulary continues to set her apart from the rest of the pack as she elicits particularly nuanced patterns and interplay between the component parts of her tracks. Hats off to Lunar Disko for always pushing quality and to Hall who continues to dazzle with every release she puts out.
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 in stock ¥103.66
4
We Rise
We Rise (12")
Cat: SINS 001. Rel: 22 Mar 24
We Rise (8:20)
Elastic (4:48)
Sansibar & Denzel - "Sonic Minds" (6:52)
2K (6:16)
Review: Sansibar aka Sunny Seppa is fast becoming a large name in underground techno and house. Now, he has opened up his new label called Sin Sistema with the first release titled 'We Rise'. The title track is a pure crusher! This fast-paced corker features a wicked acid line and a beautiful lingering melody that creates an almost acid trance stormer. Things change up quickly with the slow acid wiggle of 'Elastic' that has us comparing it to legendary slow acid tracks like from Jammin Unit. For the second side, 'Sonic Minds' might just be the floor filler of the lot while '2K' is the dancefloor workout monster for the house heads. If 'We Rise' is any indication, Sin Sistema will be a label to buy on the spot.
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 in stock ¥111.31
5
Nosferatu
Nosferatu (12")
Cat: DKMNTL 098. Rel: 13 Mar 24
Nosferatu (7:12)
Slave (5:32)
W72 (6:34)
Sorrow (5:20)
Played by: Rave Energy
! low stock ¥90.21
6
WGD 12007
WGD 12007 (12")
Cat: WGD 12007. Rel: 13 Mar 24
Equi (6:27)
Aether (6:40)
Affinity (5:13)
Septagon (5:31)
Review: Carl Finlow really is the electro gift that keeps on giving. It seems like he drops new music on a near-weekly basis and it never dips in quality. This time he is on the We're Going Deep label and his music-making machines are in fine fettle. 'Equi' opens up with a sense of caution - the nimble drums and chrome-plated synths keeping you on edge, while 'Aether' unfurls into a widescreen and laid-back electro journey to the stars. There is more menace and bite to 'Affinity' with its superbly reverb-enriched kicks and 'Septagon' again cuts loose on playful melodic sequences.
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 in stock ¥103.66
7
Fall Out (feat NAD mix)
Cat: ERC 146. Rel: 19 Feb 24
Fall Out (7:10)
Fall Out (Fresh '86) (6:46)
Fall Out (NAD Discomix) (12:12)
Review: Emotional Rescue's vital Konduko reissue series sadly comes to an end here with a look at the label's final years. In those days it moved away from reggae, disco and boogie towards an enduring electro sound that had a vast and lasting impact on the Miami scene. The biggest tune from that time was when Noel Williams linked with local songwriter Lawrence Dermer aka Der Mer for the track reissued here. 'Fall Out' soon became a hit with its driving electro-funk rhythms. The original sits next to the later Fresh '86" mix as well as a NAD disco mix from Dan Tyler, best known as one of the Idjut Boys. It's an irresistible package of body-popping electro with hooks for days.
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! low stock ¥111.31
8
Strictly Ruffneck EP
Cat: PRIVATEPARTS 03. Rel: 22 Mar 24
Strictly Ruffneck (Come Again) (5:41)
Just Need To (5:37)
5am (Your Love) (5:11)
Twisted Funk (5:10)
Review: Mella Dee is a master of making function tunes that blow apart a dancefloor but never lack character. He's been knocking them out for years now, always subtly tweaking his aesthetic and for this new on on Private Parts he tapes into electro and minimal. There is plenty of slickness to the tight drums of 'Strictly Ruffneck (Come Again)' and a squelchy garage bounce underpins the synth fizz of 'Just Need To'. '5am (Your Love)' is another rugged drum cut with a prying bassline and 'Twisted Funk' closes down with warped metallic lines and jittery low ends. Great body music once more.
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 in stock ¥119.05
9
808 Doves
Cat: KNB 01. Rel: 25 Jan 24
808 Doves (5:00)
Crystal Doves (4:44)
Review: Cheesy electro goodness from Canadian edit and remix machine Nick Bike, here indulging the humorous moniker Nicholas Bicicletta for the second of two 7" Kon editions. '808 Doves' comes through with glitzing hits, filter-freqqed lasershots, synth claves, and arpy sixteenths, all chalking up a downtown New York circa 1987 vibe. The free-as-a-bird theme is kept up with 'Crystal Doves', which concocts a sonic landscape picture of cathartic vocal gurgles and subby progressions, all against an epic collage made up of Crystal-Watery recognisance.
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Played by: Smoove
 in stock ¥142.08
10
Raise The Flag Detroit
Cat: STR 003. Rel: 26 Mar 24
Terrence Parker - "Tonight We Luv" (8:02)
Drummer B - "In My Zone" (feat Javonntte) (6:30)
Eddie Fowlkes - "Hold Me Down" (6:22)
Review: The young Soul Touch Productions label knocks it out of the park once more with this new 12" featuring Motor City royals at the top of their game. Terrence Parker kicks off with the beautifully uplifting 'Tonight We Luv' with its streaming and soulful melodies and nice smooth drum loops. Drummer B then steps up with the mad piano action and slamming house of 'In My Zone' (feat Javonntte) and last of all, the man so often left out of the early history of Detroit's underground, Eddie Fowlkes, comes through with a spine-tingling vocal deep house delight in the form of 'Hold Me Down'.
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 in stock ¥130.47
11
In The Cemetery Saga
Cat: RET 015. Rel: 25 Mar 24
In The Cemetery (part III) (5:55)
In The Cemetery (The Exaltics remix) (5:40)
False Alarm (5:28)
Out Of Control (4:53)
Review: Romanian electro agent Andrew Red Hand has been spotted delivering the heat to respected outposts like M>O>S, Detroit Underground and Chiwax, and now he's setting off with Rotterdam Electronix for a night drive through future cityscapes. It's electro through and through, driven by snappy 808 beats and analogue monosynths, but there's something particularly charming about the minimal wave quality to Red Hand's sound. That contrasts with The Exaltics, who delivers a gutsy re-version of 'In The Cemetery' which will keep you up at night for all the right reasons.
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 in stock ¥107.44
12
You Can Trust A Man With A Moustache Vol 5
Cat: MST 049. Rel: 22 Mar 24
Tending Tropic - "Hondebrok" (7:33)
Adrian Marth - "Icon Of The Night" (6:29)
Im Kellar - "Not To Be Compromised" (5:43)
Cafius - "Tonight Is The Night" (5:59)
Played by: Rave Energy
 in stock ¥122.82
13
Technicolor (remastered)
Cat: M 003. Rel: 27 Nov 23
Technicolor (radio mix) (4:45)
Color Dubbing (3:28)
Technicolor (long mix) (6:53)
Review: It's time to head back to 1987 and the early days of techno and electro experiments helmed by Juan Atkins and Doug Craig as Channel One at their studio lab in Detroit for this one. Remastered from the original tapes for this reissue, 'Technicolor' sounds as new and inventive now as ever - it has crashing hits and tight arps with hints of Kraftworks tinny synth work over a punchy low end with muffled vocal stabs. Pure body music. Radio and long mixes are included alongside third version 'Color Dubbing'. Essential stuff.
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 in stock ¥119.05
14
Edition Collector
Cat: NOUS 037. Rel: 22 Mar 24
Lavanvilla (5:12)
Edition Collector (7:57)
Pana Ondine (7:23)
Palette Doree (6:18)
 in stock ¥103.66
15
Cold Light Wave
Cold Light Wave (hand-numbered 12" + insert limited to 110 copies)
Cat: BT 85. Rel: 20 Mar 24
Cold Light Wave (5:54)
Collective Paranoia (6:21)
Pass 3 (6:13)
The Chamber (5:14)
Review: Brokntoys has been helping to set the electro agenda for some years now. This 85th outing is a hand-stamped, white label 12" in mad limited quantities from Alex Jann and it opens with a cosmic adventure in the form of 'Cold Light Wave'. Things get much darker on 'Collective Paranoia' with its menacing low ends and booming sub-bass, then 'Pass 3' takes on a creepy atmosphere with sequential synth bleeps and bumpy broken beats keeping you guessing. Last of all is a funky cyborg disco workout in the form of 'The Chamber'.
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 in stock ¥142.08
16
Mnemosyne
Mnemosyne (12")
Cat: TRUST 45. Rel: 01 Feb 24
+(82) (5:50)
Sword, NYC (4:47)
Ikebukuro Underground (6:47)
Meduse (3:43)
Review: Privacy bounds into a tenth year of releasing with labels like Klakson, Klasse Wrecks and Cultivated Electronics already under his belt, and now it's the turn of Trust to carry the goods. The goods, as we've come to expect, are high-grade electro and techno with vintage synthesis at their heart. '+(82)' isn't a purely retro track though, but rather it takes a classic Detroit approach and gives it certain discoid shimmer which works a treat. 'Sword, NYC' is a nastier slice of down-low machine funk, while 'Ikebukuro Underground' explores techy 140 in outstanding style. 'Meduse' offers some light relief to play the record out in a more delicate kind of electro style.
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 in stock ¥105.59
17
I Live In The Midwest EP
Cat: SLVMNCR 003. Rel: 14 Mar 24
I Live In The Midwest (5:14)
Everything For The Dev (5:17)
A Better House (4:32)
Brainy (2:32)
You Should Post (1:25)
J-chant (5:15)
Download (1:57)
Balls (4:05)
Review: Gesloten Cirkel has always been a firm favourite of the underground heads thanks to his leftfield taken techno. Now the Barcelona-based and experimental DIY imprint Selvamancer has signed him up for this effective new I Live In The Midwest EP. The title track gets things underway with meaning deep techno grooves embellished with a busy but soft-edged acid line that never stops prying. There is a more electro-bent to the kinetic 'Everything For The Dev' then things flip again into depraved and broken techno territory on 'A Better House.' Elsewhere, you'd be hard pushed to find more lo-fi and battered sound rhythms than those on the lumpy, bleepy 'You Should Post' while 'Download' is another uniquely brain-frying sound from this maverick.
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 in stock ¥99.79
18
Orbital 108
Orbital 108 (limited hand-stamped 12")
Cat: ORBITAL 108. Rel: 14 Mar 24
Whatever You Want (5:31)
Communication Frequency (5:42)
Ominous (5:23)
The Mind & Motion (5:33)
Review: Seven months on from the release of his superb Schematics album on Gated Recordings, Keith Farrugia brings his Sound Synthesis project back to Orbital Mechanics, a no-nonsense, electro-focused imprint he founded two years ago. His EPs for the personal label (as in, it exists solely as a vehicle for his productions) usually sell out quickly, and we expect this one to be no different. He begins by wrapping fiendishly foreboding acid bass and reverb-laden lead lines around a punchy electro beat on 'Whatever You Want', before opting for an intergalactic sound on the more minimalistic 'Communication Frequency'. Over on side B, 'Ominous' lives up to its name via ghostly chords, bubbly electronics and slowly unfurling acid lines, while 'The Mind & Motion' is a deep and melancholic treat.
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! low stock ¥105.59
19
Diners Club International Part 3
Track 1 (2:25)
Track 2 (1:55)
Track 3 (3:58)
Track 4 (2:20)
Track 5 (2:17)
Track 6 (2:15)
Track 7 (2:19)
Track 8 (1:53)
Track 9 (2:24)
Track 10 (1:37)
Track 11 (2:48)
Track 12 (2:35)
Track 13 (2:51)
Track 14 (2:00)
Track 15 (2:25)
Track 16 (2:42)
Track 17 (2:08)
Track 18 (1:46)
Track 19 (1:46)
Track 20 (2:38)
Review: If you love a good old game of musical guess who then get your ears around this, the second of three Diner's Club International records that dropped on our laps under a shroud of mystery. All we have been told about the project is that is a collective of artists from Joy Rd on the West Side of Detroit who are keeping the city's rich ghetto tech traditions alive. The tracks on this, Part 3, are all super short but super compelling - elements of juke, footwork and electro make up the bumping rhythms with smart r&b samples and diffuse synth soul all adding heartfelt charm to the irresistible dancefloor chaos.
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 in stock ¥101.72
20
Midnight Process
Cat: USR 029. Rel: 22 Mar 24
404 (6:44)
Weather System (6:49)
Glumnite (6:02)
Sing & Cry (4:33)
! low stock ¥111.31
21
Computer Age (feat Universal Cave mix)
Cat: ERC 148. Rel: 09 Oct 23
Computer Age (club mix) (4:59)
Computer Age (dub mix) (4:59)
Computer Age (Universal Cave Discomix) (13:35)
Review: King Sporty is something of a chameleonic artists, not that many people know. He started out int he 70s making reggae and soul 7"s, then moved into disco, boogie, hip-hop and electro 12"s during the 80s, and then when house music hit in the 90s he evolved once more. This new drop from Emotional Rescue takes a tune from that late era. 'Computer Music' is four to the floor with electro influences and a lazy break that pull you in deep. Far-sighted chords bring a serene sense of cosmic majesty while a filtered vocal adds space age vibes. A dub is included as well as the Universal Cave Discomix by the Philadelphia DJ and production crew. A retro-future EP indeed..
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 in stock ¥107.44
22
Fantasy (feat Jonny Rock Discomix)
Fantasy (4:34)
Fantasy (instrumental) (5:07)
Fantasy (Jonny Rock Discomix) (9:47)
Review: The last of the Konduko series from Emotional Rescue arrives now and quite possibly it is the best of the lot from Noel Williams. His 'Fantasy' saw him work with Larry Dermer aka Der Mer on what is an effective and catchy electro jam that operates at the higher end of the tempo chart with some classic vocoder vocal action to really make it pop. Despite being released originally in 1984 this one still bangs with its emulated TR-808 beats and nagging melodies. The instrumental heightens that and then the Jonny Rock Discomix shuts down with long-form rework that shows why the DJ, editor and all-round amiable bloke is so well regarded.
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 in stock ¥111.31
23
Supercell
Supercell (12")
Cat: FR 057. Rel: 14 Mar 24
EF5 (8:02)
VORTEX2 (5:45)
Honeymoon Phase (5:17)
Review: The mysterious and unknown Betdat's first EP has landed on the amazing techno and electro label Frustrated Funk, with 'Supercell' showcasing some of the most futuristic electro cuts laid to wax. The sound in 'EF5' is mechanical, robot-like, and downright brutal and unforgiving, while on the second side, 'Vortex2' mixes some dubby elements into the equation to makeup a more raw and grainy sound. 'Honeymoon Phase' rounds out the EP with a much warmer and sensual sounding space-age robot love song. This record has something for every electro fan to love.
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 in stock ¥113.24
24
Signal Sorcery EP
Cat: VOSTRA 004. Rel: 15 Mar 24
Signal Sorcery (5:43)
Mechamagic (4:55)
Codex Incognito (5:50)
The Message (6:16)
Signal Sorcery (PO remix) (6:13)
 in stock ¥120.98
25
Elogium
Elogium (LP)
Cat: AV 089. Rel: 22 Mar 24
Dreamless (4:02)
Fading Forms (4:49)
Shadow Self (3:41)
Rot With Me (4:39)
Elogium (4:37)
Suffer The Senses (3:02)
Cold Fire (4:52)
Echoes Of The Void (4:10)
 in stock ¥197.73
26
Kiss Goodbye
Kiss Goodbye (limited translucent red vinyl 2xLP in spot-varnished sleeve)
Cat: BLOW 16RED. Rel: 13 Mar 24
Kiss Goodbye
Cold Love
DIVORCEE (0:01)
HOT (3:46)
Who's That Guy? (3:53)
You Take Me Up (3:16)
Keep On Keepin' On (3:25)
He Exists! (4:22)
Let's Rock (3:54)
Feelings So Strong (4:54)
Clementine (4:27)
1101100001 (1:24)
Review: Legendary Rephlex alumni and electro mainstay DMX Krew revisited a Minneapolis sound with boogie and freestyle elements in this timeless 2005 Japan-exclusive release. After almost 20 years it finally gets a vinyl issue over there in Europe thanks to Cold Blow and is a surefire way to kick start your day no matter the mood you are in. As ever, the studio wizard cranks up through the gears, gets the most out of his array of machines and explores rhythm and sound from many different angles, sometimes seemingly all at once. This remains a great record despite its vintage.
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! low stock ¥230.26
27
Lifestyles Of The Laptop Cafe
Lifestyles Of The Laptop Cafe (2xLP + MP3 download code)
Cat: WARPLP 90R. Rel: 22 Feb 18
Eye Contact (5:28)
It's Your Love (7:29)
Moonlight Rendezvous (7:04)
You Said You Want Me (4:23)
Let Me Be Me (3:32)
Running From Love (2:38)
Lifestyles Of The Casual (5:27)
Sunrays (8:14)
Review: Last year, someone set up an online petition calling for Warp to re-release The Other People Place's brilliant Lifestyles Of The Laptop Cafe album on wax. Happily, Warp has responded to the strength of feeling from electronica fans - most of whom bristled at the high online prices for second hand copies - and re-pressed it. Drexciya man James Stinson's 2001 solo set remains a timeless electronic classic; a perfectly pitched and immaculately produced fusion of downtempo electro rhythms, spacey electronics and twinkling synthesizer melodies. In fact, you'll struggle to find a better electro album full stop, making this reissue an essential purchase for anyone not lucky enough to own an original copy.
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 in stock ¥174.70
28
Das Heise Experiment (remixes)
Cat: SOM 54R. Rel: 01 Feb 24
The Exaltics & Adult - "Dreizehn Habits" (6:18)
Sieben (Gesloten Cirkel remix) (6:27)
Acht (K1 Return mix) (6:15)
Zwoelf (Arpanet - Helium Shell Remodel) (5:50)
Review: To coincide with the reissue of the standout Exaltics album Das Heise Experiment, Robert Witschakowski has reached out to an all-star cast for a bonus 12" of remixes and collaborations which will only serve to add weight to the whole project. Iconic Detroit duo ADULT. team up with Exaltics on 'Dreizehn Habits', which is a vocal update of a track from the original soundtrack. Then Gesloten Cirkel jumps on for the typically incisive, edged-out machine language typical to his Bunker Releases. The mighty Keith Tucker dons his K1 cap for a punchy slice of Motor City machine funk, and then Gerald Donald's Arpanet alias locks on for a creeping, slippery excursion to close the record out on the B2.
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 in stock ¥111.31
29
L'ecstasy
L'ecstasy (2xLP)
Cat: TURBO 229. Rel: 07 Mar 24
Exit Warehouse At Dawn (3:20)
Tr Smooth (3:42)
Night Is Not (3:42)
VSOD (Velvet Sky Of Dreams) (5:40)
Feel The Rush (feat Channel Tres) (4:41)
Buybuysell (4:20)
Love Minus Zero (5:13)
Natural Spirit (3:15)
Silence Of Love (feat Jesse Boykins III) (4:11)
Theme From Borneo Function (3:14)
Duro (6:48)
Polyvoxx (5:04)
Ascending Into The Clouds (feat Elisabeth Troy) (6:13)
LMZNIN (2:39)
Winter Crush (5:40)
In Order 2 (4:52)
Review: HudMo is on rampant form at the moment, firing off collaborations left, right and centre and, as usual, never missing. That said, this project feels like something very special indeed, as he doubles down on kinship with Canadian techno legend Tiga to make an album in thrall to the surge of feelings that hit us when we submit to the possibilities of the night. It's a romantic kind of techno that comes on like early B12 or Artificial Intelligence-era techno in places, but there's also some crafty hooks and flamboyance as you would rightly expect from such a heavyweight studio pairing.
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 in stock ¥211.19
30
Reflexion (feat Domenico Rosa, Priori remixes)
Cat: AGR 006. Rel: 04 Mar 24
I Felt It Coming (7:38)
I Felt It Coming (Domenico Rosa remix) (5:37)
Reflexion Nocturna (Priori remix) (5:49)
Reflexion Nocturna (6:42)
Review: Brixton-based David Agrella returns after the success of his Baby Ford-remixed 'Modulo 02', with two tracks and a nifty remix of each to boot. 'I Felt It Coming' is a heady peak time track, with Underground Resistance-style drum machine handclaps and an addictive synth hook and all the suspense and drama of a Stephen King horror tale. Domenico Rosa's remix turns that frown upside down, converting it into a perky, cheeky and altogether lighter workout that nevertheless will keep feet on the dancefloor. 'Reflexion Nocturna' (Priori remix) kicks off the B-side with fizzling dub techno stealth, subtly embellished with a smidgeon of 'Funky Drummer' breakbeat, while Agrella's original closes proceedings with head down, echo-set Leftfield-style prog house skank. Not for nothing is this chap known as one of the techno scene's fastest rising new names.
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 in stock ¥119.05
31
Do You Wanna Dance? (feat Felix Dickinson mix)
Do You Wanna Dance? (5:31)
Do You Wanna Dance? (instrumental) (5:27)
Do You Wanna Dance? (Felix Dickinson Discomix) (9:08)
Review: Emotional Rescue returns with the third (and final?) King Sporty & The Ex Tras releases with the first ever-official reissue of the highly sought after cult boogie jam Do You Wanna Dance? Coming as remastered vocal and instrumental, plus again featuring a special Discomix, this time courtesy of acid-disco slayer Felix Dickinson.

Appearing shortly after the success of the band's only album, Extra Funky, Do You Wanna Dance? pointed the way forward, moving further from Disco and closer to the rising electro-boogie sounds that were sweeping the dance floors. The confident up / jump electro drum programming, slap bass and trademark Sporty guitar chops are propelled by a monster swamp inducing synth arpeggio that sings the funk electric, while hip-hop-shout-outs ride the rhythm. If the vocals are too much for some, then the original Instrumental (dub) is also included for those just wanting that infectious groove.

As many will recall, Do You Wanna Dance? featured on Felix's "Originals" compilation for Claremont 56 back in 2011, so when the King Sporty reissue project was coming together there was only one name to be asked for the Discomix. With a long history of DJing and music production, as well the man behind the Recycled Records, Fools Gold, Urban Myth and Bastedos labels, as well many, many releases on the long running and aptly titled Cynic Recordings, his remix arrives on point.

Teasingly drawn out, his mix switches back / forth between versions, the interplay between vocals, guitar, bass and electro-glide synths hypnotically building, with Dickinson's deftly dubbing tripping it out, making the title's question irrelevant, as mind and feet involuntarily move.




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 in stock ¥76.75
32
Various Artists Vol 2
Various Artists Vol 2 (hand-numbered hand-stamped translucent green 12" limited to 250 copies)
Cat: SM 011. Rel: 13 Mar 24
YTP - "Trace" (4:21)
Raw Takes - "116ctro" (4:28)
Ole Mic Odd & Alonzo - "And We Rock" (5:21)
Chupacubras - "Compassion" (6:10)
Review: YTP, Raw Takes, Ole Mic Odd & Alonzo, and Chupacabras are all back once again for some more authentic sounds from the underground. These more than able producers land on a hand-stamped translucent green wax 12" that marks the second installment in the Source Material Various Artist series. Just like the first, this is a monster outing with four searing electro cuts that bring intergalactic warfare to any party. '116ctro' is a visceral cut with corrugated rhythms and zippy synths. 'And We Rock' has a funky broken beat and tons of reverb and 'Compassion' slows it down a touch but has lashing synths and thunderous kicks to keep you moving.
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 in stock ¥119.05
33
Diners Club International Part 1
Track 1 (2:18)
Track 2 (3:24)
Track 3 (2:18)
Track 4 (2:26)
Track 5 (2:35)
Track 6 (1:35)
Track 7 (1:55)
Review: We don't know who is involved in this brand new Diner's Club International project but we do know that they have put together three superb new records, all of which are landing at the same time. We also know they have come from Detroit, specifically Joy Rd on the West Side, and so come drenched in plenty of the swaggering attitudes you would expect. Diners Club International Part 1 fuses electro, ghetto and techno into booty-shaking cuts designed square for the club. The rhythms are infectious, the drums booming and the vocals bawdy, so snap these up before they're gone as quickly as they arrived.
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 in stock ¥101.72
34
Diners Club International Part 4
Track 1 (1:53)
Track 2 (1:59)
Track 3 (2:33)
Track 4 (2:41)
Track 5 (3:17)
Track 6 (3:05)
Track 7 (2:24)
Track 8 (2:28)
Track 9 (3:02)
Track 10 (2:25)
Track 11 (3:01)
Track 12 (3:03)
Track 13 (2:25)
Track 14 (1:49)
Review: Introducing Diner's Club International, a new and anonymous collective, we have been told on the low down, that is here to keep clubs bumping. They hail from Joy Rd on the East of the city of Detroit and are here to keep the ghetto tech scene going strong with a vast array of breathless new rhythms across three different records. Their MO is to get in and out quickly with each track - short, snappy sketches packed with attitude, cut-up vocals and spongy drum and bass patterns. As physical as all these cuts are, they also have a real human heart thanks to the warming pads and well-deployed r&b stabs. These are red hot so do not sleep.
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 in stock ¥101.72
35
WATER: Dancing Moon
WATER: Dancing Moon (140 gram vinyl 12")
Cat: AESP 001. Rel: 11 Feb 19
House In Blue Rain (5:42)
Dancing Moon (7:55)
Throne Of Clay (6:51)
Review: A new project based out of Copenhagen - Aether's Spring comes shrouded in mystery but makes a bold statement with this first transmission. WATER: Dancing Moon 12" leads in with "House In Blue Rain," a downcast track bathed in melancholic pads and blown out percussion around a steady 4/4 tick. "Dancing Moon" is a more kinetic affair that works with all kinds of synth shapes alongside some primal drum machine percussion that lends the track a new wave quality that suits it just fine. Closer "Throne Of Clay" spreads across the B side in a brooding, journeying epic fit for the likes of classic James Holden or a more wave-minded Jon Hopkins.
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 in stock ¥7.65
36
Arseholes Liars & Electronic Pioneers
Cat: PDONLP 003. Rel: 05 Feb 24
People (Ah Yeah) (with Bobby Gillespie) (4:31)
Love One Self (with Joe Love) (4:37)
Up Is Down (with DJ Genesis) (4:44)
Steal & Adapt (OR) (4:34)
Start To Fade (with Josh Caffe) (5:35)
Help (4:43)
Fields Of Fire (7:57)
GRNDR (3:38)
Touch The State Of That (with Jennifer Touch) (7:15)
The Motion (with Mutado Pintado) (6:16)
Review: When it comes to wresting maximum emotion and energy from analogue electronic instruments, few artists can match acid revivalists Paranoid London. They've certainly made their machines sing on Arseholes, Liars & Electronic Pioneers, their third full length excursion. Kicking off with the EBM-meets-acid growl of Joe Lewis hook-up 'Love One Self', the set includes such gems as 'People (Ah Yeah)' (an ambient acid number featuring Bobby Gillespie on vocals), the hard-wired acid trippiness of 'Up Is Down' (with DJ Genesis), the squelchy and spacey excellence of 'Start To Fade' (with Josh Caffe), the acid-electro brilliance of 'GRINDR' and a genuine future anthem in Mutado Pintado collab 'The Motion'.
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 in stock ¥205.38
37
Huguette's Birthday
Cat: RLD 002. Rel: 01 Mar 24
Roulade 3000 - "C'est Party" (6:50)
Occibel - "Give 'Em Some Rest" (6:42)
Hearthug - "Psycho Killa" (Wah-Wah mix) (6:49)
Wooka - "Going Deeper" (6:06)
Review: The Roulade label is doing things right - not only is the music they are serving up superb, but so to do this second 12" comes with great and original artwork. Its neon glow and diffuse light capture the vibes of the synths on the opening cut 'C'est Party' perfectly. It's a melodically rich tech house cut with rubbery bass and great spoken words from a world disco dancing competition. Occibel's 'Give 'Em Some Rest' is busy and dense with whirring sci-fi synths, funky Prince riffs, thudding house beats and plenty of colour. Add in two more equally vibrant and characterful cuts from Hearthug and Wooka on the flip and you have one of the most unique EPs we've heard in some time.
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 in stock ¥117.11
38
The Other Side
Cat: EDGE 024. Rel: 20 Mar 24
The Other Side (feat Adriano Prestel) (4:22)
Out Of Luck (feat Adriano Prestel - DJ Friction remix) (5:36)
The Other Side (feat Adriano Prestel - Marian Tone '85 rework) (4:35)
Interlude I (0:44)
The Other Side (instrumental) (4:21)
Out Of Luck (DJ Friction remix - instrumental) (5:41)
Out Of Luck (Soundrays mix - instrumental) (4:36)
Interlude II (0:21)
Review: The Outer Edge rounds off their series reworking tracks from the archive of lesser-known German 80s outfit Ghia. This time round, they're offering re-imaginations of an instrumental synth-funk track first featured on last year's Don't Look LP, 'Message From The Other Side'. This time round, the band has recruited vocalist Adrian Prestel and re-imagined it as colourful and authentic synth-number simply titled 'The Other Side'. As well as a solid instrumental take, we're also treated to a superb Marian Tone take which blends bits of the 1985 demo with elements of the 2023 re-recording. Elsewhere, there are also three takes on previous single 'Out of Luck': squelchy and crunchy neo-boogie vocal and instrumental versions courtesy of DJ Friction (the disco one, not the d&b producer of the same name) and a more low-slung, dub disco style instrumental revision by Soundrays.
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 in stock ¥136.28
39
Sexual Desire
Cat: THANKYOU 031. Rel: 15 Mar 24
Sexual Desire (5:38)
Sexual Desire (Evening part) (3:42)
Sexual Desire (instrumental) (3:06)
Heat In Africa (dance mix) (7:16)
Heat In Africa (Edited radio mix) (3:48)
Heat In Africa (original single) (2:51)
Heat In Africa (Castro's bonus Heat) (4:33)
 in stock ¥149.73
40
Galactic Melt
Galactic Melt (2xLP + MP3 download code)
Cat: GI 138LP. Rel: 08 Jul 11
Terminal
VHS Sex
Cathode Girls
Air Cal
Flightwave
Hyperlips
Brokendate
Glawio
Ether Drift
Futureworld
Galactic Melt
 in stock ¥161.15
41
Art Angels
Cat: CAD 3535CD. Rel: 11 Dec 15
Laughing & Not Being Normal
California
Scream (feat Aristophanes)
Flesh Without Blood
Belly Of The Beat
Kill V Maim
Artangels
Easily
Pin
Realiti
World Princess (part II)
Venus Fly (feat Janelle MonAee)
Life In The Vivid Dream
Butterfly
Realiti (demo - bonus track)
 in stock ¥57.59
42
More Than Machine 02: Part 2
Cat: TR 122V. Rel: 18 Jan 22
Client 03 - "Default Mode Network" (4:35)
Marco Bailey - "Smoke It" (5:18)
John Selway - "Phase Vortex" (6:15)
Alexander Kowalski - "Flickering Lights" (5:59)
Review: Christian Smith's esteemed Tronic imprint recently deployed the second edition in its More Than Machine series which explored more underground sounds than expected, mainly in the form of electro. British newcomer Client 03 drops some sublime futurist beats on 'Default Mode Network', legendary Belgian Marco Bailey delivers something different from his usual main room techno sound on 'Smoke It'. Over on the flip, Smith's former studio collaborator John Selway makes a welcome appearance on the sci-fi bass explorations of 'Phase Vortex' and Kanzleramt staple Alexander Kowalski delivers the EP highlight on the dystopian machine funk of 'Flickering Lights'.
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 in stock ¥96.01
43
Paranoid Visions
Paranoid Visions (12" in die-cut sleeve)
Cat: HVN 060. Rel: 10 Feb 22
Symbiotic (5:59)
Paranoid Visions (6:59)
Astral Travel (5:05)
Fatal Ending (5:04)
 in stock ¥80.62
44
Centre Of Mass
Centre Of Mass (limited 12")
Cat: PRTR 22X. Rel: 04 Jul 22
Centre Of Mass (8:52)
Balance Point (8:08)
Review: A limited edition 12" vinyl with two extension cuts of Obergman's new album on Pariter! Vinyl only - No repress! Dreamy synths wash over the listener, analogue bubbles heading for the surface - imagine Drexciya in 'Wavejumper' or 'Sea Snake' mode, only with its restless electro foundations replaced by something more regular and reassuringly solid in the beats department. All in all, oozing melodic techno class.
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 in stock ¥76.75
45
Multirays
Multirays (12" + MP3 download code)
Cat: TRESOR 343. Rel: 13 Oct 22
Multidimentional (5:41)
Invisable Rays (6:05)
Drivion (6:13)
Horizonsz (5:22)
 in stock ¥80.62
46
Dwang
Dwang (limited 2xLP)
Cat: NINIH 004. Rel: 21 Apr 23
Bridge (3:54)
Elev (5:57)
Resist (6:07)
Must Know (7:07)
Fog (5:41)
Onheil (7:17)
Problem Solving Mode (6:03)
Tussen Tijd (7:12)
Review: The latest release to come from rising Dutch label, Ninih, is Eversines' second solo album project, Dwang. An evocative sonic exploration of the themes of inner struggles and personal growth, Dwang traces many sides of Eversines' sound, touching on dreamy ambient, breaks, acid techno and trance over the course of the album. Kicking things off with the delicate, melodic ambient track, 'Bridge', like drifting down a slow moving river, with a hand outstretched to feel the flow of cool water below, we enter seamlessly into Eversines' soundworld. On the flipside of the first LP, 'Resist' is perhaps the ultimate dark-prog track, full-bodied and driving, this track strikes the perfect balance between moments of softness and heaviness. 'Fog' could perhaps be described as glitch-prog - dissolving into tumbling drums and pulsating, growling synths before re-entering with renewed force and flecks of ear-opening, leftfield sound design. A fantastic second album from the quickly rising star.

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 in stock ¥226.48
47
Transparency
Cat: MAP 016. Rel: 24 Feb 23
Transparency (5:49)
Real Recognize Real (6:03)
False Hope (Nowhere Street) (5:50)
Beware Of The Fakers (4:16)
Review: Detroit In Effect turns out lots of music at a superbly high-quality level. This is already a second EP of the year after A Detroit Story on this same M.A.P. label earlier in February. Once again it finds the Motor City artist mining the machines to come up with electro diamonds that are razor sharp and designed to drill to the very heart of any dancefloor. 'Transparency' opens up with jagged lines and funky ghetto claps, 'Real Recognize Real' has more far-gazing chords and squelchy acid bass and 'False Hope (Nowhere Street)' is riddled with talk box vocals and edgy stabs over hurried, restless electro rhythms. 'Beware Of The Fakers' then lines up more chattery claps and lithe melodies that take you into an intergalactic night.
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 in stock ¥101.72
48
The Opening Of The Cerebral Gate (reissue)
The Opening Of The Cerebral Gate (reissue) (180 gram vinyl 3xLP in spot-varnished sleeve)
Cat: TRESOR 270LPX. Rel: 06 Feb 23
Transmission Of Life (4:29)
War Of The Clones (5:52)
Negative Flash (4:25)
Walking With Clouds (3:35)
Cluben In Guyana (5:05)
Dimensional Glide (6:57)
Crossing Into The Mental Astroplane (4:47)
Cerebral Cortex Malfunction (5:32)
Unordinary Realities (4:53)
Look Within (4:33)
Do You Want To Get Down? (vocal De Void) (5:44)
Review: Of all the many Drexciya-related projects, Transllusion is surely one of the finest. Coming in the twilight years of James Stinson's life, there's a bittersweet quality to Opening Of The Cerebral Gate but it doesn't hold the force of the music back. From 'Transmission Of Life's searing arps to the nasty machine funk of 'Negative Flash', this is Stinson running at full clip, speaking that innate Drexciyan language through the machines in a manner which has been oft imitated but never even remotely matched. Reissued by Tresor in 2014 with a bonus 12", now it's presented with a fresh sleeve design which evokes the cyberpunk mood of the music in fine style.
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 in stock ¥261.04
49
Bass Boss
Bass Boss (12")
Cat: FTP 008. Rel: 07 Feb 23
Bass Boss (5:07)
Bend Ya Back (4:03)
Bass Check (3:49)
No Panties (3:30)
Review: It's been a while since we had any booty bass or freestyle through our channels, but that all changes with Amadeezy's Bass Boss. Hailing from Boston, Amadeezy is known for helming the trap and dirty south night PVRPLE, but his own productions tend towards many more interrelated styles, usually drawing on anything related to US hip house. Nothing polished or sheeny. 'Bass Boss' is an expert emulation of old car hoedown battle electro; the title track blends telephony R&B vocals with breaks and Rhodeses. Meanwhile, the likes of 'Bend Ya Back' and 'No Panties' lean towards the humour value of debauched jit music.
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 in stock ¥74.91
50
Hi Tech
Hi Tech (LP)
Cat: FXHE HITECH. Rel: 01 Aug 22
F HN WEEK - HENNY_RUNTZ (3:06)
Big Prism (2:19)
POPPIN @ THE SUITE (feat Nila & SDNY) (1:51)
Funny Fuckits (feat Nila & Stefan Xix) (2:51)
In The Field (1:55)
$$$cashapp (1:57)
All A Vibe (2:12)
I'm Pullin' Up (1:45)
Milf Milo (2:00)
I Swear It's A Bop (feat KAYY & ALLGIRLSALLOWED) (2:17)
Fitness By King Milo (2:07)
Review: The spirit of ghetto tech looms large over this full length offering from duo Hi Tech, surfacing on Omar S' FXHE label. That said, the usual straight forward pumped up booty bouncing beats that the genre flaunts are left well behind by an eclectic and well constructed trip across the rhythmic spectrum. 'Milf Milo' is one of the more regular sounding jams, riding a relatively conventional house/garage production, but elsewhere elements of trap, hip-hop, techno, footwork and electro all influence the genuinely innovative and original frameworks. Even better, the cleverness of the arrangements doesn't lessen the alarmingly thuggish timestretched and over-autotuned vocals, giving us the best of both worlds.
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 in stock ¥128.63
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