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Back catalogue: Techno (すべて)

Juno's full catalogue of Techno (すべて)
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Green Trax Vol 2
Cat: TRP 052. Rel: 27 Feb 25
Kesk (unreleased) (5:06)
Zalias (Switch mix - unreleased) (4:18)
Grun (4:45)
Roheline (6:36)
Verde (remix - unreleased) (5:58)
Groente (unreleased) (3:33)
Ijo (5:18)
Magariisa (5:17)
Yashill (unreleased) (4:24)
Botala (4:51)
Gumir (4:49)
Review: We didn't see this coming but we're very much delighted it has: the peerless dub techno don Steve O'Sullivan with a full length of past triumphs and unreleased gems on Nina Kraviz's always adventurous Trip label is always going to be worth hearing. The Brit stretches his legs and pulls out all the stops here to cover plenty of ground while reaming true to his signature sound design excellence: bouncy, minimal but strobe-lit cuts like 'Kesk', twisted 90s techno sounds like 'Grun', barely-there IDM-adjacent sounds like 'Groente' and ice cold dub cuts like 'Botala'. A real masterclass.
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 in stock $31.93
No Contact
No Contact (gatefold clear vinyl 2xLP)
Cat: KR3 015. Rel: 20 Feb 25
Power Starved/Human Waste (7:44)
Customer Service (7:41)
Safety Net (9:55)
Prison Planet (5:35)
Power Spectrum (8:34)
Supply/Demand (7:08)
All Flesh/Funerals Daily (7:54)
Worthless Scam (5:59)
Review: 'Power Starved/Human Waste' is as scary to hear as it is to read the track title. As far as album openers go, it certainly sets the scene vividly. A dark, dystopian, murky futurism where people - or at least their ears - listen from beneath the boot of oppressive forces, inaudible vocals echoing and expanding, reverberating and dissipating into a distance we can never really hear because of how forceful foregrounded sounds are. Industrial, EBM, noise, elektro-punk. There are many ways to describe what's here but they all point to a 21st Century cloaked in darkness and anxiety. The irony, of course, is that this is a very human expressionism, despite the harsh machines that seem to dominate the soundscapes. The distorted screams and thumping bass drums of 'Safety Net' perfectly summarise the point.
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 in stock $27.70
Thank You For Letting Me Be Myself: Part 2
Cat: AOS (7700)2. Rel: 28 Jun 13
Thank You For Letting Me Be Myself
Ready My Black Asz
Messier Sixty Eight
Dumpster Graves
She's Sah Hero Nik
Broken Bamalance Horn
Force FED The Meds!!!!!!
Its Money In The 'D'
Review: The second part of Omar S' You For Letting Me Be Myself album in vinyl form sees another 8 tracks across four sides of wax; aside from the '80s inflected sounds of the album's title track, the 303 workout of "Ready My Black Asz" finds itself with the dubbed out loops of "Messier Sixty Eight". As a bonus for those who already have the album, this part contains two vinyl exclusive tracks; the soothing deepness of "She's Sah Hero Nik" and the delayed organ weirdness of "Broken Bamalance Horn" - both more than worth the price of admission alone.
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タグ: Detroit House
 in stock $23.73
Oasis Collaborating
Cat: FXHE 2200. Rel: 16 Dec 05
Oasis Fifteen
Oasis Twenty Two
Oasis Nineteen
Oasis Seventeen
Oasis Fourteen (unreleased version)
Oasis Twenty Five
Oasis Twenty One
Oasis Twenty Three
Review: Oasis Collaborating is the name of two different double albums that Omar S and Shadow Ray put out under their Oasis alias back in 2005. They are both hugely original and essential works of stripped back Motor City house music perfection. This one is packed with gems like the wispy pads and metallic synths of 'Oasis Fifteen', the low slung rawness of 'Oasis Seventeen' and the brightly, optimistic melodies and twanging chords of 'Oasis Twenty Five'. Each of the tracks sounds like they were recorded live, with two masters of their machines just jamming away, tweaking knobs and cooking up pure house magic.
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Played by: Sameed
 in stock $21.47
Still Slipping
Cat: XL 1188LP. Rel: 13 Aug 21
Dad & Frankie (2:37)
Sparko (feat Herron) (2:14)
Swag (feat Kav, James Massiah & Bathe) (3:55)
Better (feat Lea Sen) (5:10)
Bernard? (3:49)
Runnersz (2:29)
'Rraine (feat Edna) (3:36)
Glorious Amateurs (3:21)
S Gets Jaded (1:16)
Froth Sipping (3:00)
Layer 6 (4:31)
In Drink (2:52)
Playground (feat Goya Gumbani) (2:55)
Born Slipping (feat Tyson) (4:39)
Review: It may have taken a while - his massive debut single 'Hyph Mngo' was released 12 years ago - but Joy Orbison has finally got round to recording his debut album. It's a highly personal affair, peppered with speech snippets from various family members (including his mum, dad, sister, cousins and famous uncle, Ray Keith). It's a narrative device that works well, providing a unifying thread throughout a woozy, musically eclectic concoction that sees the now veteran UK producer give his distinct spin on ambient, slow house, two-step garage, deep house, post-dubstep beats, dubbed-out soundscapes, British bass music, experimental electronica, cutting-edge deep D&B and much more besides. It's perhaps not the all-out assault on the dancefloor some may have expected, but it is a genuinely brilliant and entertaining album.

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 in stock $24.02
Monsters Exist
Monsters Exist (heavyweight vinyl 2xLP + insert + MP3 download code)
Cat: ACPV 1806. Rel: 14 Sep 18
Monsters Exist (5:55)
Hoo Hoo Ha Ha (4:05)
The Raid (5:07)
PHUK (7:26)
Tiny Foldable Cities (5:48)
Buried Deep Within (4:28)
Vision OnE (5:49)
The End Is Nigh (4:36)
There Will Come A Time (feat Prof Brian Cox) (7:13)
Review: Having set aside their musical differences following a period of reflection, the Hartnoll brothers return with their tenth studio album. The break seems to have done them some good, because "Monsters Exist" contains some material that's every bit as beguiling and impressive as their most celebrated work. Certainly, there are hints of classic Orbital in the spellbinding electronics and enveloping gloominess of "Buried Deep Within", the intergalactic ambient symphony of "There Will Come a Time" (listen out for a guest spoken word vocal by rave's favourite scientist, Professor Brian Cox), and the title track's rapidly expanding paranoia. There are a few dancefloor-centric blasts from the past, too ("Hoo Hoo Ha Ha" and the festival-friendly bounce of "PHUK"), suggesting that the veteran twosome could be ready for a late-career revival.
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 in stock $25.72
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