Compilation Review: ‘We Love Detroit, compiled by Derrick May & Jimmy Edgar’ (We Love)

We Love Detroit compiled by Derrick May  Jimmy Edgar

★★★★☆

This is a good match: spiky Motor City definer May, and firebrand wildcard Edgar. Not billed as an old-versus-new soundclash, more a post-it on the fridge reminding you who invented this shit, May has the occasional look back and takes his time when looking for a deep, higher plain, through Petar Dundov’s 12 minute long “Distant Shores” and Carl Craig’s “Sandstorms” trying to solve its own crankiness. It’s about respecting the essence, as on Federico Grazzini’s “Nova,” rather than turning it into logarithms or another chance for local classics. Cradling the sphere of techno with room for some expansion, The D’s precious aura is championed with core values plugged into tribal pair Yotam Avni’s “Pentimento” and Deep’a & Biri’s “Hova.”

Edgar hotfoots it more to the club, buoyed by May’s inclusion of Benny Rodrigues. Anyone expecting his sexualised showmanship will have their disappointment soothed by his fine selection that goes toe to toe — some might say upstage — the former’s longer, broodier selections. Shock tactics left in the locker room, Kris Wadsworth’s “Connection” and Edgar’s own “Semierotic” do have more of an electro pose to them, but neither are flaunting it because they’ve got it. Edgar starts on the up with his clearly Detroit-designated “Let Yrself Be Free” and makes Magic Touch a true ambassador, continues with feisty Lando Kal, and clocks up acid rebel Kyle Hall and Darling Farah as further picks to rewind.

File under: John Beltran, Noel Jackson, Axiom Crux

Read our list of 125 dance/electronic albums to look for in 2013 here.

Album Review: Ulrich Schanuss / ‘A Long Way to Fall’ (Domino/Scripted Realities)

Ulrich Schanuss A Long Way to Fall

★★★★☆

German journeyman Ulrich Schnauss, peering over the edge with electronica that has been pinned for multimedia crossover, builds near ambiguous reflection doing subdued on a large scale. Shrugging at pervading streaks of light as early as second track “Broken Homes,” his chillout structures push for a wonderment with fire in its belly.

Passing as a pessimist’s release hailing to provocative track titles, Schnauss rules a middle ground between rainy day scratching of an itch and lushly planted apathy, answering no as to whether there’s anything wrong when clearly something is sticking in his craw. Atmosphere hanging both heavily yet reaching out to fluffy clouds on the horizon, both in real and silver screen time, “Like a Ghost in Your Own Life” journeys on an upward ascent of jangly folktronica, happily heading for the hills while turning past psychedelic walls. “Ten Years” sounds most at one with itself, with just that feeling that it could lose its footing at any moment.

The brusqueness holding down “I Take Comfort in Your Ignorance” is too mild to be angry, too jagged to chill. “The Weight of Darkening Skies” lets go of guitar-scrunched fireballs in between bouts of business as usual on the autobahn, and “A Ritual In Time and Death” beds into synth crossfire for a surprising new wave conclusion. In a capricious tender of slate-colored rainbows and cold-water invigoration, Schnauss cathartically forces you to face the music.

File under: Ethereal 77, Engineers, My Bloody Valentine

Compilation Review: ‘Punch Music’s Strongbox’ (Punch Music)

Punch Music Strongbox

★★★★☆

Allegiance pledged to tech-house being a marathon and not a sprint by a dedicated label of close-knit, like-minded grafters, in recent years you couldn’t have asked for tracks any straighter down the line than from Israel’s Punch. Hostile only to a degree, which helps its unwavering temperament lose anticipated monotony, you should know better than to try and act the fool once this 14-track collection has killed the lights. Nickel plated bass beats grabbing at you, skitters of rhythm and percussion skimming within the lines and raising itself above a murmur before remembering that tunnel vision is next to godliness, it’s not here to make your dancefloor experience a pampered one.

Peter Horrevorts’ “Marked in Black” wants to see you sweat, a back and forth sounding like the Dutchman has dedicated his life to discipline, though it’s never quite as wearied as that, and a thin ghostly film covers Muzarco’s “Jaffa” and the looser “The Entrapment”. For variations to an ever-high heart-rate, Yariv Bernstein’s “Shangrila” dips its pistons in acid for a slightly fuller flavor, and DanDrastic’s mix of his “Tandem” is deep house with another acid lineage, finding the club ever more tense despite a fraction more funkiness. See also the synth lines arcing through Mark Marzenit’s remix of “Stringer Bell.”

Strongbox is as it says — it might rate functionality highly, but it won’t tip over anytime soon in its reliability. Disconnect yourself and enjoy.

File under: Gary Beck, Nir Shoshani, Roland M. Dill

Compilation Review: ‘San City High All Stars, mixed by Kissy Sell Out’ (San City High)

San City High ALL STARS

★★★★☆

Kissy Sell Out sells you the colorful calisthenics of hyper-synthed electro-house aiming to go heavy on the B-lines and give trouble to the treble. The All Stars tag is an underestimation, it’s more a Justice League of bass at his disposal that takes up the mantle of his Wild Romance LP and goes even further by adding dubstep give-and-take, rave redemption, fidget basics and Dutch house on a surging 28-tracks.

It’s a close run thing as to whether the mix is totally up-for-it or nothing more than headless. Breakdowns jump out of airplanes until speakers are left slurping beats through straws, on a rave travelling at speed through a hypercolor carwash, with sideshows of wobble-boards and didgeridoos being electrocuted, or on in the case of Jack Beats’ remix of KSS’s “This Kiss,” a cuckoo clock having a psychopathic episode. When the tempo slows a notch, the All Stars clutch onto the sides as if seasick, also meaning the mixing is only 99% perfect. But in full effect, the 4×4 runs are damaging in anyone’s book. Once the squeakiness of KSS’ “Moombah Car!” has cut through ears like a candy-topped cutlass and Tom Piper collabo “Side Winder” has ripped apart the old Benni Benassi synth-bass standard, “Under Arrest” with The Midi Mafia, Eats Everything remixing Hot Pink Delorean, and “Gimme Sin” drubbing a toytown riff, run riot with highlighter pen through KSS’ bass glossary.

File under: Herve, His Majesty Andre, Laidback Luke