Jani Ho deforms traditional experiments in electronic music; and instead, gives us challenging rhythms teetering on the edges of industrial, electro, and braindance channels.
Tag: Techno
V/A :: Almost Everywhere EP (Tensor Norm)
Five musicians at the top of their craft, creating the most blistered and fractured electro-nics this side of the Galaxy as Almost Everywhere provides the latest in their quest to dominate the low-end frequency spectrum.
Mr. Projectile :: Slow Motion Hailstorm (La Luna / Wex)
Matthew Arnold’s sound has changed since his Toytronic days, although not drastically. The tender melodies of the past remain, the lightness of touch, with innovations in musical design…
Mono Junk :: Iäti (Cold Blow)
Electro and techno are at the EP’s heart, yet there are also flourishes of electronica embedded alongside the use of voice.
Clark :: Body Riddle (Remastered) (Warp)
Well, this month it appears that one of my calls is answered with the repress of Clark’s 2006 Body Riddle—not only that, but it’s accompanied by a new collection of previously-unreleased and hard-to-find works, 05-10.
Brad P :: Late Night Journeys (Moto Music)
Without a doubt Brad Peterson’s (Brad P) solo album is an essential and wonderful piece for the pure deep house lover as well as those who have an ear for jazz and lush techno auras.
Cuadroped :: inurmaul EP (Heterodox)
There’s a gritty and nostalgic flare surrounding inurmaul by Cuadroped; downtempo beatwork rolled up into bite size tracks ranging from 60 to 150 seconds is no ordinary feat.
Fleck E.S.C. :: 486.134 EP (Science Cult)
If an AI were tasked with cross-pollinating Thomas Dolby with Photek, it might sound a lot like this funky, freaky, frantic masterpiece.
Paddy Thorne :: Lost Cause (Part Two) (Mighty Force)
Lost Cause (Part Two) is most definitely right up there with the Inkipak album as Mighty Force’s finest album to date. I’ve no doubt though, there’s more great things to come from the label.
Illocanblo :: Maze (Rednetic)
There are albums that build up gradually, and then there are albums that simply propel like a rocket right from the start. Maze follows the later trajectory.
Stasis :: From a Failing Light (De:tuned)
From a Failing Light is absorbing and totally transfixing, a message from the past with a touch of the present. The continuation of a legacy from a true legend.
















