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Showing posts with label david holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label david holmes. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 May 2026

His Life In England

One of those treats that light up your life- got home yesterday, long day at work, exam season, had some tea, pottered round the kitchen loading the dishwasher and other mundane chores, went to the computer and opened up my emails and sitting in the middle of the unread pile in my Inbox was one from Heavenly Recordings that read, 'Dexys Midnight Runners Announce New Album LOVE/ My Life In England Pt. 1 single and video out now'

And on clicking on the link you find this blast of life affirming joy that is Kevin Rowland in full flight...


How much fun is that? The song, the singing and the video.

My Life In England Pt 1 is the story of Kevin's childhood, his Irish immigrant roots, his father and brother, the Irish community in Wolverhampton, rebel songs in social clubs and being taught to fight and love, and then on moving to North London discovering the joys of clothes, music and dancing. The song was originally recorded for a Dexys compilation in 2003, written by Kevin and Jim Patterson- the new version opens the new album, called Love because Kevin realised that all the songs one way or another were about love. It's produced by David Holmes, who had been wanting to work with the band since being eleven years old when his sister gave him a Walkman and his first cassette was Searching For The Young Soul Rebels and the first band he saw live. 

Back in 1985 Dexys released one of the great misunderstood albums of that decade, one that over time has grown to be recognised as a masterpiece. In 1997 after years out of print it was re- issued by Creation and Kevin renamed some of the songs including Listen to This, a song just packed to the brim with passion and feeling. 

I Love You (Listen To This)


Sunday, 22 March 2026

Humanity As An Act Of Resistance


David Holmes returned to NTS for his monthly God's Waiting Room last week, a two hour long show that sequences speeches and excerpts into his musical selections. The speeches include comments on Donald Trump's Middle East fiasco, Ted Cruz, the Epstein Files, bombing a girl's school in Tehran, the state of Israel, the blockade of Cuba, the lunatic Christian Maga fringe, ICE, Ram Dass, Howard Zinn and more. In between and around these there are songs from Shockheaded Peters, Aphex Twin, Little Annie, Country Joe and The Fish, Sandals and DSS, Primal Scream, Grian Chatten, and Habitat Ensemble. The full track list is here

Humanity As An Act Of Resistance can be listened to here

Some people say pop and politics shouldn't mix, but some people are wrong. Music is made by people who live in the real world, it isn't just entertainment. 

Grian Chatten's band Fontaines DC have contributed a song to the latest War Child album, Help 2 (a sequel to 1995's Help). War Child raises money to help children affected by warfare and conflict. Fontaines have covered Sinead O'Connor's Black Boys On Mopeds, a song that in 1990 highlighted Margaret Thatcher's hypocrisy. One of her hypocrisies. 

'England's not the mythical land of Madame George and roses/ It's the home of police who kill Black boys on mopeds.'


In 1990 Sinead sang it at the BBC on The Late Show. In 1989 police chased Nicholas Bramble. He was on a moped they suspected him of stealing- he hadn't stolen it, it belonged to him. As they chased him he careered off the road and crashed. He later died of his injuries. Colin Roach, a black man from Hackney, was arrested and died in a police station of a gunshot wound- the verdict was suicide but few believed this and a cover up was suspected. Calls for an inquiry were ignored. Both men are remembered in the song. 



Monday, 9 March 2026

Monday's Long Song


'Gimme an F'

'F!'

'Gimme a 'U'

'U!'

'Gimme a C'

'C'

'Gimme a K'

'K'

'What's that spell?'

'Fuck!'

'What's that spell?'

'Fuck!'

What's that spell?'

'Fuck!'

Deep voice 'War'

This artist- audience exchange is sampled from the 1969 film of the Woodstock festival, Country Joe and The Fish protesting about Vietnam in front of quarter of a million kids*. It kicks off the DSS remix of We Wanna Live by Sandals, a 1993 single on the band's own Open Toe label. The drums rumble in and vocalist/ poet Derek Delves begins his address. 

'Think you know what's right? Think you know what's wrong? How long? Well, it's anybody's guess, we all wake up, get out of this mess...'

We Wanna Live (DSS Remix)

The drums and percussion, courtesy of the four Sandals and on this remix Ashley Beedle, David Holmes, Jagz Kooner and Gary Burns, thump and rattle, everything part of a deep and murky, progressive house sonic stew, acid house that's been through the wringer and is now on the other side of the mother of all comedowns. 

Well, it's late 1993 yeah, over five years since the summer of love, two decades since the dawning of the Age of Aquarius, two years since the first Gulf War, three since the Soviets left Afghanistan, two since Thatcher went, five since Reagan left, four since the Berlin Wall came down and the Cold War suddenly ended and the Soviet Union fractured. Yugoslavia is becoming an ex- state, a civil war and sectarian murder, genocide, already underway. 

In Oslo the PLO and Israel, led by the US President Bill Clinton,  announce a peace process aimed at establishing self- government for Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. A joint declaration about a peace process in Northern Ireland is issued, paving the way for the Good Friday Agreement five years later. 

'If we don't wake up/ We don't get out of this mess'

'We wanna live!'

There's a sitar, raga scales running down, synths and at seven minutes a breakdown, crowd noise and then a lone voice shouting, 'Party!' and the crowd chanting it back, 'Party!'.

Derek returns. 'How long?' 

Flute, more whispered poetry and more questions. 

The questions remain the same. And now, March 2026, there are psychopaths in the White House. No restraint. No control. Reveling in their power to kill. 

'What's that spell?'


* In a weird coincidence, an hour after writing this post I saw that Country Joe McDonald's death had been announced. He died aged 84 due to complications from living with Parkinson's disease. RIP Country Joe. 



Friday, 9 January 2026

From Belfast

Something else from 2025 that I missed and was sent last week by a friend- a cover of Orbital's Belfast by Spanish artist Pepe Link. You might think that a cover of Belfast is entirely unnecessary at this stage in proceedings but I think this casts doubt on that thought...

It's chiller than chilled, totally inappropriate for this Arctic blast we've been experiencing recently. The trumpet line, played by Pepe Navarro, is gorgeous. It crosses the line into easy listening I guess but on occasion that's a line worth crossing. 

In 2024 Orbital came back with their own new version, Tonight In Belfast, together with DJ Helen and David Holmes and Mike Garry's words- a celebration, a eulogy, a love letter- at the heart of a new take on Belfast. 


Yep, that still has the capacity to move me. 

In 2018 Orbital came back with an album, Monsters Exist, that was led by this track, Tiny Foldable Cities, that showed the Hartnoll brothers still had the chops and the capacity to surprise. Tiny Foldable Cities is as good as anything they've done since their golden years in the 90s. 

Tiny Foldable Cities

Tuesday, 23 December 2025

Resistance In The Dark


This is Resistance In the Dark by The Five Techniques....

The Five Techniques is a David Holmes project which sees music and art as an act of resistance. Holmes played at a gig for Gaza, put together by Paul Weller. Holmes and Weller decided to make a song, available as a digital and 7" single, with vocals by Roisin el Charif, singing in Arabic, 'If my voice will falter/Yours should remain'. Douglas Hart's video is a powerful and discomforting watch. The bass drives the song on, there is a chaos among the noise, Weller's voice echoes Roisin's but in English, an acid rock guitar solo cuts through, the voices return, 'In no light/This resistance grows strong', the music swirls and urges before fading out leaving just Roisin and the voices of some Palestinians. It's strong stuff. You can get it at Bandcamp. All profits will go to Medical Aid for Palestine. 

David Holmes grew up in Belfast during The Troubles. The name of the project, The Five Techniques, refers to interrogation practices used by the British in Northern Ireland: prolonged wall standing to induce stress; hooding detainees; subjection to long periods of intense noise; sleep deprivation; and food and drink deprivation. In 1978 the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the UK government was in breach of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights and a 2021 Supreme Court judgement ruled that if they were used today they would be classified as torture. There are some mainstream politicians in UK politics currently who want to take the UK out of the European Convention on Human Rights. Make of that what you will. 

Resistance In The Dark is a song that it is easy to imagine Sinead O'Connor singing on, if she'd lived. Sinead was recording a solo album with David after the pair met at a concert for Shane MacGowan's 60th birthday. They'd never met previously and Sinead knew nothing about David but he introduced himself and proposed making an album together, him producing and her singing, about healing- and she agreed. The album was to some extent contemporaneous with David's solo record Blind On A Galloping Horse so it's fair to assume similarities would exist between the two sonically and musically. The only released fruit of their work together is a one- off single with David's band Unloved, a cover of Mahalia Jackson's Trouble Of The World. Sinead putting the vocal down in one take, at 5 am at his house in Belfast. Given what happened to Sinead subsequently- the death of her son Shane in 2022 aged 17 and the circumstances of it, Sinead's anger and grief, and her own death in July 2023- the song sounds like a premonition, 'Soon I will be done/ With all the trouble of the world'. 

Between 2018 and 2023 Holmes and Sinead recorded eight more songs at David's house and in 2021 Sinead announced that the album would be called No Veteran Dies Alone. The album was a major work for both of them, Sinead moving into David's house for periods. David has said that he wants to see the album released, describing it as 'extraordinary, a very special album... up there with her very best work'. 

David wanted the album to be specifically about healing and it seems Sinead delivered- songs about being reunited with her mother, about God and Mary Magdalene, about her children, about dreams of being in heaven and the value of a soul, about pain, loss and grief, injustice and suffering, addiction and mental health, redemption, survival and about no veteran dying alone. It could be seen as Sinead's final statement, her last will and testament, her reckoning with the world. Unfortunately it has become mired in wranglings and music business murkiness. Its release is outside David Holmes' control and in the hands of Sinead's estate and record company. Maybe it'll come out, maybe it won't. 

In 2023 David's Necessary Genius single listed the misfits and dreamers, outsiders and radicals that have inspired him ending with the line 'I believe in Sinead O'Connor/ I believe in refugees'. Which takes us back to The Five Techniques and Resistance In The Dark. 



Sunday, 14 December 2025

Fifty Minutes Of Soundtrack Saturday


2025's year long Saturday series Soundtrack Saturday has reached the final reel but before the credits roll it seemed that a Sunday mix of various songs and scores from the various film soundtracks I've written about would make a good Sunday mix. This is the result, seventeen tracks from sixteen films, sequenced with something approaching a narrative arc- it starts out in the desert with Harry Dean Stanton tramping round the dust, stays out west for while and then shifts to Tokyo, sleeplessness and jet lag. We jump around some other locations- Long Island, France, Memphis- and have visions of a post- apocalyptic USA before the climax, a death, some levity and then Rutger Hauer in the rain. 

The photo at the top is of Stretford Essoldo, a former cinema just up the road from me, a beautiful 1930s building that has been sadly empty and unused for decades. 

Fifty Minutes Of Soundtrack Saturday

  • Ry Cooder: Cancion Mixteca
  • Ennio Morricone: Watch Chimes
  • Bob Dylan: Billy 7
  • Joe Strummer: Tennessee Rain
  • Tom Waits: Jockey Full Of Bourbon
  • Kevin Shields: Intro- Tokyo
  • Kevin Shields: City Girl
  • Mick Jones: Long Island
  • David Holmes: I Think You Flooded It
  • John Lurie: Tuesday Night In Memphis
  • Gabriel Yared: 37 Degrees 2 Le Matin
  • Nick Cave and Warren Ellis: The Road
  • John Barry: Theme From Midnight Cowboy
  • Brian Eno: Deep Blue Day
  • Son House: Death Letter Blues
  • B.J. Thomas: Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head
  • Vangelis: Tears In Rain

Cancion Mixteca is from Paris, Texas, Wim Wenders' 1984 film, a Ry Cooder soundtrack with some dialogue from the film that stands up as an album in its own right.  

Watch Chimes is from Sergio Leone's For A Few Dollars More, the second installment of the Dollars trilogy, released in 1967. 

Billy is from Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid, Sam Peckinpah's 1973 Western, Bob Dylan contributing the soundtrack and appearing in the film. 

Joe Strummer did the soundtrack for Walker, Alex Cox's 1987 Western- one of Joe's best 'wilderness years' songs. 

A Jockey Full Of Bourbon appears in Down By Law, Jim Jarmusch's 1986 film- Tom Waits is one of the three stars of the film as well as being a key part of the soundtrack. 

Intro- Tokyo and City Girl are from Lost In Translation, Sofia Coppola's 2003 film, Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson lost in Tokyo. 

Mick Jones provided three tracks for the 1993 film Amongst Friends- Long Island is the most complete, a Jones solo song. 

I Think You Flooded It is from Out Of Sight, the first of many David Holmes- Steven Soderbergh soundtrack collaborations, released in 1998. 

John Lurie's score for Mystery Train had to compete with some big hitters- Elvis' Mystery Train for one, Roy Orbison's Domino for another. A second Jim Jarmusch film in this mix- the use of music is central to Jarmusch's films. 

Gabriel Yared's guitar playing is from the soundtrack to Betty Blue, another late 80s film that made a deep impression on me- Beatrice Dalle made quite an impression too. 

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis' soundtrack work spans all sorts of movies and documentaries. They began with the soundtrack to 2009 film The Road, a harrowing version of Cormac McCarthy's equally harrowing novel. 

Theme From Midnight Cowboy is gorgeous, a John Barry highpoint from a composer who recorded dozens of soundtracks. That harmonica. Stunning. 

Brian Eno's soundtrack work is wide and varied and an Eno only soundtrack mix would definitely work- Deep Blue Day is from the 1996 film Trainspotting but originally on Another Green World, Eno's 1975 album. 

Son House's Death Letter Blues is from 1965, just Son and a metal bodied resonator guitar. It's a stunning song and performance, Son's lyrics and performance can chill to the bone. It appeared on the soundtrack to On The Road, the  2012 version of Jack Kerouac's novel. 

B.J. Thomas' Raindrops Keep falling On My Head was a worldwide smash following its appearance in the 1969 film Butch Cassady And The Sundance Kid. The song is probably what the film is best known for, along with the two stars- Robert Redford and Paul Newman- and the famous shoot out ending. 

At the end of Blade Runner, Ridley Scott's 1982 sci fi/ film noir version of Philip K. Dick's novel Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?, Rutger Hauer sits on top of a crumbling building in the rain, holding a dove and improvises a farewell speech as Harrison Ford slumps in front of him, his life saved. 'All these moments will be lost in time', Hauer says as Vangelis' synth score plays. But they're not are they- they replay endlessly, equally moving each time. 


Saturday, 29 November 2025

Sabres, Nicky Maguire And The White Hotel

Haunted Dancehall was the second Sabres Of Paradise album, released in November 1994. It was recorded as and should be listened to as a whole piece, a musical wander round the minds, music and influences of Andrew Weatherall, Jagz Kooner and Gary Burns. 

On the inner sleeves were extracts from a novel, also Haunted Dancehall, by James Woodbourne. The extracts follow a character called Maguire round London at night, a London noir novel taking in Battersea Bridge, Borough tube station, Soho, Berwick Street and a strip club on Dean Street*. In the final extract Maguire pulls some planks off the front of a boarded up cafe and steps inside...


Those of us that spent time in second hand books shops looking for Haunted Dancehall (back in the pre- internet age) found out fairly quickly that no- one had heard of it. Unsurprisingly really, as the novel didn't exist. Neither did James Woodbourne. The author of the text was Andrew Weatherall, using one of his many pseudonyms to create one of his many worlds and subcultures. 

On Wednesday night Sabres Of Paradise arrived in Salford to play at The White Hotel, the second stop on their week long tour of the UK, bringing those tracks from 1994 and 1995 to life on stage, Jagz and Gary with the 90s live band, Nick Abnett (bass), Rich Thair (percussion an drums) and Phil Mossman (guitar, keys, synth). While returning home from the gig, elated, in the murky black Mancunian night I wondered about whether  James Woodbourne could make a to return to the Haunted Dancehall...

Maguire was lost, no doubt about it, lost and a long way from home. The East End of London he knew very well, and Soho like the back of his hand, but he was now well out of his manor. He stepped off the train at Piccadilly, through the barrier and down the escalator. A quick pint in a pub across the road from the station, The Bull's Head he recalled now some days later, to settle the nerves and then he stepped back into night. He headed up Dale Street and round what locals called the Northern Quarter ('as if this northern town was somehow French', he snorted to himself). The backstreets seemed familiar, similar to some of the ones in London but dirtier and wet, always wet. He slipped down Shudehill and pausing to check his bearings turned right up Cheetham Hill Road. Ahead of him the tower and walls of the infamous Strangeways prison loomed out of the darkness. 

He was only five minutes from the city centre but this was a different world, vape shops and takeaways, a distinct lack of gentrification. Turning left- 'can it be down here?', he asked himself, 'a music venue round here?'- he saw concrete fences, barbed wire, yards with barking Alsatians, graffiti, urban dereliction and businesses that couldn't be totally law abiding. He could hear the thump of the bass now, up the road, and he continued, turning right past a few optimistically parked cars. Ahead of him, The White Hotel. 

Someone, Maguire thought, was having a laugh. This place was not a hotel, never had been and it wasn't white either. It looked like a rundown mechanics garage, single storey and unadorned, with a bouncer outside. Maguire approached the man sitting by the door. 'I'm on the list', Maguire muttered. The list was checked and indeed, Maguire was on it. 'Round the back', the doorman said. He walked round the building, past the smokers and through the door. Maguire entered The White Hotel. Colourbox were playing through the sound system, the dub bassline rattling round the building and gunshots echoing out. 

Looks Like We're Shy One Horse

Inside it was clear the venue was indeed once a mechanics garage. There was a hole in the wall covered in a sheet, the pit to work on the underneath of cars was still there and a roller shutter formed the back wall of the stage. The stage was only a couple feet high and there was no barrier between the stage and the crowd. The room had a pillar in the centre and a girder formed a cross, ready for some urban crucifixion. The DJ, one Alex Knight, was playing from inside a cage. Maguire moved inside the room and shuffled round the back. He waited. It smelt of damp, grease and beer. Nearby someone lit a spliff. The room was busy and still filling up. They all seemed to know each other. 

Colourbox faded into In The Nursery and as the symphonic strings played five figures took the stage, The Sabres Of Paradise, suited and booted. At the back of the stage, Jagz Kooner, behind a table full of boxes and mixers. Near the front Mossman, behatted, strapping his guitar on. The bassist, Abnett or something like that Maguire remembered, looked sharp, short hair, suit and tie and bass worn suitably low. They started up, a slow ambient intro, the guitar and synths kicking in gently, the sound moody and dark. Like the venue. Maguire nodded along. 

Mossman hit the riff and the song shifted, the drums kicked in and everything lurched, a James Bond theme but if Bond had been a proper wrong 'un, a small time hood rather than an international spy. The Sabres weren't playing the songs as Maguire remembered them, they were looser, dubbier, more drawn out with the bass loud and central. There were parts where Abnett pummelled his bass for ages, the noise filling the venue, a huge wall of distortion, then suddenly cutting it and the band back into the track. Maguire grinned to himself. All this on a wet Wednesday in an unloved corner of Salford.

Kooner hit a button or moved a fader or did something and the horns from Theme blared out. A cheer from the crowd and the nodding and shuffling increased, the hip hop drums thumping and the gnarly guitar hook caught in a whirl, going round and round. A pause and they slid into Edge 6. 'What a track', Maguire thought, 'and a fuckin' B-side too'. The drums shuffled, the bass pumped. The descending mournful keys at half speed. The spirit of King Tubby lurked somewhere in the room Maguire thought- maybe trapped in that fuckin' mechanic's pit. 

Years before Maguire had encountered Wilmot, chasing that trumpet line. It repeated its magic, the trumpet and the keys and snatches of a vocal, 'ai ai aiee'. Maguire hadn't expected to hear these songs played live, not three decades after the band split and, what was it now, nearly five years after the man that dreamt it all up had sadly left this world. But here he was, among two hundred and fifty other revellers, hearing Wilmot. The skank of Wilmot. Fuck. 

'Chase that tune, scour the shacks, pester the sound boys', Maguire recalled, a line from a book he once read.

On it went, the band now in their element, feeding off the crowd and playing the songs as if they were both brand new and centuries old. Kooner stopped between two of the songs and made a dedication to Mani, 'a fucking great musicians and a fucking great bloke', Jagz said and they began to play Smokebelch, the twinkles of the ambient, beatless version lighting up the darkness of the room. Abnett's bass and Burns' piano and oh, what a moment. Grown men with tears running down their faces. Even Maguire was moved. 

Clock Factory, many minutes of delicious weirdness located somewhere between ambient and industrial, a ticking of clocks and doomy chords, a track that somehow expands time and makes it stop. Maguire rubbed his chin. This was special, it made him think of things bigger than himself. Music and its power. Both beautiful and strange, he thought. 

There was a pause and then it got louder, thumping kick drums and whoops from the crowd, metallic clangs and throbbing bass, that Sabres collision of spectral melodies and thumping rhythms, everyone, band and crowd in the same place. Mossman waved his hands in the air, encouraging the crowd. Kooner conducted from the back, red shirt and black tie. 

Still Fighting started with long chords and tension, and then the release, the thump of the bass drum. That's the spirit, Maguire thought, that's it, they're still fighting. Crashing drums and early 90s synths, and then that two note whistle, the track betraying its origins, a remix of a remix, a version of a version, Don't Fight It, Feel It, Nicolson's topline refrain- doo doo doo dit dit- ricocheting round the space, this former industrial unit, God knows how many cars ended up in here, Cortinas, Datsuns, Fords, knackered vans and failed MOTs, oil and spanners all over the place, mechanics in dirty overalls- and now this epic piece of music filling it. Still fighting.

The Sabres took the applause and headed off stage, through the hole in the wall. A few minutes later they returned, as the crowd knew they would, cheers and hollers welcoming them. They went in for the kill, more Smokebelch, the David Holmes version, dancing piano lines and that enormous acid house squiggle, the drums battering the walls and the roller shutter. One of the venue's speakers was right behind Maguire and he could feel the music, the bass rippling his trousers and rattling his chest. Behind him a scouser was lost in his own world, his head in the bassbin. At the back a woman danced on a step against the wall, grinning, lost in the moment. In front of him people jumped up and down, danced and span. Then the breakdown and the drummer, Thair, on the snare, recreating Holmes' majorettes- then the bass bumping up and down and those Smokebelch melody lines riding the wave, on and on... Maguire had to pinch himself to check it was real, that he wasn't imagining it from his room in Limehouse, an armchair reverie. No, it was real and it was happening right in front of him. The Sabres stepped out from behind their machines, moved to the edge of the stage and arms around each other, took their bow, all smiles. 

Afterwards, in the outdoor area, the band milled around with punters and well wishers, taking in the Salford air and drizzle. Maguire overheard Jagz telling a fan that when they arrived he saw the graffiti and barbed wire and thought 'this is exactly where Sabres should be playing'. He looked on from a distance, pleased he'd made the effort. Maguire enjoyed the pursuit, the chasing of the tune. He contemplated the walk back to Piccadilly and wondered whether he could find somewhere on the way to have a drink. Maguire walked past the band and their fans and stepped into the street outside...

Smokebelch (David Homes Remix)

* The strip club on Dean Street was the home of the Sabres Of Paradise office, which operated on the first floor above the strip club. 

Thanks to Linda Gardiner for the photo of the band onstage.

Saturday, 18 October 2025

Soundtrack Saturday

Soundtrack Saturday has been running all year and I've got this far- mid- October- without mentioning Quentin Tarantino. Tarantino had a big impact in the world of cinema 90s and if nothing else gave soundtracks a huge shot in the arm (maybe shot in the chest would be more appropriate given the famous scene in Pulp Fiction where they revive an overdosed Uma Thurman). Today's soundtrack isn't from a Tarantino film but instead Steven Soderbergh's 1998 movie Out Of Sight. Soundtrack albums with several revived pop culture songs with dialogue from the film spliced in are surely indebted to Tarantino and the popularity of his soundtracks for Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill and Jackie Brown.

Out Of Sight is based on an Elmore Leonard novel, a crime caper about a bank robber, Foley, played by George Clooney. Soderbergh said that Out Of Sight was a deliberate move on his part to leave the arthouse world ('arthouse ghetto' I think he may have described it as) and make a blockbuster. 

The soundtrack was scored by David Holmes who Soderbergh hired to do just a few scenes but they clicked and Holmes stayed around to do the whole film, working round the clock to meet the deadlines. In keeping with the film's influences Holmes drew on other soundtrack artists and their work- Lalo Schiffrin and Quincy Jones- plus a slew of American funk and jazz artists. The soundtrack is best listened to in one hit, it makes perfect sense as a single piece, fifteen songs, nine original Holmes pieces with dialogue from the film and two songs from The Isley Brothers and one each from Dean Martin, Walter Wanderly and Mungo Santamaria. You can probably pick the CD up for pennies.

It's Your Thing opens with Clooney giving instructions to a bank teller who he's robbing and then fades into The Isley Brothers and their 1969 song.

 It's Your Thing 

I Think You Flooded It is by Holmes but starts with the sound of a car engine not starting and voices from the film, followed by a jazzy Holmes instrumental.

I Think You Flooded It

Watermelon Man is a Herbie Hancock song, 1962 bop jazz. The version of Out Of Sight is by Mungo Santamaria, a 1963 hit for the Afro- Cuban percussionist. 

Watermelon Man

Rip Rip is another David Holmes piece, more dialogue, wah wah bass and organ, guitar licks and funky drums. 

Rip Rip

David Holmes has worked with Soderbergh often since Out Of Sight- the Ocean's films, No Sudden Move, The Laundromat and this year's Black Bag. David was booked to play The Golden Lion this autumn. Holmes at The Lion is always a great night out- he had to apologise for being double booked. It clashed with his required attendance at a film festival/ awards event in Toronto with Steven Soderbergh which as acceptable reasons for absence go, ranks pretty highly. 


Thursday, 9 October 2025

Holy Tongue

Last week David Holmes returned to NTS for his two hour expedition into music that is God's Waiting Room. The set is constructed partly around the psychedelic soul, global/ dub and eletronic end of things- the first half hour alone starting with Autarkic is a trip down the river. Later on Sly Stone turns up along with Holy Tongue, Sault, Sly and Robbie, Hugo Nicolson and a host of others. It's deep and can be listened to here with the tracklist here

Holy Tongue have been taking over my listening time a little. Holy Tongue began as a studio project between percussionist Valentina Maggaletti and producer Al Wootton. After releasing a handful of EPs since 2020 they have become a three piece for live shows with Susumu Mukai joining them on bass and guitar. The sound they cook up is a stew of drone, psychedelia and spiritual dub- think On U Sound especially African Head Charge, the expressionism and freedom of Alice Coltrane and early 80s punk- funkers like 23 Skidoo but with a very 2020s production feel, a sound built around echo and groove. 

This half hour film captures them playing live in their East London studio in early November 2021, a mesmerising thirty minutes of drums, percussion, synth and bass guitar. 

Earlier this year they released a 7" single on Trule, the A- side Ambulance Dub a serious slice of experimental, spiritual dub. The 7" and digital are at Bandcamp. Heads set to nod. 

In August 2024 they hooked up with Shackleton, sharing a festival line up. Initially they wanted to remix each other but soon went beyond that and recorded an album, The Tumbling Psychic Joy Of Now. On this track, Blessed And Bewildered, they drop eight minutes of righteous free form dub- jazz soundscapes, all of them locked in tightly to the rhythm. The album is here



Thursday, 25 September 2025

The Ban Ban Ton Ton Connection

Over at Ban Ban Ton Ton, Dr Rob invited me to review some new releases. This pair of releases have become part of my September listening, both highly recommended. There's daily posts at Ban ban Ton Ton by Dr. Rob and a cast of contributors, music and words that are always worth checking in on. 

Manchester trio Sonnenspot came together after times spent playing in various Mancunian related line ups and records- Alfie, Badly Drawn Boy's Hour Of The Bewilder Beast album, Jane Weaver's band and Mother Sky all feature as do the current Rainy Heart team who are doing some really good events around the city. Sonnenspot's debut album is out on Jason Boardman's Before I Die and so is automatically of interest and is in part a tribute to the sounds of Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger, Kraftwerk, Manuel Gottsching and other 70s cosmicshe bands as well as some 90s influences. 

My review is here and the album can be listened to at Bandcamp here. This is an edited, shorter version of the song at the album's core, Motorway.

Before that I took on the latest EP by Warmduscher, a song that didn't make their last album (2024's Too Cold To Hold) because it didn't fit and needed a release of its own- Yakuza. Warmduscher formed to play at a house party in 2014 and have close connections with some other top class London post- punk/ electronic punk/ sleaze- techno bands including Fat White Family, Paranoid London and Decius.

Yakuza is a Spaghetti Western theme crossed with Tom Waits and Big Audio Dynamite, a rollercoaster ride, a blur of action on the big screen. There are two remixes on the EP, one by Sworn Virgins and the other by David Holmes. Holmes doesn't hold back with his remix, turning everything up as far as it will go. My review is here


 


Monday, 30 June 2025

Sounds From The Flightpath Estate Volume 2

 

Last year the five of us that make up the online Andrew Weatherall fan group that is The Flightpath Estate made an album and sold 1000 vinyl copies of it. It featured nine entirely new tracks from Weatherall associated artists and a then unreleased on vinyl Two Lone Swordsmen ambient track called The Crescents. Our album, Sounds From The Flightpath Estate Volume 1, came out with our friends at The Golden Lion in Todmorden on Golden Lion Sounds and raised over £6, 000 for Andrew's chosen charities. It made the Piccadilly Records and Uncut end of year round ups, we had three tracks played on Lauren Laverne's 6 Music show as Compilation Of The Week, had a Piccadilly Records window takeover- it was all very exciting. The music was all uniformly superb with tracks by Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s, Timothy J. Fairplay, The Light Brigade (David Holmes), Rude Audio, 10:40, Richard Sen, Sons Of Slough and Hardway Bros, all recorded specifically for the album, and Andy Bell recorded an acoustic/ electric guitar cover of Smokebelch. 

We named the album Volume 1, partly chancing our arm collective arms in the hope that we might get to do a follow up. That album, Sounds From The Flightpath Estate Vol.2, is done, dusted, polished, shone and on its way to the pressing plant. The line up of artists and the music stands head and shoulders alongside Volume 1's. In no particular order, Volume 2 features a previously unreleased Sabres Of Paradise track, and new and exclusive music from Richard Fearless (of Death In Vegas), A Certain Ratio remixed by Number, Red Snapper, Richard Norris, David Harrow, Bedford Falls Players, Dicky Continental, the mysterious Unit 14, and a Two Lone Swordsmen cover by Sleaford Mods. Exciting eh?!

Sounds From The Flightpath Estate Volume 2 will be available for pre- order tomorrow morning at 10 am from the Golden Lion Sounds Bandcamp page and from the Golden Lion Sounds online shop (via The Big Cartel). I'm giving Bagging Area readers a heads up today- I know some of you bought Vol. 1 and would imagine/ hope some of you will want to be online tomorrow, Tuesday 1st July, fingers poised over the Add To Cart button. There are 1000 copies for pre- order tomorrow with a further 500 going to selected record shops in late August when the album will get its full physical release. 

We've been sitting on this for a couple of months and we're itching to get it out to people so they can enjoy the music as much as we have been. Mark has done a twenty- five minute mix of all the tracks which I'll share asap and I'll put the links up to order too. There'll be a few other bits of Vol. 2 news coming around over the summer- in the meantime...

David Holmes used the pseudonym The Light Brigade on Volume 1 and has this year putout a 12" on Mystic Arts under the name name. Shuffle The Deck came out on 12" and digitally in May, two tracks- the first was made with Lone Swordsman Keith Tenniswood and samples Andrew at its end, a rabble rousing acid house monster called Shuffle The Deck. The flipside, Only Love Can Save Us, was made in collaboration with Michael Andrews who David worked with on his Blind On A Galloping Horse album and is shimmering, heavenly electronic goodness. Get both here




Sunday, 1 June 2025

Still Fighting

Sabres Of Paradise took the stage in Fabric at 9pm on Thursday night to sirens and red spotlights, the first date they've played in 30 years, and a re- union that is missing the main man, Andrew Weatherall. Jagz Kooner, red shirt, black suit and tie, is behind a large console. To his right Gary Burns and a bank of keyboards and synths and beyond him Phil Mossman, guitar and bowler hat. To Jagz's left, Rich Thair with drums, congas, cymbals, black hat and Palestinian flag on his chest and next to him Nick Abnett, black suit, bass guitar, sharp haircut. They look ready to go. The trip hop drums of Tow Truck rumble in and we're off, Haunted Dancehall reborn for 2025, the track being reconstructed in front of us, transforming into the Depth Charge remix (another missing man tonight- J Saul Kane died last year). 

Tow Truck (Depth Charge Mix II)


Fabric is in Farringdon, a cavernous venue with several rooms all below ground level and a warren of connecting corridors and staircases. The room Sabres are playing is low ceilinged and dark, lit only by red lights, and feels industrial- it's perfect for the bass- led, swampy Sabres sound, the tracks filling the space. The room is packed with fans, friends and family, everyone willing Sabres on. Three tracks in Theme snaps into place, the horn sample and massive drums bouncing off the walls and Phil Mossman's gnarly guitar cutting through. Theme takes us into the bumpy, rough edged dub of Edge 6, these three decade old tracks sounding electrified and alive, not exactly the same as the recorded versions but retooled and remade on stage. 

Having felt their way in, the band and the room step up a gear with Wilmot, Nick Abnett's bassline working its magic and the horn riff snaking around. Jagz at the centre and always busy, his Cheshire Cat grin showing how much they're enjoying it. After Wilmot the chimes of the Beatless version of Smokebelch ring out, twinkling synths and piano. I have a long and intimate history with this track- we played it at the graveside at Isaac's funeral- and I'm sure I'm not the only one with tears in their eyes as Gary and Jagz play their blissed out ambient serenade. 

The second half of the gig is a stunner, energy levels raised, crowd and band in sync. The Ballad Of Nicky Maguire comes next- acid squiggles and burps, chunky drums, metallic dub clanks and eventually those long, melancholy chords, a track that as much as any seemed like the soundtrack to the James Woodbourne noir novel excerpts from Haunted Dancehall's inner sleeve (James Woodbourne is yet another Andrew Weatherall pseudonym and Nicky Maguire's identity is a closely guarded secret). They play Clock Factory, the fifteen minute long industrial ambient from 1994's Sabresonic, all clicks and whirs, and follow it with Ano Electro, more metallic drums and huge distorted bass and then they're done, to huge applause and waves of cheers and whoops. Sabres Of Paradise come back quickly, no messing about and launch into Sabresonic's opening track, the hard edged, acid house and thumping kick drums of Still Fighting, Jagz dropping in the whistling synth sound from Still Fighting's source material, Primal Scream's Don't Fight It, Feel It. It's is fast and frenetic, physical, techno you can feel, and it cuts deep. 

Then they push everything a notch higher with the return of Smokebelch, this time the David Holmes remix (Holmes is in the DJ booth watching having warmed the crowd up with ninety minutes of dubby sounds). Holmes's remix, released a week after the original 12" (itself a version of LB Bad's New Age Of Faith) did what seemed impossible- it made Smokebelch peakier, upping the ante. Jagz and Gary, Rich, Nick and Phil, are at the centre of a storm in Fabric now, the crowd going nuts as the drum troupe drums rattle around the room, the whistles and piano ride around on top and that huge acid line runs through the centre of it. I have a thirty second clip of it, the piano runs and drums, red lights and a sea of hands in the air- mayhem, everyone dancing and lost in the music, a thirty year gap vanished, Smokebelch very much in the present. 

It's also very poignant. Andrew Weatherall's not here and he started this whole thing, Sabres a result of a late night conversation with Jagz and Gary in a club in 1992. I'm sure I'm not the only one who, as the five man Sabres live band gather centre stage and take their bow, can imagine Lord Sabre himself, somewhere in the shadows at the side of the stage, nodding and smiling, giving them his blessing as The Sabres Of Paradise ship sails on to Sydney Opera House and then to Spain. 

The gig at Fabric coincided with an announcement that Warp are re- pressing the long out of print pair of Sabres Of Paradise albums, Sabresonic and Haunted Dancehall, remastered and available either red or black vinyl. 

In September 2023 I put together a mix made up of various versions of Smokebelch to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the 12" release, five versions of the track sequenced together for extended enjoyment. It seems the right time to repost it. 

Smokebelches

  • Smokebelch (Beatless Mix)
  • Smokebelch I
  • Smokebelch II (Entry)
  • Smokebelch II (Exit)
  • Smokebelch II (David Holmes Mix)

Tuesday, 20 May 2025

Shuffle The Pack

When David Holmes appeared on our album Sounds From The Flightpath Estate it was under the name The Light Brigade. He's using that name again now for a 12" single that's due out at the end of the month, a track that has been kicking around in David's DJ and radio sets for a while. Shuffle The Pack is a collaboration with former Two Lone Swordsman Keith Tenniswood, a fired up and righteous piece of music that sounds like the soundtrack to a protest. 

It starts with applause and crowd sounds and then a voice, 'yeah, it's time for anew course, a new coalition.. got to rise above race, rise above sex... don't cry about what you don't have, use what you got! Our time has come'. The drums kick in, a massive wobbly bassline rides the waves and synths, strings and FX echo and bounce around. Just as you think you're done, that the soundtrack to your own personal revolution is coming to an end and everything's fading out, the voice of Andrew Weatherall appears talking about gnostic ceremony, coloured lights, smoke and acid house as religious ritual. 

Shuffle The Pack is at Bandcamp. The flipside is a track called Only Love Can Save Us, another collaboration, this one with Michael Andrews who worked with David on his Blind On A Galloping Horse album. David was back at NTS last week, another two hour edition of God's Waiting Room with the subtitle Humanity As An Act Of Resistance. AS well as the usual excellent selection of tunes David intersperses the mix with excerpts from TV and radio news concerning the recent hysteria over Kneecap and the ongoing horror show in Gaza and genocide of the Palestinian people who live there- and die there. It's vital stuff, powerful and important. You can listen at NTS

Sunday, 27 April 2025

Sunday Mix Trio

Some long form mixes for Sunday, enough to keep you occupied for a few hours if you need some soundtracks for your weekend. First up is David Holmes back at NTS for his monthly God's Waiting Room show, which you can listen to at Soundcloud. No tracklist as yet but the usual excellence in selections- esoteric jazz dub,  sounds, psych and all round good old weirdness. The first thirty minutes covers more ground than some radio shows do in a year. 

Also at Soundcloud is the latest mix from M- Paths and Reverb Delay man Marcus Farley, a forty five minute, 115 bpm mix that starts and ends with Vangelis' Blade Runner soundtrack. 

  • Vangelis: Rachel’s Song
  • Shed: The Praetorian
  • Christian Loffler: Veiled Grey
  • Grouper: Sick
  • Moderat: Finder
  • Shed: Keep Time
  • Rebekah: Intro
  • R.Rose: Kneeling
  • Marco Lazovic: Untitled 1
  • Clockwork: Escape Sequence
  • Vangelis: Blade Runner (End Titles)
Thirdly, and once more at Soundcloud, is a six hour and forty minute extravaganza from Daniel Avery and John Loveless playing back to back, one on- one off, live at The Lighthouse, Plotzensee back in February. No tracklist unfortunately- starts out ambient, goes techno via submarine dub and Avery's Cure remix ninety minutes in. 

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

AW62

AW62 was last weekend, a proper gathering of the clans at The Golden Lion in Todmorden, an 18th century stone walled pub nestled into a gap between a hill and the canal, to celebrate the life of Andrew Weatherall on what would have been his 62nd birthday. Andrew's brother Ian, one of the event's key movers, said that it was planned as a party that had 'everything except Andrew'. The line up of DJs and acts was testament to the spirit of the man, a diverse and exceptional bunch of DJs, writers, artists, producers, publishers and bands. 

Some highlights from a weekend packed full of them- this is necessarily a highly selective account drawn from my at times unreliable memories. Everyone who attended will have their own version and highlights but these were some of mine. 

Friday night saw Richard Fearless DJing in the downstairs bar, a vinyl techno masterclass- minimal, sleek, machine music, emotive and huge sounding on the pub's recently upgraded sound system, causing quite a stir among the crowd and packing the space in front of the DJ booth out with dancers. 


I took this picture while Fearless was playing. It may not be in focus or even a vaguely coherent picture but it sums the night up quite well from where I was standing. 

Saturday night was split between upstairs and downstairs. Upstairs Duncan Gray played a house set and then Scott Fraser took over at midnight. Downstairs David Holmes headlined, picking up where Matt Hum left off. David has played The Golden Lion often in recent years. He changes his set every time, saying he doesn't plan it too much, just goes with the flow and the feel in the pub. His set on Saturday night was out of this world, a huge range of dance music, from spangly chuggers to amped up noise, breakbeats and the sudden switching to huge piano tracks. Towards the end of his set, a 2 am finish, I was stuck in a corner by the door, just enjoying the music and the volume. Joe Strummer's voice came out of the speakers, his famous 'people can do anything...' speech from a radio show followed by ecstatic synth noise (an unreleased Holmes and Matty Skylab track, David said afterwards). There was a pause at 2am and then two or three more tunes, one a rumbly, garage band guitar song, one an explosion of synth chords, a wall of noise, and then finishing with the huge, extended Leftside Wobble remix of Tomorrow Never Knows, The Beatles most experimental, most progressive song filling the pub and scrambling heads. Thoughts were indeed laid down and voids were very much surrendered to. 

Saturday afternoon was our turn to play again, The Flightpath Estate DJs given the privilege of being part of the proceedings. Me, Baz, Martin, Dan and Mark played throughout the afternoon and into the evening. At one point I looked out into the space in front of the booth and saw author David Keenan and White Rabbit Books publisher Lee Brackstone  dancing and singing along to a song I was playing, the magnificent One Of Those Things by Dexys, from 1985 (a song even Kevin Rowland eventually had to accept he'd ripped off from Warren Zevon's Werewolves Of London). 

One Of Those Things

I spoke to David Keenan at some point, excitedly telling him about the experience I had reading Xstabeth a few years ago, a book which at several points blew my mind a little. This photo has me and David, me somewhat out of focus, mind probably still blown. 

Saturday afternoon also saw the fabled raffle and auction, Claire Doll's hard work and creativity raising  thousands of pounds for charity, Weatherdolls and Sabres cross stitch and a box of records found in Andrew's lock up when it was cleared out, promo copies of the David Holmes remix of Smokebelch and other delights. Golden Lion landlady Gig conducted the auction action in her own inimitable style. Holmes bid for and won this Gnostic Sonics banner.

Sunday saw the crowds, fans, punters and artists drawn back to the pub and its beer garden, bathed in early April sunshine. Andrew's friends Sherman and Curley played dub and ambient sounds the whole afternoon. Meanwhile the Sunday afternoon literary event came in three parts- a Lee Brackstone hosted discussion with Andrew's partner of seventeen years Lizzie Walker, Two Lone Swordsman guitarist Chris Rotter, Ian Weatherall and The Flightpath's own Martin Brannagan, Lee asking the questions which included 'when did you first meet Andrew?' which drew a range of funny responses. 

The second part was Lee and David Keenan, an interview and a reading from his new book Volcanic Tongue. The third was Keenan interviewing  Adrian Sherwood, a fascinating half hour with one of Andrew's heroes, the main man of UK dub whose reminiscences and thoughts could and should fill a book. David Keenan (and David Holmes, sitting on the front row) unpicking all sorts of aspects of On U Sound and Sherwood's music and career and the nature of dub. Genuinely amazing to sit in on and as much a part of the weekend as the DJs and music. 

Adrian Sherwood The Producers Series #1

This hour long Sherwood mix comes from the Test Pressing blog, published back in 2010. The tracklist can be found at Test Pressing- Creation Rebel, African Head Charge, Dub Syndicate and Doctor Pablo all feature. 

Sunday night finished with the twin attack of The Jonny Halifax Invocation playing live upstairs and Sherwood DJing downstairs. Criminally I missed both- having been at The Lion since Friday night, suffering from a distinct lack of sleep and having to drive home at some point that night, I called it a day at around 6 pm. 

Everyone involved in AW62 should give themselves a well earned pat on the back and maybe have a bit of a lie down- Waka and Gig at The Golden Lion, Ian Weatherall, Claire, Lizzie and Curley with the raffle and auction and merch, all the DJs and bands, Lee and David bringing the literature angle (books and writing were as big for Mr Weatherall as music was). It was a brilliant weekend and event- heart warming and inclusive, packed with energising and exciting music, and filled with great people. The Lion always draws a lovely bunch of punters and AW62 was no exception. And when the lie down is over and everyone's recovered, more please next year...

Sunday, 23 March 2025

An Hour Of The Jezebell Takeover

Last weekend's Jezebell Takeover at The Golden Lion in Todmorden was a lot of fun, two days of DJs and a live act playing to a full house. Saturday kicked off with Nessa Johnston getting things into gear quickly and setting the pace for everyone who followed. ACR's Martin Moscrop played a set that took in dub and disco, including a low slung dubbed out cover of Born Slippy, and at just after 8pm OBOST played a live set. 

OBOST is Bobby Langfield, ridiculously young, still in his teens- synths, keys, laptops, a microphone and an hour of uptempo electronic music that sounds like it has decades of experience behind it. Jamie Tolley took over at 9 and took things up a notch again, bpms and energy levels rising. At one point he dropped As I Ran by Yame, a bit of an ALFOS at The Lion moment last year and the pub erupted. The Jezebell headliners took over at 10, Jesse first and then Darren. The floor was packed, a mix of youth and older dancers...

I had to run for a late train back to Manchester so missed the last our of Darren's set but was back in the pub on Sunday afternoon where Jesse and Darren were starting proceedings off. Maybe they'd stayed up and played straight through. My guest slot was at 4pm and I had a few technical difficulties at first- I accidentally cued up a track from Jesse's USB instead of mine, then the right hand deck got stuck in an emergency loop and things took a little while for me to sort. Eventually Martin Moscrop turned the deck off and on again and as usual with piece of IT support advice it did the trick. Adam Roberts, due to play after me, was also official photographer. All the photos here are his and if nothing else he made me look like I know what I'm doing. 

I came off the decks feeling it had been a bit of a nightmare- technical issues, trying to cram too much into an hour- but looking at it now, a week later, it seems ok. The link below is the set recreated at home.

Bagging Area At The Jezebell Takeover

  • Moon Duo: In A Cloud
  • Durutti Column: For Belgian Friends
  • The Charlatans: Trouble Understanding (Norman Cook Remix)
  • The Beta Band: I Know
  • Dub Syndicate: Right Back To Your Soul
  • Soft Cotton County: The Future's Not What It Used To Be (Five Green Moons Remix)
  • David Holmes: Blind On A Galloping Horse (Sons Of Slough Remix)
  • Totem Edit 12: Feel
  • Mogwai: The Sun Smells Too loud
  • Orbital, David Holmes, DJ Helen and Mike Garry: Tonight In Belfast

Adam Roberts followed me, four four house and disco action and then Kim Lana. We had to leave so missed the remaining Sunday night fun, Stuart Alexander and then FC Kahuna, both of whom were outstanding by all accounts, Jesse saying Dan Kahuna was the weekend's highlight. Some hardy souls were back in The Lion on the Monday for St Patrick's Day celebrations, a live band and unplanned karaoke session. There's a second Jezebell Takeover planned for September. 

Jesse's been uploading recordings of some of the sets. His Saturday night hour is here and his Sunday afternoon set is here

I hadn't met Jesse or Darren before despite having had a several years strong online connection. It's always brilliant when people turn out to be as lovely in real life as they appear online and the crowd they drew to the Lion- regulars and newcomers- was testament to what they've built together as Jezebell. More power to them. 


Friday, 28 February 2025

Field Of Dreams

I've been excited about this EP for some time and it's finally out today. Hugo Nicolson is the man who learnt his trade engineering at On U Sound with Adrian Sherwood, went on to ably assist Andrew Weatherall on his groundbreaking early productions and remixes, and then produced several of Julian Cope's most significant albums (Peggy Suicide and Jehoavakill). He recently moved home from LA and has got an EP out today on Brighton's Higher Love label, a  label that knows its musical onions. Hugo's EP kicks off with his own track, the nine minute extravaganza that is Field Of Dreams. Chanting voices, a big kick drum, tumbling reverb- laden piano, and an amazing snaking horn line, the sound of the souk over a thumping four four. All manner of sonics follow- distorted, buzzing bass, rattling percussion, dancing synthlines... everything swirling around and swaying with those horns and the voices in unison. There's a four minute radio edit which does the job as a taster but you going to want the full nine minutes for maximum joy...


There are remixes, three of them from Bagging Area repeat offenders/ heavyweights David Holmes, Hardway Bros and Rude Audio. 

Holmes' remix judders and spins with an energy all of its own, the beats coming on strong and those chanting voices isolated before they're joined by a kaleidoscopic whirl of percussion and sounds, like being trapped on a rotating dancefloor, giddy and heady fun that threatens to tip over into madness. There's a pause at three and half minutes for a breather, a breakdown and some piano but those horns re- enter, summoning you back to the dance. The chanting section at five a a half minutes is equally hypnotic and then the horns work their magic again. A friend's partner said Holmes' remix made her heart race and made her feel a tad anxious and I can see what she means. 

The Hardway Bros Cosmic Interpolation Mix sets out as Hardway Bros remixes often do, a cosmic disco drum pattern and Sean's trademark s-p-a-c-e-d production. The chanting voices make an appearance in this remix too as Sean keeps things more linear, a propulsive and driving remix that gets on the train tracks and heads relentlessly across the expanses of the desert with the occasional bleepy breakdown and face melting synth whooshes. Like Holmes' remix, it doesn't do things by halves, both clocking in north of nine minutes. 

Rude Audio usually use ten minutes as the standard length for a remix. Surprisingly this one is closer to seven minutes, a blinding dub- dance version with bass that will shake your clothing and rattle your ribcage, synths that ricochet left and right and those chanting voices swirling around while the Arabian horn pulls us back into the dance. The entire EP is a trip, one of this year's best releases thus far, and should be soundtracking many an event. Build it and they will come. 

Hugo Nicolson's Field Of Dreams can be bought and heard at Bandcamp

Sunday, 23 February 2025

Five Hours Of Music From Belfast And From Bristol

We had two days and nights in Belfast last week, flying out very early Wednesday morning and returning Friday midday. I'd never been before. It's a great city, we loved our time their exploring the place and while it might be a bit of a cliche to say that the Guinness is excellent, it really is. Belfast has many wonderful pubs in which to try the Guinness, loads of history (the difficult parts of which it doesn't shy away from and which are still part of its present) and lots to do. I definitely intend to go back. 

Belfast (David Holmes Remix)

We also missed David Holmes and Timmy Stewart DJing together which took place in Belfast last night. Luckily last week David returned to NTS for his monthly God's Waiting Room show, so we've got that to listen to instead- three hours of sounds starting out ambient and drifty, going cinematic and jazz- ambient jazz in fact- and then veering into psychedelic jazz and all sorts of interesting, superbly well stitched together songs. There's no tracklist available at the moment but you can tune in at Mixcloud

I also offer you this for Sunday, a two hour mix celebrating the sounds of Bristol courtesy of Nick Callaghan and Love Will Save The Day FM. Nick's put together an all vinyl, two hour celebration of The Wild Bunch, the Bristol collective and sound system from whom Massive Attack emerged. Surface Noise is two hours of Bristol based treasures, the sounds that The Wild Bunch were listening to and playing, the reggae and dub, mid- 80s hip hop, post punk, soul and New Wave sounds that fed into the ether and became such a key part of 90s culture. Find it here. It goes well with a pint or two of Sunday Guinness. 

Sunday, 2 February 2025

Forty Five Minutes Of Kruder And Dorfmeister

Kruder and Dorfmeister, a trip hop/ downtempo duo from Austria, first found acclaim in 1993 with their G- Stoned EP. Their late night hazy, blunted tunes and remixes are the stuff post- club nights are made of, head nodding, drawn out tunes that slip by in a beautiful fug. The got phone calls and remix requests came in throughout the 90s, from Depeche Mode, Madonna, Roni Size, Alex Reece, David Holmes, Bomb The Bass and Lamb. In 1998 they compiled many of their remixes with a selection of their own tracks as The Kruder And Dorfmeister Sessions two CDs, four pieces of vinyl), an album which last year got the full re- release treatment. The pair, Peter Kruder and Richard Dorfmeister, are touring in May to promote it. The mix below is a forty five minute selection of some of that album. Any of the tracks in the mix could have been substituted for any of the other twenty eight tracks from the album without any discernible dip in quality. They found a sound, refined it and  brought it to bear on whoever's music they touched. Rattly, slowed down hip hop drum breaks, subsonic bass, snatches of vocals, one or two words max, found sounds, an aural smoke filled haze flecked with jazzy organ fills, DJ Shadow's Endtroducing... hovering close by. Sunday sounds for early February. 

Forty Five Minutes Of Kruder And Dorfmeister

  • Lamb: Trans Fatty Acid (K&D Session)
  • Bomb The Bass: Bug Powder Dust (Dub Remixed By Kruder and Dorfmeister)
  • Kruder And Dorfmeister: Lexicon
  • Strange Cargo: Million Town (K&D Session)
  • David Holmes: Gone (K&D Session)
  • Rockers Hi- Fi: Going Under (K&D Session)
  • Roni Size: Heroes (Kruder's Long Loose Bossa)

Lamb were/ are a duo from Manchester, producer Andy Barlow and singer/ songwriter Lou Rhodes, jazz/ hip hop/ trip hop/ drum and bass, best known for their single Gorecki. They split in 2004 to pursue solo projects but reformed a few years later and have performed intermittently ever since. 

Bomb The Bass is the musical outfit for the legendary Tim Simenon, the man who made one of the first British acid house/ sample based records, Beat Dis. If you're looking for origin stories, Beat Dis is hard to beat. Bug Powder Dust came out in 1994, a powerful piece of mid 90s hip hop (from the third Bomb The Bass album Clear) with Justin Warfield on vocals. There were remixes aplenty- Dust Brothers, La Funk Mob, DJ Muggs (from Cypress Hill) and Kruder and Dorfmeister. 

Lexicon is a short interlude piece of music, one minute of Kruder and Dorfmeister from the Sessions album.

Strange Cargo was one of William Orbit's solo aliases, resulting in four albums- Strange Cargo, II, III and Hinterland. Strange Cargo III is the pick for me, 1993 ambient/ downtempo/ global/ dub classic with Beth Orton on vocals on the superb water From A Vine Leaf. Million Town was on Strange Cargo Hinterland from 1995.

Gone was a single from David Holmes' 1995 debut album, This Film's Crap Let's Slash The Seats, with Saint Etienne's Sarah Cracknell on vocals. It's a gloriously low slung trip hop torch song and was remixed by Two Lone Swordsmen as well as Kruder and Dorfmeister. K&D strip it right down to the bones. 

Rockers Hi- Fi are an electronic dub outfit from Birmingham, starting out as Original Rockers in 1991 and changing their name in 94. Going Under was from '97, deep and dubbed out. 

Roni Size famously won the Mercury Prize in 1997 with his album New Forms, drum and bass entering the mainstream (a move first made by Goldie in 1994 with Inner City Life). Bristol had already cemented its reputation with Massive Attack and Portishead, and Roni Size had attended house parties run by The Wild Bunch Soundsystem so the torch was being well and truly passed on. New Forms and the single Brown Paper Bag especially became festival favourites. The Mercury Prize became a bit of millstone around Roni's neck I think and he continued to plough his furrow with further albums in 2002, 2004 and 2014.