Showing posts with label DJ Nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DJ Nature. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 August 2024

Up On The Downs, Part One

I spent Bank Holiday Sunday (25th) at the ACT 1.5 climate action accelerator event in Bristol, organised and headlined by Massive Attack, for what was billed as their first hometown gig in 5 years...and potentially their last.
 
And event is an understatement. You've probably read about it, as they were all over the media in the lead up, but this was an attempt to stage the lowest carbon show of its size (capacity c. 36,000 people). On the ground, bar the odd hiccup, it felt like they delivered and then some.

ACT 1.5 was situated on Durdham Downs, in the north of Bristol, a short walk from the old Zoo and Clifton Suspension Bridge. Except all of the promo referred to it as Clifton Downs. I haven't lived in the city for a decade and a half and everyone I knew back then referred to it as simply "The Downs". Secret Bristol attempted to dig deep into the origin of the name though, in the end, it's all the same: a 400-acre flat expanse, and a perfect setting for the event.

I drove to a rail station a few miles from home and about ten miles from Bristol and travelled into the city via train. I purchased tickets via Train Hugger, which included access to a free (electric) shuttle service to The Downs and, at the end of the event, a shuttle service to each of Bristol's main stations to get one of five special 'after hours' trains that had been specially laid on to get attendees back home. 

It's been a while since I've been in Bristol so on arrival at Temple Meads station, I skipped the shuttle and walked the 2.5 miles through the city centre, up Park Street and Whiteladies Road to The Downs. It was a nostalgic ramble, even though many of the places I frequented in my younger days are long, long gone.

Arriving around 2.15pm meant that there was very little queuing to get in, and a chance to do a site recce before taking my pitch. There was plenty around the site opposite the stage, from a programme of speakers and interviews, a tent offering the chance to create DIY Merch with Peter Kennard and Cat Phillips, the Hell Bus by Darren Cullen to a Fire Sale shop selling Massive Attack prints. And of course the Merch Stand if you wanted a quick change into a T-shirt to prove you were there whilst you were there.
 
No food or drink (apart from refillable water bottles) could be brought into the gig; the event had water stations and a range of vegan only food stalls on site. Even more amazing, for a gig of this scale, not the sound or smell of a diesel generator. All I could hear as I approached the stage was DJ Milo doing his thing.

DJ Milo aka Milo Johnson is a local legend, part of the Wild Bunch collective back in the day and continuing to release music as DJ Nature (2023 Otherwhere was a highight of the year). I missed the first quarter of his hour-long set, but it was super slick - as were the between-gig segues - and a perfect scene setter. My favourite moment was a sequence of low-tempo house sandwiched by two 1980s classics: Crockett's Theme from Miami Vice by Jan Hammer and superlative Propaganda B-side Frozen Faces. What a perfect set up.

At 3.00pm, Sam Morton - the person and the band - took to the stage. Samantha Morton is a superb actor, but the prospect of a thespian turning their hand to music is path that I frequently approach with caution, and with good reason. However, the debut Daffodils & Dirt has been a rewarding listen, even if the narrative is frequently challenging.

A collaboration with XL label head Richard Russell, the duo double in size for their live performance. It's not the most dramatic set up: three musicians sat behind a long table like an interview panel, with Samantha front and centre at the mic; an ironic nod to a Britain's Got Talent-style stage, perhaps? Probably not, but all eyes are on Samantha anyway as they perform Daffodils & Dirt in its entirety. 
 
Apart from high winds which buffet the musicians and at one point blow over Samantha's music stand, it's a fine performance. Her vocals are pitched somewhere between sprechsang and nursery rhyme but it's perfectly suited to the narrative and the music. 
 
Despite some brief flashes of intense sunshine, the sky is generally full of ominous looking clouds, which somehow seems fitting. The shortest set of the day at 45 minutes, entirely down to the material available I guess, but appreciated by me and the few hundred that got there early.

It's hard to pick a favourite as I enjoyed the whole performance. Broxtowe Girl is a highlight on the album, focusing on the narrator's love of UB40's Labour Of Love II and featuring a restrained guest vocal from Ali Campbell. Sadly, no sign of Ali on stage today but none the poorer for that. Double Dip Neon is also worth a mention for it's dubby, uptempo vibe which at times channels One Dove, which is no bad thing.
 
Two hours in, seven and half hours and three acts to go. This is inevitably too big for one post (or two, for that matter). Part Two will share my experience of the remaining support acts, when things got a lot busier and took an unexpected turn.

Sunday, 18 June 2023

God Save The Ing

...that is, if your thing is dancing, jigging, shaking or some other ing that involves moving, because the next hour and an a half is all about the beats. 

2023 has been a great year so far, musically speaking and as I hope this 14-track selection ably demonstrates. Several long-time favourites have returned with a vengeance: Cerrone, DJ Nature, A Man Called Adam and Four Tet; all delivering music as good as anything in their rich and varied catalogue. 
 
Others have done so in collaboration: Justin Robertson meets David Holmes' Unloved in the Temple Of Wonders; Telefís aka Cathal Coughlan (RIP) and Jacknife Lee holiday in Madrid with Howie B; Hifi Sean and David McAlmont take a dub excursion to another Happy Ending.
 
Some relatively recent discoveries continue to delight: Jezebell, Max Essa and Duncan Gray have all somehow managed to raise the bar with each successive release; how high can they go?
 
The rest are all artists that I've heard for the first time this year: Minus Yogis, Bárbara Boeing, Cee ElAssaad, DjClick and Masha Natanson; all very different, all worth further investigation.

Apart from Four Tet, I'm not sure if any of these artists will be troubling a stage at Glastonbury next week (though to be honest, my eyesight starting blurring after the tenth or eleventh scroll through the seemingly endless line-up page on their website). If they did though, I think they'd smash it.
 
1) A Part Of You (Club Mix): Cerrone
2) Follow Your Dreams: DJ Nature
3) Fruity Blues (Balearic Mix By Minus Yogis): Minus Yogis
4) It's Science Baby (Funkified): A Man Called Adam
5) Trading Places (6PM): Jezebell
6) Thrill Me (Justin Robertson's Temple Of Wonders Remix): Unloved
7) Short Haul: Duncan Gray
8) Beautiful (Hifi's Dub Excursion): Hifi Sean & David McAlmont
9) Baile Do Silêncio (Donald Dust Remix): Bárbara Boeing
10) Njalo (Full Length Version): Cee ElAssaad
11) Come Come The Rain (Club Mix): Max Essa ft. DC Mathias
12) Strawboy Supernova (Madrid Metal By Howie B): Telefís
13) Three Drums: Four Tet
14) 24022022 (Fluo Sobre RMX): DjClick & Masha Natanson

God Save The Ing (1:28:44) (Box) (Mega)

Monday, 12 June 2023

Here, There And Otherwhere

DJ Nature aka Milo Johnson aka one of the founding fathers of legendary Bristol collective The Wild Bunch quietly released a new album called Otherwhere at the end of March.
 
Eight songs and fifty seven minutes featuring pulsing grooves, occasional vocals and samples and jazz inflections on most tracks via saxophone, flute and keyboards courtesy of frequent collaborator Willie Williams
 
Appropriately enough, it's been released via Jazzy Sport, a Tokyo-based label and shop, initially on CD with double vinyl to follow.

I found it more difficult to track down the digital version, only being able to find it on Amazon, personally always a last resort when it comes to album purchases.
 
After a few listens, it's a winner for me, the favourite right now being Follow Your Dreams. I can get with that.
 
You can listen to Otherwhere in full via YouTube.

Sunday, 8 August 2021

Raindrops Keep Falling

Thirteen songs to sail through a soggy Sunday. Select cuts from some of my favourite EPs, albums and remixes from the last couple of years, several purchased on Bandcamp Friday, which will be continuing for the rest of this year. It won't be a great surprise to see Dan Wainwright, Andy Bell/GLOK or Pye Corner Audio here, but there have been a few unexpected 'comebacks' from Ultramarine and D:Ream, which I've really enjoyed.
 
1) I Love You: Dan Wainwright (2021) 
2) Ride Or Die (Single Version): Boys Noize ft. Kelsey Lu & Chilly Gonzales (2021)
3) Parallel 6: Four Tet (2020)
4) Meet Me At Midnight (Dan Wainwright Remix): D:Ream (2021)
5) In My Sleep (DJ Nature Remix By Milo Johnson): Margee (2021)
6) Lagrimas De San Lorenzo (Coyote Remix): Chris Coco & George Solar (2021)
7) That Time Of Night (Single Version): GLOK ft. Shiarra (2021)
8) Memory Of Rave: Pye Corner Audio (2020)
9) Fledgling Sun: The Future Sound Of London (2021)
10) Rickie's Alibi: Andres Y Xavi (2021)
11) The Commune (Pye Corner Audio Remix): Andy Bell (2021)
12) Spark From Flint To Clay: Ultramarine ft. Anna Domino (2019)
13) The County (Revisited By Dylan Henner): Valgeir Sigurðsson (2020)
 

Monday, 26 July 2021

Cosmic Intervention

From goth to groove in 24 hours. Today, I was up early and not in the mood to move. Thankfully, Australia's Angus Gruzman aka Dreems has remedied that with the infectious Opium Tiger, Flying Again. It's a rework of a 2019 song and all the better for it, nearly 13 minutes of groove, that changes tack about halfway. There's also a very indie guitar snippet, which got me thinking of Pink Industry at one point. The remix EP, out today, includes further versions of Flying Tiger by Japan's Zongamin and two from Canada's The Mole, all worth your time and hard earned pennies.



Next up, and out earlier this month, is the UNKLE remix of Krust's Hegel Dialect from his 2020 album, The Edge Of Everything. In typical back-to-front fashion, I haven't heard the album yet, but this remix package (TEOE Remixes #3) is spot on. I think the last UNKLE remix I picked up was in 2015 so this is a welcome surprise.



What will come as no surprise is that Sean Johnson aka Hardway Bros delivers a killer groove on his remix of French producer Margee's Wrong Dream, from the In My Sleep EP released last Friday. 11 minutes of pulsing beats and shimmering synths that feels way too short. Both the Krust and Margee packages include essential remixes from Bristol legend and founding member of The Wild Bunch, Milo Johnson, in his DJ Nature guise. 

 
 
Dreems (Bandcamp)
Krust on Crosstown Rebels (Bandcamp)
The Edge Of Everything: Remixed (out 6th August on Bandcamp)
Margee (Soundcloud)
DJ Nature (Soundcloud)