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Positive Education - Fergie & Octogen remixes

July 9

Soma264d

 

Ah, remixes.  Such a fraught arena - especially these days when no-one knows how to make money from selling records any more.   How can you be sure that the fee you pay to the remixer will be covered by the extra sales?  Maybe they'll work for free?  It'll be good exposure!  (Aspiring producers please note;  this is a phrase you will hear relentlessly).  What we're dealing with here though is that extra step upward in complexity and stress - the remixing of a classic.   What can you do to a classic tune without ruining it?  Is it possible to even improve on it?

Let's have a quick blast of the said classic tune:

It seems to me that there are three main ways of approaching it - firstly, you can try to keep the track as close as is reasonably possible to the original, whilst updating it a touch or giving it a slightly different feel.  This is generally the most disappointing one for the fan, as you don't really get much new stuff, but it can work well.  And one thing I've always thought Positive Education would benefit from would be a new kick drum!  The original was one of those boxy, early 90's style unprocessed 909 kicks.  You didn't notice them at the time, because that's just how all kicks were - but looking back now, they do sound a touch unsatisfying.  Toppy, no real sub pressure.  Anyway, the second way is to completely re-imagine the tune - rip it apart, write your own tune, almost unrecognisable from the original.  But then you could be remixing anything - surely there should be some acknowledgement in there of the original version's classicness?  A bit of a tribute, a nod and a wink?  Then lastly we've got the halfway house - try and take some recognisable sounds or riffs from the original and bolt them onto a new tune.  To put it bluntly.  But it can work.

It's this last approach that Fergie uses in his mix.  It's a stripped down, minimal(ish) techno affair, based around a competent but standard kind of groove.  It rolls, it's fairly driving in a 3am kind of way, it's fairly bland, then he drops in a sample from the original track for a fill or a build.  Woo!  Hands in the air!  Then back to the groove.  Maybe I'm being harsh - the production is tight, and you only need to crank it up to hear how effective it would be in the club - it's certainly not going to be clearing any floors any time soon.  But it does feel a touch on the bland side.

On the bland side of things is certainly not a phrase that comes to mind with Marco Bernardi's mix, under his Octogen guise, however, and this is a mix that takes the second approach - it doesn't sound at all like the original.  It starts off with a harmonic bassline (you guessed it - it's a minor chord on a 4-bar phrasing.  One of those eternal couplings that will never get boring.  Gin and tonic, roast beef and yorkshires, minor chords on analogue synths, Amen breaks and raging 170bpm subs.  If I ever grow tired of any of these things it's all over) with simple swinging percs and a twiddling riff (minor chord), - reminds me of some of the electro-influenced stuff heard from the likes of The Hacker a few years back - and quickly adds in some emotive string chords and a new vocal sample - but still about positive education.  From here it builds up further - some sparkling, ascending chord riffs are thrown into the mix and the bassline is doubled up with a fizzy lead line.  If you're thinking this is all starting to sound a little bit trance, you'd be right.  There's certainly a hint of that in there.  But I don't care.  It's genuine, hands in the air stuff, and impossible not to like.  Once it hits a plateau at about 3 mins in, it stays there for the next 5 and half minutes without getting boring.  Give this clip a whirl and you'll get sucked in too.

The release is due mid-August on Soma.  There's also a re-mastered version of the original - I'm not about to start reviewing mastering, but because I am an utter, utter nerd I have A/B'd it with the original version and can tell you it definitely sounds better; crisper, fuller, and obviously in these days of loudness wars, louder, albeit at the cost of some slight definition of the hihats.  Does that count as a review?  Hm.

(download)

 

(download)

 

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i.d.

Filed under  //   Fergie   Octogen   Positive Education   Reviews   Slam   Soma  
Posted by bassmusic 

Comments [2]

Now This Is How To Program A Mix

June 16

Slam-past-lessonsfutur-318075

 

The audio below is a clip of Slam's classic mix 'Past Lessons / Future Theories'.  It's actually about the first 20 minutes of CD1, and is still, for me, one of the most exciting entrances to a mix CD.  Me and Bao were recently cruising the M62 over the Pennines in our whip (a rented Transit van) and had this album for company, and it was great to listen to it again, nearly a decade on from its original release.  

A few things stand out - firstly the level of depth, and the pacing.  As you can hear, the mix doesn't really start 'pumping' until 15 minutes in, with Flunky's "Love Song (dub)"  - or to put it another way, the beat steps up a gear with a introduction of some jacking swung percussion - and even then we've still got melancholic pad sounds and dubbed out vocals echoing off the sides of this big, night-time soundscape.  It's probably my favourite track on the mix; I love the way it just sets up an aesthetic with a rolling beat, and does just enough to hold you in.  

One other thing that grabs me is the level of sincerity and soulfulness that comes through.  I mentioned before that I'm not a fan of irony in music - as far as I'm concerned, mocking something rubbish is weak when you could be trying to do something with a bit of artistic integrity; but there's a lot of it coming through these days - and one of the things I love about the Detroit sound heard here is the constant push to do electronic music with soul, and with musicality. (If anyone can name a techno crew besides UR that have a saxophonist for example, let us know!)  I think this soulfulness is sometimes missed these days from the techno that's around now - it's all too easy to fall into sterile minimal territory.   

Maybe I've been looking in the wrong places, but the last mix CD to really stir me like this was James Holden's 'At The Controls' - and that was a while back!  So I'd welcome any suggestions in the comments for others...

From Bao: Yeah I think the whole double pack CD affair is one of the best house / techno mixes ever put together. The section we uploaded is obviously a highlight, but I really like the second CD as well - starts of with the utterly amazing 'Healer' by Bushwacka and gradually builds, through stuff like Onionz and Hipp-E (uber chunky house drums)  into some of the very best of loopy / funky techno - when it still had vibes and soul. Tracks like 'Compound' by Michel de Hey vs Grooveyard, 'A Sound Called House' by Trevor Rockliffe, 'Tribe Cut' by Samuel L Session and classics like the Wink mix of 'How's Your Evening So Far' all lead up to a pretty much untouchable finale of 'Positive Education' into 'Jaguar'.

And - the whole thing is mixed on vinyl (or possibly acetate, I don't know). Mixed incredibly tightly, with perfect phrasing, and totally in tune key-wise. So impressive, and not in a cold, clinical 'yeah that's very clever' way, but in a super warm, fully enjoyable and yes dare I say it, soulful, way. Thoroughly recommended.  

(download)

 

..... and hey - while we're here, and in a kind of fawning mood, lets just have a quick blast of the tune that got me into Slam in the first place.  It was given away free on a CD with an issue of Future Music circa 1995.  I was just getting into dance music (having previously been a bit of a metalhead) and was blown away by the way minimal electronic dance music could be every bit as dark and aggressive as shouty, thrashy rock....

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i.d.

Filed under  //   DJ mixes   Slam  
Posted by bassmusic 

Comments [1]