“Speed Emotions” – Marbert Rocel (Compost) [ALBUM] November 13, 2007
Posted by rocketsciencemedia in Press Releases.Tags: 26th november, compost, marbert rocel, speed emotions
add a comment

TITLE: Speed Emotions / ARTIST: Marbert Rocel / LABEL: Compost / RELEASE DATE: 26th November / CAT NO: CPT 278-2
It all began with two hip guys and one fly girl, sharing a cup of milk and honey at the late club. Every sip caused a warm and cosy beat to ripple over their hearts. Beats, like birds, flapped their wings to the rhythm of warm house and understated pop…
Marbert Rocel is Compost’s latest coup. The trio – Marcel Aue (producer and DJ), Robert Krause (producing, DJing and artwork) and Antje Seifarth (vocals) – hail from Erfurt, where interplay on band names is something of a local pastime. The multi-talented Marcel Aue aka DJ Malik has been spinning records as a hip hop DJ for the last 10 years and is part of German pop-funk-rap crossover act Clueso, whose records “Weit Weg” and “Gute Musik” he co-produced. Robert Krause studied graphic design and is responsible for the artwork of “Speed Emotions” and all other Marbert Rocel releases. Vocalist Antje Seifarth (or “Spunki” to her friends) was backing vocalist for Clueso and the jazz project Rhythm Club.
The album’s title – “Speed Emotions” – alludes to the emotionality of their songs. Marbert Rocel don’t produce “tracks” – they deal with intense emotions that come about swiftly but can disappear just as quick as they arrived. They take this fast paced ephemeral nature as an integrated concept that pairs lush melodies with swinging house beats. Genres and their boundaries are intentionally ignored. Besides catchy hits like “Ttticticrac” there are dancefloor fillers like “Roll To Roll”. The first single “Beats Like Birds” comes across with a remix by Douglas Greed from the Freude Am Tanzen camp. The muscle packed heart on the album cover describes perfectly how self-confident Marbert Rocel are at letting their perception of emotions flow through their music.
Marbert Rocel definitely know how to captivate the ears and melt the sneaker soles of their fellow Thuringians with their unique brand of music that successfully combines jazz, house, minimal and song writing into some kind of delectable melting pot. It is sometimes bizarre but always brilliant. With the release of their debut album “Speed Emotions” it is time to venture out and spread their compositions to all those greedy music appreciators worldwide…
—
If you would like some more information or you want to preview or review this release and would like to receive a promo copy, please contact sophie@rocketsciencemedia.com or simon@rocketsciencemedia.com
“Nueva Vision” – Various Artists (Sonar Kollektiv) [ALBUM] November 13, 2007
Posted by rocketsciencemedia in Press Releases.Tags: 12th november, areito, egrem, nueva vision, sonar kollektiv
add a comment

TITLE: Nueva Vision: Latin Jazz & soul from The Cuban Label EGREM/AREITO / ARTIST: Various Artists / LABEL: Sonar Kollektiv / RELEASE DATE: 12th November / CAT NO: SK166CD/jazzclub
Following on from the success of “Forum West”, “Focus Jazz” and “Romanian Jazz”, is “Nueva Vision”, an intoxicating collection of Cuban Jazz from the Egrem/Areito label. This 18 track strong compilation presents some of the finest in Cuban music from the last century, with great names from the Cuban scene such as Chucho Valdés, Omara Portuondo and Bobby Carcasses to name but a few.
The much-celebrated pianist Chucho Valdés – son of bandleader Bebo – founded the experimental Grupo Irakere in 1973. As a solo artist he is represented with two tracks, opening the compilation with “La Sombra”, and returning later with the rich piano-saxophone duel, “Triton”. Meanwhile, his band Grupo Irakere‘s track “Juana 1600” fuses the traditional Cuban sounds with the breaks of soul and funk. The horns are explosive and the rhythm’s frenetic – this song will make you sweat!
The beautifully sung music of Tema 4 sound like Burt Bacharach’s chase scene soundtrack from Butch Cassidy & Sundance Kid. Tema 4 are also represented on the compilation with another song: gorgeous harmonies, a slightly out-of-tune guitar and some interesting changes characterise the short but sweet song “Yayabo”, which also appears on the 12″ single to accompany the CD’s release.
Emiliano Salvador is an artists admired by all musicians and especially those playing the piano; he is what American Jazz men call a “pianist’s pianist”. In 1978, he recorded his first LP “Nueva Visión” (from which the title track comes) and it’s precisely this work that makes him known worldwide. Salvador is also heard tinkling the ivories in his unmistakable style on the delightful number “Son en 7/4”; only a musician of this calibre names his song after the time signature!
A member of the important Cuarteto D’Aida during the ’50s and ’60s, Omara Portuondo was the only female voice on the Buena Vista Social Club album. So her “Soy Cubano” really had to be on this compilation.
The legendary Bobby Carcasses is one of Cuba’s most revered jazz musicians. A fitred performer, recording artist, and entertainer, Bobby is also an extremely versatile multi-instrumentalist. His astonishing tune “Emiliano 1ro” is based on a classic salsa rhythm and carries the listener along at a typically fast pace.
Some of the best songs in the genre are gathered together here on this collection that’s guaranteed to please those already familiar with Cuban music and those unfamiliar to the scene. Jazzanova and Erik Ott’s “Nueva Vision” compilation is packed full with greats from the Cuban scene, functioning as the perfect reference for those who really want to know where it’s at in Cuban Jazz. It is gloriously happy music that will fill your life with sunshine.
—
If you would like some more information or you want to preview or review this release and would like to receive a promo copy, please contact sophie@rocketsciencemedia.com or simon@rocketsciencemedia.com
“Solid Silver” – The Bionics (Bocajito) [ALBUM] November 13, 2007
Posted by rocketsciencemedia in Press Releases.Tags: 19th november, bionics, bocajito, solid silver
add a comment

TITLE: Solid Silver / ARTIST: The Bionics / LABEL: Bocajito / RELEASE DATE: 19th November / CAT NO: BOCACD006
Consisting of Danielle Moore and Tim Davies of Crazy P, and renowned producer Ben Davis, The Bionics have created is a sublime piece of club-disco.
Ben Davis spent the earlier part of his musical career as an indie kid, before being slapped in the face by rave in the early ‘90s. He went on to run paperecordings and Shaboom Records for a number of years, before finally picking up a copy of Cubase and locking himself in a room until he’d learnt the tools of the trade. A man of diverse tastes, his influences range from Al Green to Devandra Banhart to Moodyman, and he currently enjoys a spot of dubstep of a Saturday. There is a rumour that Ben served as an apprentice castanet player with both Los Lobos and the Gypsy Kings.
Danielle Moore is something of a tour de force. Her mother introduced her to Sister Sledge at the tender age of 8, securing a love of disco and eventually paving the way for a career in music. An original Hacienda regular and big Prince fan, she provides Crazy P with an undeniable stage presence and ensures the crowd have a bloody good time, matching her on stage antics with an incredible voice.
Tim Davies spent his teens in bands, plucking away on bass until at the age of 18 he located the funk and soul section of a grotty second hand record store on a pier in Colwyn Bay. He’s an accomplished bass player, and notes that the hoover is pitched at a constant D-sharp. He’s rumoured to have been a member of a Bangladeshi skiffle group in the 70’s.
A bizarre magnetic pull lured Ben, Danielle and Tim Davies into the cellar of Flash Studios where they banged on tins, pulled on strings and poked at keys, feeding their creations into a master computer and lubricating the results with Danielle’s able vocals and lyrics. The process was an organic one, resulting in half a dozen accomplished tracks that made creating an album the logical next step. Thus was the rather splendidly raw and wonky “Solid Silver” borne: ten tracks of organic electronics and natural digitalism with roots in pop, house, techno and disco aimed at the heart, feet and head.
“Solid Silver” is scheduled for release on Nottingham’s Bocajito Records, responsible for some of the best slow-burning dance albums of the year from Secret Stealth (“Mince & Onions”), Floorman (“Floorman Presents Stack”) and Neon Heights.
The first single off “Solid Silver” will be “Love Chains”, complete with a Greg Wilson edit and Heavy Deviance remix of “Real Loving”.
The Bionics have been getting props from Ralph Lawson, Greg Wilson, Phat Phil Cooper, Magik Johnson and Yes King for their blend of wonky dancefloor robotics.
—
If you would like some more information or you want to preview or review this release and would like to receive a promo copy, please contact sophie@rocketsciencemedia.com or simon@rocketsciencemedia.com
“The Moonshine Sessions” – $olal (¡Ya Basta!) [ALBUM] November 13, 2007
Posted by rocketsciencemedia in Press Releases.Tags: 25th february, solal, the moonshine sessions, ya basta
1 comment so far

TITLE: The Moonshine Sessions / ARTIST: $olal / LABEL: ¡Ya Basta / RELEASE DATE: 25th February / CAT NO: YAB035CDLTD
“The Moonshine Sessions” – the new album from Philippe Cohen Solal, French composer, DJ/producer and co-founder of Gotan Project – is as unexpected as it is remarkable. Recorded near Nashville with an ensemble of virtuoso musicians, and devoid of dance beats or electronica, this is an album of purist acoustic country music. Haunting, ghostly, unobtrusively emotional, its frugal use of melody is in vivid contrast to Gotan Project’s multi-million selling, velvety fusion of live tango and electronica. But it’s a piece of creative risk taking that has paid off dramatically.
Produced by Philippe Solal and Bucky Baxter during an enjoyably fruitful fortnight at Baxter’s rural Three Trees Studios, “The Moonshine Sessions” became a labour of love for all concerned, creating a buzz around Nashville’s country scene, and features musicians such as Richard Bennett – who’s worked with Neil Diamond and Emmylou Harris – Kenny Malone, Stuart Duncan and Shawn Camp.
Philippe’s love affair with country first began when he heard Neil Young’s Nashville-recorded album “Harvest”. Years later while touring with Gotan Project, he found himself writing darker, more personal songs. In June 2004 he took a bluegrass course at the Maryville College near Knoxville, Tennessee to improve his flat-picking guitar technique, hang out with fellow country enthusiasts, and wallow a little in the atmosphere of the Deep South. He drove to Nashville in search of the right producer and musicians to record and perform what was now an album’s worth of songs, and found Bucky Baxter and his Three Trees Studios. Baxter – a musician of no small repute – toured for 8 years with Bob Dylan as a multi-instrumentalist and colourful on-stage foil. He also played on the Ryan Adams albums “Gold” and “Demolition”, and the vinyl-only album, “Country Mike’s Greatest Hits”, with the Beastie Boys.
You can feel the languor of a Tennessee day and the heat of a Tennessee night ever-present on the album. Songs like “The Academy of Trust”, sung by Jim Lauderdale, carry a depth and intensity that belies their simple arrangements: the gentle acoustic guitar, the sighing pedal steel, the bitter vocals. There is longing, in Melonie Cannon’s exquisitely sad vocals on the tender “I Lost Him”, about the sudden death of a loved one. “Always Alone” is sung by Ronny Bowman, who magically appeared when Philippe was looking for someone who sounded like James Taylor doing country. This song brims with the kind of loneliness and regret that make country the best break-up music there is. But there is light amongst the shade in two playful, contrary, yet complimentary covers: ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” and the Sex Pistols’ “Pretty Vacant”.
Back in Paris, $olal tried to add electronic beats and textures – but it didn’t work. He decided to accept that “The Moonshine Sessions” should be totally acoustic, adding noises of the Tennessee day and night, snippets of conversation, the noise of a truck engine rumbling into life and the hum of crickets – all elements that bring a contemporary edge to an album that is pure country, refracted through the eyes, ears and experiences of a French DJ and producer not afraid to push his creative freedom to its limits.
—
If you would like some more information or you want to preview or review this release and would like to receive a promo copy, please contact sophie@rocketsciencemedia.com or simon@rocketsciencemedia.com
“Drum Lesson Vol. 1″ – Christian Prommer’s Drumlesson (Sonar Kollektiv) [ALBUM] November 13, 2007
Posted by rocketsciencemedia in Press Releases.Tags: 28th january, christian prommer, drumlesson, sonar kollektiv
add a comment

TITLE: Drum Lesson Vol. 1 / ARTIST: Christian Prommer’s Drumlesson / LABEL: Sonar Kollektiv / RELEASE DATE: 28th January / CAT NO: SK162CD
Drum Lesson Vol. 1 began with the idea of recording an acoustic version of the Derrick May classic “Strings of Life” for jazz quartet. Christian Prommer had recorded the basic idea some time ago in his new studio in the Munich countryside. Considered as a “one-off” track for a bit of fun, it sat on the shelf for a long time until Alex Barck of the Jazzanova crew, came by and heard the track. Alex and the rest of the crew got so excited about it – playing it in their DJ sets all over the world – that they soon decided to release a 12″ with the track. Released in May 2007 it was a fast spreading phenomenon. DJs and music lovers from all sides of the musical spectrum found something to love in it, including Derrick May who also gave Christian Prommer the thumbs up.
Christian Prommer decided to stick with his idea of covering dance classics in a jazz style while preparing his debut album for Sonar Kollektiv. Feeling most at home in the world between jazz and Detroit techno, he decided to do an album project in two parts. Volume 1 would reinterpret the dance classics in a jazz fashion, using a band to perform them. Meanwhile, Volume 2 – to be released in 2008 – will be an album that takes the lesson to the next level and delivers original compositions in a wider range, featuring collaborations with vocalists, the Drumlesson players, string ensembles, and with Christian Prommer playing many of the instruments himself.
Prommer used specific microphones and preamps, taking care to use vintage drums from the fifties and sixties and combine them with the musicians’ instruments to get the exact sounds he needed for the session. After the music had been recorded, Christian went to Vienna to mix the album with long time collaborator and friend Peter Kruder in his studio. All analogue and vintage technology was used to create the sound of the album.
From the deep interpretation of DJ Gregory’s “Elle” to the Rachmaninoff-like excursions on Nuyorican Soul’s “Nervous Track”; from the polyrhythmic melody of “Rej” to the beautiful intro of Mr. Fingers‘ “Can You Feel It”; from the amazing playing in the Latin firework of “Trans Europa Express” and “Beau Mot Plage” to the deep, moody moments in “Higher State of Consciousness”; from Patrick Pulsinger’s “Claire” to the 3/4 rhythm of “Plastic Dreams”; each dance track – once a quantized lattice of synthesised sounds – has been beautifully and originally worked over with a tremendous amount of care and respect, bringing the two oft-considered disparate worlds of jazz and dance together in a harmonious union.
—
If you would like some more information or you want to preview or review this release and would like to receive a promo copy, please contact sophie@rocketsciencemedia.com or simon@rocketsciencemedia.com