Articles
The Fun Years
Mlle Caro & Franck Garcia
James Blackshaw
Lullatone

Albums
@c
Antenne
Antripodean Collective
Rudi Arapahoe
Black Gold 360
Brael / Tokyo Bloodworm
Richard Chartier
Jack Dangers
Rae Davis
Depth Affect
Taylor Deupree
Engine7
Emanuele Errante
Force of Nature
Gel-Sol
Glissando
Hardfloor
He Can Jog
Hulk
Adam Hurst
Kenny Larkin
Loco Dice
Mad EP
Maju
Marc + Hillage
Izumi Misawa
Nico Muhly
Toshimaru Nakamura
Organum
Maja S.K. Ratkje
Nicola Ratti
Recue
Renfro
Sawako
Seawalker
Raoul Sinier
Spyweirdos et al.
Svartbag
Tape
John Tejada
Tietchens + Chartier
Transitional

Compilations / Mixes
Ai022LP
Buzzin' Fly 5 Golden Years
Cielo-Cinco
Deconstructive Music
Om: Miami 2008
Sounds of Om Vol. 6
Traum 100
Underscan Now

EPs
Claro Intelecto
Funckarma
Tanaka Hideyuki
Jona
Alton Miller
Move D
saidsound
Sebastian San
Scott vs. Vaz
Philip Sherburne
Vakula

VA: Traum 100
Traum

Staying in operation for ten years and issuing one hundred releases are accomplishments that definitely warrant celebration, especially when labels seem to be falling so regularly by the wayside. So one would expect Traum's one-hundredth release to be well-nigh perfect—alas, it's not, though its established names (Broker/Dealer, Gabriel Ananda, Jesse Somfay, Process, Dominik Eulberg, Thomas Brinkmann) and recent recruits (Moonbeam, Minilogue, Super Flu) do contribute a goodly amount of high-grade material (all previously unreleased).

The best tracks, from Dominik Eulberg and Jesse Somfay, are both irresistibly melodic and rhythmically infectious: Eulberg's “Es Klebt Noch Morgentau in Deinem Haar” (“There Is Still Morning Dew Sticking To Your Hair”) is distinguished by the thrust of its bumping techno groove and tinkle of its sweetly chiming melodies, while Somfay's euphoric “The Days of My Youth Ended With Broken Bottles” (remixed by Eulberg and Riley Reinhold) pairs a lovely Kraftwerk-styled synth melody over an equally jaunty pulse (listen closely and you'll actually hear four instruments play the original melody in variations). Were all of the album's material at this level it would be perfect (sequenced after Somfay's track, Super Flu's club banger “Sunset Handjob” can't help but suffer when it's so melodically lean).

The too-little heard West Coast duo Broker/Dealer makes a strong impression with “Midnight,” whose shimmering synth lines and lightly chugging beats exude a sultry Balearic breeziness, and so too do Moonbeam with its low-riding clubber “You Can Hear Them,” Gabriel Ananda with his sleek rouser “Lila Pause” and Process (Steve Barnes) with the early-hours stormer “City-zen.” Slightly less stunning though still credible enough are tracks by Bukaddor & Fishbeck (the trance house cut “Decade”), Minilogue (the clickety flow of the driving tech-house track “Carnival”), Thomas Brinkmann (the punchy, bass-heavy disco groover “Aleks in Love”).

July 2008