Articles
Rafael Anton Irisarri
Slow Six

Albums
Another Electronic Musician
Balmorhea
Celer
City of Satellites
Cylon
Deadbeat
Kyle Bobby Dunn
Eluvium
Ent
Ido Govrin
Danny Paul Grody
Chihei Hatakeyama
Wyndel Hunt
The Internal Tulips
Keepsakes
The Knife
Kshatriy
Lali Puna
Francisco López
Mask
Melodium
Monolake
Clara Moto
Myrmyr
Nos Phillipé
Ontayso
Outputmessage
Pleq
The Q4
Schuster
Shinkei + mise_en_scene
The Sight Below
Sphere Rex
subtractiveLAD
Bjørn Svin
Tamagawa
Ten and Tracer
Trills
Trouble Books
Yellow Swans

Compilations / Mixes
An Taobh Tuathail Vol. III
Does Your Cat Know My...
Emerging Organisms 3
Moment Sound Vol. 1

EPs
Brim Liski
Ceremony
Eric Chenaux
Abe Duque
Hieroglyphic Being
Rafael Anton Irisarri
Manaboo
Monolake
Mr Cooper & Dday One
Pleq & Seque
Nigel Samways
Santos and Woodward
Simon Scott
Soundpool
Stimming, Watt & Biel
Stray Ghost
Ten and Tracer
Stuchka Vkarmanye

Abe Duque feat. Blake Baxter: What Happened?-Part 2
Process Recordings

The second remix go-round of the 2004 classic “What Happened?” by Abe Duque and Blake Baxter arrives by way of a competition conducted by Resident Advisor. All four remixers retain the tune's signature rant (though voice treatments alter its delivery) but liberally twist the instrumental backing into contrasting shapes. Competition winner DJ Glen sets the scene with an instrumental intro featuring a nicely rolling bass pattern and a driving funk-techno swing before unleashing the vocal in a gravelly, low-pitched, and occasionaly shredded treatment. In their frenetic makeover, R.E.C. (Ralph Myerz, Eddie de Bass and DJ Carina) back the vocal with a supercharged blend of techno broil and squelchy house chords. At first, Zied Jouini's trippy, mid-tempo treatment allows the vitriol of the vocal to occupy center stage, but soon enough one's attention shifts to the jacking thrust of the backing. The final treatment comes from Reiner Mauch and Lady Puma, with the two pairing the original voiceover with an infectious house pulse and some vocal shadowboxing by Lady Puma. They're legitimate covers all, though one can't help feel that the point's now been thoroughly made. Time to move on…

March 2010