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Deadfish Audio

Almost one year ago, we held our very first inTORview segment, which featured the likes of electronic music’s shining prince, Louis Brodinski. The concept was catchy, an explicit play on the word interview, so as to insinuate that the artist was playing a gig in Toronto. Genius, if we do say so ourselves, but we must admit, these close encounters are too few and far between, so a conscious effort will be made by us to conduct more of the like. Today we’re very happy to announce that we caught up with one of the premier duos in the realm of house music, Made To Play’s DJ/producing tandem, Round Table Knights — who are coincidentally our headliner for this Saturday. We touch all topics branching from hip-hop music, to picking sides in Black Swan; you don’t wanna miss this.

Huge congratulations to you two upon the completion of the forthcoming album on Made To Play. The “Say What” Album Sampler gave us a taste of what to expect, but we’re curious about the tenuous process of creating a house music album. Was there a unique direction you guys chose to take with the album (a theme, maybe), or was it a bunch of pieces that eventually just came together?

The basic idea was to make a real album. Not just some dance tracks that can only be enjoyed in the club. We wanted to do something that works in the club, as well as at home, or in the car.  The album should be like one of our mixes, with all the different influences we have, but at the end it should be house music.

Your relationship with Made To Play has rendered three massive EPs, all of which have been very well-received by the house music community. Talk about your relationship with label-boss Jesse Rose, and how influential he’s been to your work, and evolution as DJs.

We have been fans of Made To Play since day one. The label has always had quite a big influence on us, so it was a big honour to hear that Jesse Rose liked our stuff so much. We first met Jesse when we opened for him in Switzerland, and that was also where he first heard Calypso. He loved the song, and one week later it was signed to Made To Play. That was a big step in our career.

There’s no denying that “Calypso” almost perfected the tropical/ethno house sound that was so popular over the past two years. In general, has that specific sound begun to expire, or will there always be ways to keep tribal/tropical/ethno house fresh and enticing?

Its like with every sound. Someone comes up with it, it gets popular and after a while you get sick of it because everybody’s doing the same thing. Its just normal, but there will always be elements that stay and help to improve future music. The interesting thing is gonna be who is taking which elements, playing with it until they come up with something new. The learning process in never over.

With darker strands of Techno music, more specifically Acid, and Deep House seeing such a renaissance as of late, do you guys see your sets going noticeably deeper, or do you make a point of keeping your sets fun and bouncy?

Our sets are always different. We never prepare. We usually arrive one hour before the set, check out the club and the crowd, then one of us starts with a song ,and from there on it’s back-to-back till the end of the set. But it’s true, we notice it ourselves that our sets getting deeper than maybe one year ago. That has to do with our interest in developing our music and our DJ sets. We wanna do new, fresh stuff. Improvement is the most important thing.

We’re always curious about what artists think of the contrast between European and North American club culture. You’ve been across the pond a couple times now, where do you see the main differences between the two?

The main thing is maybe that nights start earlier here in North America than in Europe. But then again Europe is very different too from country to country. Some people told us before we came here, that North Americans like it ‘harder’, that we couldn’t play as deep as we play in Europe, but that’s not true. We play the same kind of sets over here as we would play over there. It’s all about your attitude on stage and how you combine your songs.

We understand your early DJ career was rooted in serious turntablism, being big fans of the ITF and DMC. Hip-Hop remains a massive musical sector in North America. Do you guys keep up to date with the going-ons in rap culture?

Yes, we were big scratch nerds. We still have a lot of old DMC and ITF videos at home…haha. We still follow the hip-hop scene a little bit, but its not like it has a big influence in our music. But it can happen that we play some hip-hop tunes in our set. That’s always fun.

You guys just recently put together a remix for your countrymen, Mercury, which dropped on one of our favorite labels, GOMMA. We were so impressed by Mercury, we were wondering if you could give us the inside track on any other budding talents from your homeland?

Yes, check out Mercury they are amazing, and there will be more stuff coming soon from them! Also check out Jagged and if you like it a bit more tropical, check out Wildlife! I’m sure you already know Deetron and Dimlite.

RTK is part of a close-knit rat-pack so to speak, with the likes of Mowgli, Solo, Jesse Rose, Zombie Disco Squad, Renaissance Man, Camel and several others. Tell us about the dynamic when you’re together with those guys. Who’s the funniest, who parties hardest, etc. etc.?

We love those guys, and it’s so amazing to be part of this big family. It’s fun with everyone, but the best thing is when we’re all together, then it gets messy…haha.

Who are some of the DJ/Producers you guys look up to (past or present)? Who have you seen lately that you’ve been especially impressed by?

Homework are great! And one of our favourite labels at the moment is Suol. We are also big fans of James Blake, and Jamie XX.

Who is Reverend Beat-Man, from ‘Cut To The Top’?

Reverend Beat-Man is a voodoo Garage Rock Legend from Bern. Check his amazing label, Voodoo Rhythm, and if you have the chance, go check him out live. He’s an amazing performer!!

We understand you guys are somewhat big movie buffs, in regard to Black Swan — Mila Kunis, or Natalie Portman?

Natalie Portman!!! We love her!!!

Last question here gentlemen. What’s the best thing in Bern that we don’t know about?

In the summer you can swim in the river called Aare. This really is the best thing you can do! After this, go to Club Bonsoir ;-)

Thanks very much for doing this guys, and we look forward to catching up with you again at The Social on Saturday. We’re certain that the Faktory will have the “Really Good” sign positioned all over the place! Cheers!

RTK | myspace | website

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Top Ten Labels of 2010

January 3, 2011

What’s maybe more interesting than the actual list below, is the notable omissions made for this year — well, one in particular. You will find that Sound Pellegrino, everyone’s (us included) super-label of 2009 has not been included on our 2010 docket. With a solid start to 2010, releasing Bart B More’s Romane EP, we thought SNP was off to another scorcher of a year, but it was a tragic fall from there. Far too much annoying gibberish by Teki Latex, too many soft spot tracks, and no where near the production prowess that was enlisted in ’09. It’s sad, but true. Ok, now, after having got that off our chests, we must mention that we love the way our 2010 label rankings shaped up, with some stunning up-and-comers, and some always stellar powerhouses. Enjoy.

Top Ten Labels of 2010:

01 | Turbo Recordings

Est: 1998
Headquarters: Montreal, Canada
# of 2010 Releases: 22
Notable Artists: Tiga, Sei A, Kebacid, Terence Fixmer, Gesaffeslstein, Azari & III, Boy 8 Bit
Website

Whether it’s industrial techno, banging techno, sappy disco, fancy electro or nu-acid, Turbo does it all. With the Sei A album, and EPs from the likes of Terence Fixmer, Gesaffeslstein, Azari & III, and Boy 8 Bit, our friends from Montreal seriously ran away with it this year. With looming LPs from Proxy and Azari & III, a repeat for 2011 looks more than probable.

02 | Made To Play

Est: 2005
Headquarters: Berlin, Germany
# of 2010 Releases: 14
Notable Artists: RTK, Renaissance Man, Jesse Rose, Riva Starr, Homework, Oliver $
Website

A massive campaign for Jesse Rose and the boys, with a classic album from Riva Starr, a pair of EPs from Renaissance Man, and EPs from the likes of Homework, Oliver $, and the boss himself, this was truly a year to remember for Made To Play. Add to that, the success of Play it Down, and the number two spot in our ranks is cemented.

03 | Get The Curse

Est: 2010
Headquarters: Paris, France
# of 2010 Releases: 5
Notable Artists: Clement Meyer, Photonz, Olibusta, Darabi, Sei A, Roman Fluegel
Website

This selection may raise a bunch of eyebrows, but we’re adamant that no one is making proper techno music like these boys from Paris. The entire braintrust from Get The Curse are on another dimension of deep, haunted techno production, and the quality rammed into their tastefully minute catalogue is the cherry on top.

04 | Hot Creations

Est: 2010
Headquarters: Los Angeles, California
# of 2010 Releases: 5
Notable Artists: Lee Foss, Jamie Jones, Robert James, Burnski, Robin Porter
Website

The funkiest, grooviest disco-house outfit on this list, with EPs by Lee Foss and Jamie Jones that were some of the strongest we heard all year long. Very happy to see that California is a stronghold for creative house music, with another label run by Mr. von Stroke not far away, in the bay-area.

05 | Youngunz

Est: 2009
Headquarters: Paris, France
# of 2010 Releases: 7
Notable Artists: French Fries, Manare, Bambounou, Alan Gay, Lazy Flow
Website

What a year for this youthful group of Frenchman. They practically took the industry by storm in early 2010 with unforgettable releases by French Fries and Manare, but eventually cooled with a borderline sexpose´ EP by Alan Gay. Regardless, a very promising future for these ringleaders of gangster house.


06 | Night Slugs

Est: 2010
Headquarters: London, England
# of 2010 Releases: 10
Notable Artists: L-Vis 1990, Mosca, Egyptrixx, Girl Unit, Kingdom, Velour, Jam City
Website

A label that embodies the vogue sound for the back-half of 2010. How to categorize it, we’ll never know. Throwing around cliches like UK Funky, UK Garage, Experimental, Dubstep — none of these resonate particularly well with us. Regardless, an incredible roster of talent, with a series of knock-out EPs.

07 | Crosstown Rebels

Est: 2003
Headquarters: London, England
# of 2010 Releases: 16
Notable Artists: Art Department, Soul Clap, Jamie Jones, Laurent Garnier, Lee Jones
Website

Vintage house music was reborn this year, and Crosstown Rebels lead the brigade. We all know how successful the release by Art Department was, but strong showings by Soul Clap and Jamie Jones as well, help make this decision a no-brainer. Will they hit the jack-pot with another Art Dept. release in 2011?

08 | Boysnoize Records

Est: 2005
Headquarters: Berlin, Germany
# of 2010 Releases: 17
Notable Artists: Boys Noize, Djedjotronic, Housemeister, Strip Steve, Rynecologist
Website

Boysnoize Recs is always an electro manufacturing powerhouse, and we were really happy with the mother-load of releases they dropped this year. Add to this, the success of BNR Traxe and some may be scratching their heads as to why BNR wasn’t top-5. Our answer, too much of anything is never a good thing; BNR needs to diversify in 2011.

09 | Ed Banger

Est: 2003
Headquarters: Paris, France
# of 2010 Releases: 15
Notable Artists: Carte Blanche, Mr. Flash, Cassius, Feadz, Mickey Moonlight, Breakbot
Website

A renaissance year for Pedro’s crew in France, after being snubbed off our list in 2009. Obviously there was no stopping Ed Banger this time around with EPs by Carte Blanch, Mr. Flash, and of course, Cassius. Hopefully they don’t make a habit of taking years off, and keep the tunes churning in 2011.

10 | Ghostly International

Est: 1999
Headquarters: Ann Arbor, Michigan
# of 2010 Releases: 29
Notable Artists: Gold Panda, Matthew Dear, Deastro, School of Seven Bells
Website

Home to some of the most bizarre, artsy-fartsy, experimental snob music around, Ghostly makes our list because they were the geniuses behind two of our top-10 albums for this past year. Indeed, Black City by Matthew Dear and Lucky Shiner by Gold Panda were both products of this Michigan-based label.

11 | Dirtybird

Est: 2005
Headquarters: San Francisco, United States
# of 2009 Releases: 17
Notable Artists: Claude Von Stroke, Justin Martin, Sascha Braemer, Julio Bashmore
Website

Perhaps the most solid contemperary house music label in the world. Dirtybird’s brand of San Francisco house deserves it’s own sub-genre at this point, because each release bring something innovative and fresh to the table. Taking chances on fresh artists like Julio Bashmore and Cajmere really paid off.

12 | Phantasy Sound

Est: 2007
Headquarters: London, England
# of 2010 Releases: 10
Notable Artists: Erol Alkan, Paul Chambers, Chilly Gonzales, Babe Terror
Website

Phantasy always operates in a very sneaky and subliminal way, compiling solid release after solid release, often going unnoticed the whole way. Luckily, anything run by Erol Alkan is going to wreak with quality, so there never is much of an issue when it comes to measuring their success.

13 | Deadfish Audio

Est: 2008
Headquarters: London, England
# of 2010 Releases: 10
Notable Artists: Mowgli, Camel, Tom Flynn, Zombie Disco Squad
Website

A bit of a drop-off for our Italian friends at Deadfish. Mowgli and Camel are keeping this outfit alive with their sturdy house and tech-house production. A little more variety and some fresh faces would have done them good. We saw glimpses in the Deadfish remix album, but we want to hear from some of those artists in EP form.

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We’re always a tad over-excited when we can personally contribute to the impact of What’s Good Wednesday!? by bringing international DJ talent to town. Our helping hand comes specifically on this Thursday (tomorrow night) when Deadfish Audio DJ/Producer Camel comes to town to dazzle The Social, alongside trusty DJs Golden Gloves, Meech and Bordello. This one promises to be a truly rare passage through quality house and tech house, treating the most seasoned listener to a wide array of exclusive noises. Camel’s tremendous quality has been well documented on this page and we are bubbling with excitement to see this young gun strut his stuff on those fancy CDJ2000′s at The Social.

Thursday

The Headliner: CAMEL — Thursday @ The Social
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The Opener: Calvertron, Barletta & More — Thursday @ Nocture
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The Opener: Barletta, O-God & Paul David — Thursday @ Sutra
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The Opener: Lucie Tic & Fawn Big Canoe — Thursday @ Andy Poolhall
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The Closer: Mike Shannon — Thursday @ Cobra
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Friday

The Headliner: St. Mandrew, Bordello & Andy Ares — Friday @ Mod Club
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The Opener: The Rub, Smalltown DJs & Tom Wrecks — Friday @ The Drake
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The Opener: Nave C, Hutch & More — Friday @ The Social
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The Opener: Denise Benson, Pho, Orly & More — Friday @ Andy Poolhall
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Saturday

The Headliner: Stephan Bodzin — Saturday @ Footwork
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The Opener: Blatta & Inesha w/ Torro Torro — Saturday @ The Social
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The Opener: PeaceTreaty w/ Gooffee & More — Saturday @ Wrongbar
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The Opener: Carlo Lio, James Teej & More — Saturday @ Beach Location
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Desert’s Finest

August 24, 2010

In case you haven’t already heard, one of our most cherished dj/producers will be making his highly anticipated North American debut this Thursday (August 26th) at The Social. Indeed, electroTO and The Faktory are very proud to present the latest installment of Social Thursday featuring Italian-native Andrea Maver, aka Camel, of Deadfish Audio fame.

The perfect precursor to this massive occasion is Camel’s latest promotional single, which was released just days ago as a free give-away through Jackmode Agency — one of the most relevant talent management organizations in the world. The piece goes by the name Akin and features the deep drums, melodic harmonies and enchanting vibe that we have come to know and love from Camel.

It truly seems that this dude can do no wrong in the production room, assembling brilliant track, after brilliant track. His intricate use of lucid samples, haunting organic instrument progressions, and the grooviest percussion loops all amount to Andrea Maver being one of the finest producers around. This specific aural experience almost entices you to spiritually teleport to the most remote regions of an Arabic desert, and wander, aimlessly.  Thursday is going to be magical.

Camel – Akin (Original Mix)

Camel | myspace | beatport

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Camel Ride

August 19, 2010

One week from today.

Once again, blogging superpower electroTO has teamed up with promotion mastermind The Faktory to bring you an event that combines all things beautiful about Toronto’s electronic music scene. The latest edition features a very dear guest, making his North American debut, and more specifically, one of the most promising DJ talents in the world.

In the spring of 2009, we stumbled upon an infantile tech-house label based out the UK by the name of Deadfish Audio (a label that we’ve repeatedly flaunted on this very space). Spearheaded by lead-man Mowgli, the steady stream of innovative releases opened our eyes to a very refreshing take on house music, and left a lasting impression that eventually won our unquestioned support.

Thursday August 26th will celebrate the man who is arguably the diamond jewel of the Deadfish Audio crew, both as a DJ & as a producer — Camel. With three stellar EP releases and a whole slew of incredible remixes in the last year and a half, Camel has asserted himself as the most sought out young producer in the house and tech house game. Period. Mark this one on your calendar, it’s going to be special.

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Smoking Trumpet

February 28, 2010

This past week, we kinda had a theme here at electroTO. With posts published on both the Round Table Knights, as well as Zombie Disco Squad, we were trying to shed light on the next generation of dominant house-music producers. Today, we will continue that trend by discussing one of Deadfish Audio‘s most prized possessions, Italian-born producer, Camel.

Camel is yet another budding DJ/Producer who got off to a ferocious start in 2010, with the release of his Zig Zag EP on the aforementioned Deadfish Audio label, managed by Mowgli. The track that we’re featuring today is actually not from that release, and in fact, it’s not from any official release. The track “Smoking Trumpet” has been popping up in relevant sets across Europe, and just recently infiltrated the interwebs (at the utter jubilation of the electronic music community).

Being indiscriminate supporters of everything that comes out of the Deadfish camp, often times our support will be utterly blind — but we can truthfully say that this track is special. Certainly, the horn sample has become cliché after the likes of Jesse Rose, Crookers and virtually everyone at Sound Pellegrino got a hold of the sound package, but Camel manages to keep it unique, stemming from his sheer mastery of drum selection, and sample phrasing. The track bumps like few others, and solidifies this dude as yet another member of the house music renaissance movement. Enjoy.

Camel – Smoking Trumpet (Original Mix)

Camel | myspace | beatport

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inTORview: Brodinski

February 2, 2010

Yes, yes, ladies and gentlemen, we here at electroTO are proud to announce a new segment set to grace our space, and we honestly believe that it will offer insights into the electronic music industry that can seldom be found anywhere else. Most of us are well aware of the talent that comes through our beloved city, but our InTORview segment will provide an exclusive, deeply personal look at the top DJ/Producer talents that descend upon our borough. And our inaugural edition, really couldn’t be much bigger. Here is our sit-down with Louis Brodinski:

So how has your latest trip to North America been? Work or play?

It’s been pretty good. It was not really a tour. It was like three weeks in LA for work, but after that, my agent found some gigs, and said you have your friend from Philly who wants you to play, your friend Ryne in Toronto who wants you to play, as well as a gig in Montreal. So I said, okay I’ll take it. I’m coming back in March in Miami, with Erol, Boys Noize, DJ Mehdi, Aeroplane. Yeaaa… it’s going to be good.

In playing your style of techno, how do you find the difference in crowd response from Europe to North America?

The club couture in North America is totally different, but it’s a really good thing for us too. In Europe it’s a real business. Every club, I come, I open as the invite DJ, and every weekend it’s a good party; the crowd is really into it. But here, we need to work, like, we need to come, and come back, and come back, and come back again. You know? Even for me it’s really difficult because I have no album or nothing like that, like Boys Noize for example. For Alex, it’s pretty good because he has his image, his label, his project, his albums, he has two albums right now, and he’s come here, and people go to see him. One, because he’s a good DJ, and two,  you can hear tracks from an album. You know what I mean? Like only the geeks and the nerd can know everything that I play [...] But it’s cool (haha).

People know you for your close friendship and production relationship with Yuksek. Can you speak about your relationship with him, and are you two still as close in the studio?

I think we are the exact same today. When we can work together, we do. But for example, I have a mixtape to do, I have a CD to do, I have a remix to do for Miami. I’m in North America right now, coming back for only two days in France, play, and then go off to Japan after having only one week off. Then after it’s Maimi… like wow. It’s a lot.

We heard about a collaboration with You, Djedjotronic, Noob and Harvard Bass. Tell us!

Yes, we do a track with Noob, Djedjotronic, Harvard Bass and me. Yea but, like now it’s close to the end, with Noob and Djedjo. But we will definitely be doing something for Miami, I think.

You just named a couple of your close DJ friends. Who’s the craziest? Who parties hardest?

Ohh no Victor (Harvard Bass). Victor is the craziest. He’s so funny. Even Noob and Djedjo too, but they are very clever. They work a lot. Yea but like, all good guys.

From other interviews we’ve heard that you’ve been getting better at doing your own production. Do you ever see yourself producing on your own, without a collaborator?

No. It’s just like I’m not a big fan of being in the studio and working on my own song. But when I’m with somebody, it’s really funny, and we can do something different. [...] If I’m working on something I really like, I need to be in the studio for like a week, working on like exactly the same track. I need to be with somebody in the studio. After two years of working with somebody, I’m just seeing. I know what I’m seeing. I totally understand it. I need some more time, but I think it’s going to be good.

It’s clear that you’re a huge fan of hip-hop, as depicted in your blog SmokeMachine. Are you doing anything to pursue that, or is it just a personal hobby?

I think the real problem with hip-hop… when you want to be a hip-hop producer, you need to produce like 25 beats a day. And we produce a track every 4 months, so like, it’s difficult. The rap business is totally different from the electronic business. But yea it’s interesting, like I will do some stuff. Some people are interested in it. I’m doing a rap mixtape, just for myself, just so I can say, at this time, I listened to this music. I don’t care what people think. I just do it for me. [...] In Canada and US, hip-hop is big. Half of the tracks I put on my blog, everybody knows. In Europe, it’s like nobody cares about hip-hop music.

When it comes to producing techno, who would be the one producer you would want to see yourself working with?

I would say Yuksek is the best for that. Yea, for me, because, he’s an engineer and a friend. And working with a friend is just the best for me. [What about Soulwax?] Yeaa, Soulwax are good, but they’re really busy too, you know?

You appeared on Teki and Orgasmic’s ‘Sound Pellegrino’ label last year, any chance you appear on some other emerging labels, like Mowgli’s ‘Deadfish’, or the like?

I like Deadfish. I think it’s a really good label. We just decide… For example, Mowgli asked me, “Do You want to work with Camel? I think it’s gonna be a good idea for him.” And, I think it’s gonna be a good idea for him too, and I like what Camel is doing at the moment, he is really on fire. So I said, ahh, why not!? And it’s a project, between another one. It’s just like, cool… But for Teki, he approach me maybe a year and a half ago, and said “Listen man, I maybe want to do a label, have you got something?” And I said, yea I got something, and it was the track ‘Boogieman’, an old one, really. Then I told my friend Guilliam (The Shoes) that I wanted to do something, and we did ‘Sha Shtil’, and ‘Casablanco’ was like two weeks after. And it was with Yuksek too, yea. It was pretty good. It was good for me. People liked it, people reacted pretty well.

In previous interviews you mentioned that The Shoes and Monsieur Monsieur are big acts to look out for. Anyone else that you have your eye on in 2010?

Hmm. I think a little guy from Belgium, named Highbloo. He send me just all his stuff, and the last two is just… (gesture suggesting craziness). Yea, yea he’s really good. And he’s a nice guy. He send me all his stuff and says “okay what you think, what do you think?”. I just want to see what’s next for him. He’s a French guy from Belgium. You know how they have two parts in Belgium? But yea he’s really good, I really like his stuff. And another guy, a French guy called French Fries [Ohh yes the Arma EP]. Yeaaa, that’s really good. The BeatauCue remix is the best, and even the original too. And the sound, I think it’s really good today. It’s like that minimal kind of dutch house. It works really well… I remember end of January of 2009, I was so excited about music, with the ‘Spraycan EP’, ‘Nadastrom’, and stuff like that. And today, I’m listening to some different stuff. Like this Dutch guy named Oliver Twizt, sent some stuff to Mad Decent. I was in LA, with Diplo, and I was listening to that, and it’s going to be really big.

As far as your new releases for this year, you have Arnold Classics coming out, and…?

Yes, Arnold Classics is coming out on Sinden’s new label called ‘Grizzly’. Yea, Sinden ask me from long time ago, “He says ya ya. I’m doing a label. Give me a track or something.” So I give him this one, and I said find some remixers. I think one is from Toronto? Egyptrixx? He’s really good. And he just did a remix for a band called Cubic Zirconia, and it’s an amazing remix. I just said to Sinden, let’s ask him to do it.

You’re a wristwatch guy, how many watches do you have?

I have 25 watches, but I only wear 25. I have many more than that. [Do you have a favorite?] I don’t have any favorites. It’s exactly like music, I change all the time.

As far as DJs you look up to, who are the best you’ve seen lately?

Mehdi is amazing. Who I’ve seen recently… Jack Beats is really good. He’s a party DJ. Diplo is amazing, as always. Who else… [Alex, obviously?] Yea, but, pfff, he’s already a king, you don’t have to (haha). Everybody plays different stuff now. I cannot wait to see the Hard party. Between Aeroplane, Erol, Busy P… and, oh man.

Last question, you play a lot of material from cutting edge artists, would you consider yourself to be a musical trendsetter?

Umm, I think a test-maker. I hope to be one. I hope to be one for everybody, not just for those who read the blog and forum! (haha)

Thanks for your time Louis!

BONUS: Edu K – Flutesnoot (Brodinski’s B-Live Mix)



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Top Ten Labels Of 2009

January 3, 2010

Sound Pellegrino

The top 10 labels of 2009 were determined by our trusty crew, through the careful consideration of a number of variables, and were not assessed exclusively on the label’s quantity of releases, or the specific artist’s notoriety. We feel very strongly about these rankings, and are convinced that this is the precise order of the quality hierarchy in the electronic music industry today. We hope you enjoy.

Top 10:

01 | Sound Pellegrino

Est: 2009
Headquarters: Paris, France
# of 2009 Releases: 9
Notable Artists: Gucci Vump, Harvard Bass, Renaissance Man, Momma’s Boy
Website

What can we really say that hasn’t already been said about the emergence of this Parisian electronic superpower. With widely publicized mysterious aliases, totally innovative sounds, and nine EPs in our top 40, there is really no denying that Teki and Orgasmic’s Sound Pellegrino is electroTO‘s label of 2009. It’s truly rare for a label to be born, and skyrocket to greatness as SP has — but it’s the only logical result when you make nothing but quality electronic music.

02 | Turbo Recordings

Est: 1998
Headquarters: Montreal, Canada
# of 2009 Releases: 17
Notable Artists: Tiga, Proxy, Jori Hulkkonen, Brodinski, Mike Mind
Website

Forget our National hockey team, or our symbolic national animals (ie. goose, moose, etc.) , Canada’s most notable point of pride should be the techno/pseudo-acid/house label known as Turbo Recordings. If not for the painstaking delay of the Proxy LP release, this label could well have claimed our top spot — luckily, EP’s such as Peanuts Club and the Zombielicious Remixes did make it to release.

03 | Boysnoize Records

Est: 2005
Headquarters: Berlin, Germany
# of 2009 Releases: 11
Notable Artists: Boys Noize, Shadow Dancer, Djedjotronic, Housemeister
Website

A blooming roster of young, talented DJ/Producers creating some of the biggest tunes in the industry — that pretty much sums up the goings-on at Boysnoize headquarters. It all starts with album boss Alex Ridha (Boys Noize) and his Power LP, which shocked the world with tracks like Starter, Jeffer, and of course Kontact Me.

04 | Made To Play

Est: 2005
Headquarters: Berlin, Germany
# of 2009 Releases: 9
Notable Artists: Jesse Rose, Riva Starr, Oliver $, Zombie Disco Squad
Website

A very “sexy” pick, if you will. Don’t let your unfamiliarity fool you, Jesse Rose’s Made To Play features some of the biggest supersleepers in all of house music, and a quick listen to their Scion CD sampler will leave you convinced. Riva Starr and Oliver $ are set to have monster 2010′s, and are names destined for the largest font on an event poster near you.

05 | Phantasy Sound

Est: 2007
Headquarters: England
# of 2009 Releases: 5
Notable Artists: Erol Alkan, Boris Dlugosch, Riton, Primary 1
Website

Erol Alkan’s Phantasy Sound featured some massive 2009 releases including Dlugosch’s Bangkok EP and Riton & Primary 1′s Who’s There? EP, in addition to the corresponding Who’s There? Remix EP.  Add on to that, the AA24/7 EP that dropped at the very tail end of 2008 and you have one of the most impressive production line-ups of the year.

06 | Dirtybird

Est: 2005
Headquarters: San Francisco, United States
# of 2009 Releases: 18
Notable Artists: Claude Von Stroke, Style of Eye, Tim Green, Riva Starr
Website

Mr. Von Stroke’s San Fran-based label is perhaps the most tech-oriented organization of the top-10, and they certainly used that to their advantage. Dirtybird’s strong 2009 was highlighted by CVS’s own full length album entitled Bird Brain, which has been described as a “diverse menagerie of sounds”, and ranks near the top in our 2009 LP rankings.

07 | Deadfish Audio

Est: 2008
Headquarters: London, England
# of 2009 Releases: 5
Notable Artists: Mowgli, Solo, Camel, Round Table Knights
Website

2009 saw the boys at Deadfish build upon the momentum they created at the end of 2008, lead by their talisman and label boss Mowgli and his flurry of releases. Both the Nu Skool EP and the Paris To London EP, by Mowgli, perfectly showcased Deadfish’s unique brand of house music, and solidified the labels position in the Top-10.

08 | Dubsided

Est: 2003
Headquarters: London, England
# of 2009 Releases: 7
Notable Artists: Jesse Rose, Renaissance Man, Nadastrom, Duke Dumont
Website

Switch’s label got off to a great start in 2009 with the release of productions such as Jesse Rose’s widely applauded LP entitled What Do You Do If You Don’t?, as well as Renaissance Man’s Spraycan EP. Both of these works were masterful in their own right, and did very well in our LP and EP rankings respectively.

09 | Nightshifters

Est: 2008
Headquarters: Berlin, Germany
# of 2009 Releases: 7
Notable Artists: AC Slater, Rob Threezy, Udachi, Hostage
Website

A very sharp, genre-agnostic label, based out of Germany that features tunes with “elements of B’more, Rave, Baile funk, Electro, Dubstep, House, Bassline, Drum and Bass” and the list goes on. It’s just this dynamic and diverse approach to electro that impressed us each time we checked out a new Nightshifters release.

10 | Trouble & Bass Recordings

Est: 2007
Headquarters: Brooklyn, United States
# of 2009 Releases: 7
Notable Artists: Drop The Lime, Mikix The Cat, AC Slater, Udachi
Website

When we brought in Luca Venezia aka Drop The Lime (Trouble & Bass label boss) to Toronto in mid-august, we were treated to a wide array of T&B exclusives, and once those tunes finally made their way to release, they did not fail to impress. The Set Me Free 12″ and the Youth Blood 12″ both featured some quality remixing from a wide array of artists.

electroTO

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