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EP Review: Crystalised - Art Department Presents Martina Topley Bird feat. Mark Lanegan & Warpaint

Art Department Presents Martina Topley Bird Featuring Mark Lanegan & Warpaint Crystalised No.19 Music September 23rd / October 7th No19040 vinyl / digital No19 take a detour into downtempo indie/funk excellence for their surprising but exquisite next release, Art Department Presents Martina Topley Bird Featuring Mark Lanegan & Warpaint -- 'Crystalised'.

On first listen this new single from Art Department blew my mind. The duo are better known for their dark techno production, and to a certain extent that is audible here, but the main radio edit suggests they could be priming themselves up for some cross-over production action.

This EP is based around a cover version of The xx's beautiful but somewhat over-familiar "Crystalised". Rather than just remix the original though Art Department have some serious talent involved to re-imagine it. The single edit is this re-imagininng in its most original form - a loose and fuzzy track with vocals from Martina Topley Bird and Mark Lanegan.

The vocals feel sultry and bluesy were the originals were nervous and exposed - it sounds like you'd expect The xx to sound once they've played this song on tour for another 25-years, in a good way, like Fleetwood Mac's tense over-familiarity simmering over into the music. Topping it off is some typically moody instrumentation from Warpaint. Something about their sound always feels like it deserves to be heard drenched in the pissing rain with boots full of mud. This is no different. It reeks of bitterness. In a good way.

Crystalised - Art Department Presents Martina Topley Bird feat. Mark Lanegan & Warpaint

Alongside this stark reimagining are five dance remixes and following in such footsteps it is inevitable that none of them are quite as exciting... It would have been much more interesting if Art Department had instead included an extended version of that radio edit.

Art Department themselves provide two mixes - a Director's Cut Signature and Director's Cut Unmarked Dub. The former sounds pretty much like you would expect a tech-house version of "Crystalised" to sound - its swirling FX and synthesised take on the original's delicate melody is impressive, yet it still feels a little overly plastic. The dub is similar but light on vocals, replacing them with a gradual build that combined with the memorable melody will prove a great track to drop into deeper sets.

Additional mixes come from Agoria, Deniz Kurtel and Tone of Arc. Agoria's mix is played slow, with plenty of feeling, bass forming a wall-like barrier against lots of distortion. Kurtel plays it straighter but darker - throbbing bass creating a sinister feel whilst Synths and echo provide a sense of isolation. Finally Tone of Arc's mix is full of eighties electro-swagger, fuzz and clicks combining with robotic bassline to create am industrial feel.

This is an intriguing release - I just can't wait to hear what comes next... 

Crystalised is released on No. 19 Music. 

Video: Breathe This Air - Jon Hopkins feat. Purity Ring

Jon Hopkins - Breathe This Air feat. Purity Ring (Official Video) Buy Breathe This Air feat. Purity Ring at iTunes - http://smarturl.it/BreatheThisAir Buy Immunity at iTunes - http://smarturl.it/immunity-itunes Director - Anthony Dickenson DOP - Michael Belcher Producer - Rik Green Exec Producer - Zak Razvi Production Company -- Pulse Films

More knee-trembling and piercing ambient electronica from Hopkins, his latest single is another team-up that lends vocals to a previously instrumental work, "Breathe This Air". The vocals come from Purity Ring and lend the track a more accessible air. The vocals are good, but there wasn't much wrong with the original in all honesty.

The vido comes from director Anthony Dickenson and is more than a little sinister... It's also a little NSFW, so maybe don't whack it on the big monitor in your office. Otherwise, sit back and enjoy...

 

Video: Florence Welch & Dev Hynes cover Icona Pop's "I Love It"

Straight allies, Florence Welch of Florence & the Machine and Dev Hynes of Blood Orange join a growing list of musicians standing with the Human Rights Campaign on the right side of history. Equality Rocks! Learn more at www.hrc.org/equalityrocks #EQUALITYROCKS Filmed at Le Poisson Rouge, event produced by Barbi Rockers and hosted by Amanda Leigh Dunn.

Loving this cover of Icona Pop's "I Love It" by Florence, sans-Machine but with Dev Hynes. Random but good and further evidence of Hynes' imminent ascent to major-league producer status. 

Hat tip to Barnickle for finding!

Video: Blood Orange drops the video for new song "Chamakay"

Directed by Adam Bainbridge. Buy Chamakay at iTunes: http://smarturl.it/Chamakay-iTunes "I decided to visit Georgetown, Guyana for the first time, the town where my mother is from. She, herself has not been back for 30 years, 3 years before I was born. I tracked down family members, including my 92 year old grandfather, who I had never met before.

Basically this is like jamming with Enya in the Caribbean. Get ready for some next level R&B shit. 

Video: Colored Emotions - Night Moves

Buy Colored Emotions at iTunes - http://smarturl.it/dfpz3l With inspiration ranging from Pink Floyd and Todd Rundgren to Curtis Mayfield and Neil Young, Night Moves' debut album blends both psychedelia and Americana, with modest bursts of soul and pop.

'Colored Emotions' is full of the hazy longing that comes with late steamy summer nights and the video seems to have gone a little stir crazy from the heat - it's a surreal affair.

Nights Moves take inspiration from a varied set of influences - Pink Floyd, Todd Rundgren, Curtis Mayfield and Neil Young, and the result is west-coast Americana draped in psychedelic pop.

The single is out on 7 October, but the album is out now - check it out on Spotify: