Future•Japan Relief Campaign
Another great remix collection, this time based on the 1996 debut album The Errornormous World by japanese duo Reflection. Contains remixes by 4Hero, Hidden Agenda, Plaid, Morgan Geist plus two by Kirk Degiorgio. I'm going to post The Errornormous World in the next batch so don't bother to ask.
mp3 I 320kbps I 55 minutes I 127mb I link in comments
Wednesday, 30 March 2011
Ryu - 我 (1999 Exceptional)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
Polyrhythmic breakbeats, bamboo sticks and funny japanese rapu on this exceptional album by one-off project Ryu.. Who? DJ Krush once again, accompanied by DJ Hide and DJ Sak this time. Jap abstract hip hop at is's best.
mp3 I 320kbps I 60 minutes I 138mb I link in comments
Polyrhythmic breakbeats, bamboo sticks and funny japanese rapu on this exceptional album by one-off project Ryu.. Who? DJ Krush once again, accompanied by DJ Hide and DJ Sak this time. Jap abstract hip hop at is's best.
mp3 I 320kbps I 60 minutes I 138mb I link in comments
Ronny Jordan meets DJ Krush - Bad Brothers (1994 Nippon Phonogram)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
This little gem should actually be called DJ Krush featuring Ronny Jordan. It's just plain to hear that Ronny's outdated Benson-esque guitar sound is just another ingredient in this trip hop primordial soup. Don't miss the vocal contributions by Dana Bryant and the sadly missed Gifted Unlimited Rhymes Universal.
mp3 I 320kbps I 35 minutes I 82mb I link in comments
This little gem should actually be called DJ Krush featuring Ronny Jordan. It's just plain to hear that Ronny's outdated Benson-esque guitar sound is just another ingredient in this trip hop primordial soup. Don't miss the vocal contributions by Dana Bryant and the sadly missed Gifted Unlimited Rhymes Universal.
mp3 I 320kbps I 35 minutes I 82mb I link in comments
Sunday, 27 March 2011
VA Multidirection 2 (1995 Brownswood Workshop)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
Multidirection Part Two (intanashunal zis time), selected by United Future Organization. Includes the legendary last track by Kruder & Dorfmeister.
01 Sylk 130 featuring Alison Crockette-Seasons Change
02 Trio Da Lata-Deep Water
03 Diet Music-Por El (Correspondance Mix)
04 Kruder & Dorfmeister-A Tune For Us
05 Love T.K.O.-Rock 'N' Roll Philosophy
06 DJ Mil'O featuring Knowledge & Nadine-Is It Worth It
07 Jazz Brothers-Spontaneity
08 Pronoia-April In Tokio
09 Tiny Voice Production-Hug
10 Naoyuki Honzawa-La Lune (mOOn)
11 Audio Active-Return Of The Space Ape
mp3 I 320kbps I 69 minutes I 159mb I link in comments
Multidirection Part Two (intanashunal zis time), selected by United Future Organization. Includes the legendary last track by Kruder & Dorfmeister.
01 Sylk 130 featuring Alison Crockette-Seasons Change
02 Trio Da Lata-Deep Water
03 Diet Music-Por El (Correspondance Mix)
04 Kruder & Dorfmeister-A Tune For Us
05 Love T.K.O.-Rock 'N' Roll Philosophy
06 DJ Mil'O featuring Knowledge & Nadine-Is It Worth It
07 Jazz Brothers-Spontaneity
08 Pronoia-April In Tokio
09 Tiny Voice Production-Hug
10 Naoyuki Honzawa-La Lune (mOOn)
11 Audio Active-Return Of The Space Ape
mp3 I 320kbps I 69 minutes I 159mb I link in comments
Yoshinori Sunahara - Pan Am (The Sound Of '70s) (1998 Ki/oon / Bungalow)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
Yoshinori Sunahara, well known house music producer known as Denki Groove, and his third solo collection of faux in-flight entertainment exotica-flavoured downtempo. This rip comes from the 1999 Bungalow re-issue.
mp3 I 320kbps I 74 minutes I 171mb I link in comments
Nobukazu Takemura - Child's View Remix (1995 Toy's Factory)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
Another great collection of remixes from Toy's Facory. Nobukazu Takemura's debut album Child's View gets treated by Aphex Twin, Coldcut, Mad Professor and Roni Size among others.
mp3 I 320kbps I 57 minutes I 130mb I link in comments
Another great collection of remixes from Toy's Facory. Nobukazu Takemura's debut album Child's View gets treated by Aphex Twin, Coldcut, Mad Professor and Roni Size among others.
mp3 I 320kbps I 57 minutes I 130mb I link in comments
Thursday, 24 March 2011
VA Multidirection 1 (1994 Brownswood Workshop)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
Compiled by United Future Organization, released by Gilles Peterson. This is the coolest the cool can get.
01 Kyoto Jazz Massive Project-Rising Sun
02 The Indepent Colors-Fly-way
03 Jazz Brothers-Beatitude
04 Cool Spoon-Coolie Coolie Spooners
05 Muro from Microphon Pager-#$%@#x#%$&
06 United Future Organization-Upa Neguinho (Supa Neg Mix)
07 Soul-Bossa-Trio-Easy Bounce
08 Nobukazu Takemura-Elm
09 Small Circle Of Friends-Sittin' On The Fence
mp3 I 320kbps I 46 minutes I 107mb I link in comments
Compiled by United Future Organization, released by Gilles Peterson. This is the coolest the cool can get.
01 Kyoto Jazz Massive Project-Rising Sun
02 The Indepent Colors-Fly-way
03 Jazz Brothers-Beatitude
04 Cool Spoon-Coolie Coolie Spooners
05 Muro from Microphon Pager-#$%@#x#%$&
06 United Future Organization-Upa Neguinho (Supa Neg Mix)
07 Soul-Bossa-Trio-Easy Bounce
08 Nobukazu Takemura-Elm
09 Small Circle Of Friends-Sittin' On The Fence
mp3 I 320kbps I 46 minutes I 107mb I link in comments
Silent Poets - Drawing (1995 Toy's Factory / 99 Records)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
You could have already noticed I'm a sucker for remix albums and this is the best example. Drawing contains some unreleased material from 1994 Words And Silence sessions (which I'm going to post as soon as I find it) plus a handful of cool remixes by Palm Skin Productions, Nobukazu Takemura, Ian Simmonds and Pigalle's finest DJ Jimmy Jay.
mp3 I 320kbps I 43 minutes I 99mb I link in comments
You could have already noticed I'm a sucker for remix albums and this is the best example. Drawing contains some unreleased material from 1994 Words And Silence sessions (which I'm going to post as soon as I find it) plus a handful of cool remixes by Palm Skin Productions, Nobukazu Takemura, Ian Simmonds and Pigalle's finest DJ Jimmy Jay.
mp3 I 320kbps I 43 minutes I 99mb I link in comments
Ultra·Living - Monochromatic Adventure (1998 Creation)
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
One would expect such album with singles remixed by Doc Scott and DJ Die to appear on Toy's Factory in Japan (japanese trip hop with girlie vocals) or Pussyfoot in England (it was co-produced by Luke Gordon of Spacer fame), but Takuma and Tetsushi Nonaka AKA Ultra·Living released their debut Monochromatic Adventure on the very-unlikely label Creation Records. Anyway, the breakbeats are smart and vocals by Kyoko Mori are sweet, especially on my favs, pathetically fragile God Song and Mr. Freedom.
mp3 I 320kbps I 57 minutes I 132mb I link in comments
One would expect such album with singles remixed by Doc Scott and DJ Die to appear on Toy's Factory in Japan (japanese trip hop with girlie vocals) or Pussyfoot in England (it was co-produced by Luke Gordon of Spacer fame), but Takuma and Tetsushi Nonaka AKA Ultra·Living released their debut Monochromatic Adventure on the very-unlikely label Creation Records. Anyway, the breakbeats are smart and vocals by Kyoko Mori are sweet, especially on my favs, pathetically fragile God Song and Mr. Freedom.
mp3 I 320kbps I 57 minutes I 132mb I link in comments
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
Future•Japan Relief Campaign
My readers know that never in the history of Future Vintage have I asked them to reach into their pockets for some loose change and donate. In fact there's more virtual dust on the PayPal button than the real one on the records I post here. But there are moments when time stops and all values become relative. The time is now, the place is Japan.
Although the "cruel race" hasn't learned much from WWII and since the 1950's kept giving the rest of the world a cold eye, the overwhelming tragedy of earthquake-tsunami-meltdown crisis would get even stronger nation to its knees. Let's set it straight - however strong they pretend to be, they are facing possibly the worst catastrophic scenario in the history of industrial world with death toll expected to rise as high as 100.000.
What is the Future•Japan Relief Campaign? In the following days I will post a continuing serie of japanese artists and labels from The Sunny Daze. If you like what you download (and I'm sure you will) I encourage you to take the monies you saved that way and donate it to your favourite local or int'l humanitarian organisation with strong presence in the heart of the tortured island.
Also I encourage my fellow bloggers to join the campaign or support it by adding Future•Japan Relief Campaign tag and link to this text to their Japan-related posts.
Let me express my belief that even the smallest donation will not only help the Japanese people keep their bento boxes full but also (and I don't hesitate to admit it) will give my effort nad your fun some Higher Meaning.
Domo arigato!
Although the "cruel race" hasn't learned much from WWII and since the 1950's kept giving the rest of the world a cold eye, the overwhelming tragedy of earthquake-tsunami-meltdown crisis would get even stronger nation to its knees. Let's set it straight - however strong they pretend to be, they are facing possibly the worst catastrophic scenario in the history of industrial world with death toll expected to rise as high as 100.000.
What is the Future•Japan Relief Campaign? In the following days I will post a continuing serie of japanese artists and labels from The Sunny Daze. If you like what you download (and I'm sure you will) I encourage you to take the monies you saved that way and donate it to your favourite local or int'l humanitarian organisation with strong presence in the heart of the tortured island.
Also I encourage my fellow bloggers to join the campaign or support it by adding Future•Japan Relief Campaign tag and link to this text to their Japan-related posts.
Let me express my belief that even the smallest donation will not only help the Japanese people keep their bento boxes full but also (and I don't hesitate to admit it) will give my effort nad your fun some Higher Meaning.
Domo arigato!
Wednesday, 16 March 2011
Jhelisa - Galactica Rush (1994 Dorado)
In the lost episode of The X-Files, Fox Mulder has no difficulty linking the late 1960's US government classified genetic project in Houston, TX and a Motown-style story of three girls of the Anderson family who became The Voices Of Acid Jazz after fleeing Texas with men in black breathing down their necks. What else is there to explain the undisputed monopoly of Pamela (D*Note, Incognito), Carleen (The Brand New Heavies, Young Disciples) and Jhelisa Anderson between 1993 and 1997? Keep it in mind while listening to this suspiciously brilliant Cool Breeze-produced acid soul album and keep on believing ;-).
mp3 I 320kbps I 52 minutes I 119mb I link in comments
mp3 I 320kbps I 52 minutes I 119mb I link in comments
D*Note - Criminal Justice (1995 Dorado)
Criminal Justice is the second album by Charlie Lexton and Matt Wienevski AKA D*Note and imho their best. Unlike the relaxed acid-jazzy debut Babel (I wish I know where that one is..) Criminal Justice mixes raggamuffin babbling and soulful vocals with broken beats and twisted ambience to create unique atmosphere of drama and suspense. A perfect soundtrack to a life in pre-Blair Britain.
mp3 I 320kbps I 53 minutes I 121mb I link in comments
mp3 I 320kbps I 53 minutes I 121mb I link in comments
VA Dorado - The Gold Sessions (1994 Instinct)
Dressed in americanized version of Dorado label design comes this donated disc released by Instinct Records. It's actually a compilation compiled from two compilations (A Compilation and A Compilation /2/) and despite the added "remix" tags all the tracks are the same including the bad original mastering. Suitable for those who currently experience their first encounter with Future Vintage.
mp3 I 320kbps I 58 minutes I 134mb I link in comments
mp3 I 320kbps I 58 minutes I 134mb I link in comments
Sunday, 13 March 2011
Twilight Circus Sound System - Horsie (1999 M Records)
It's hard to imagine that Ryan Moore AKA Twilight Circus Sound System was once part of The Legendary Pink Dots (cold war apocalyptic poetry meets synths-against-the-wall, for those who don't remember the 80's). It's even harder to imagine that relaxed dub record of such crystalline purity comes from a white guy born in Canada. Hand painted and numbered cover (not the actual picture). Availability: hard to find. Get it now and stay tuned!
mp3 I 320kbps I 41 minutes I 94mb I link in comments
mp3 I 320kbps I 41 minutes I 94mb I link in comments
The Dub Funk Association - Spirits Under Pressure (1996 Tanty Records)
The Dub Funk Association were Harrow (Middlesex) based dub massive that released a couple of albums in the mid-90's, Spirits Under Pressure being their 2nd. Their hip hop-scented organic dub style reminds me of the Bristol dub sound circa 1991 which didn't seem to be a goldmine. Otherwise the label wouldn't release this promo with a dirty fax copy of tracklist instead of a decent cover.
mp3 I 320kbps I 50 minutes I 116mb I link in comments
mp3 I 320kbps I 50 minutes I 116mb I link in comments
Five-H-T - Neurotransmitter (1995 Hypoxia)
Before we continue the Dorado excursion, there are some quite old requests to fulfill. Our reader RocksOff asked for some less known electronic dub albums so let's make it Sunday Night In Dub.
There's not much info about Five-H-T, actually long time I thought the artist name was Neurotransmitter Electronic Dub. The album is their only release and one of three releases by London's Hypoxia Records, really "less known", see. Let me add they could as well name theirselves The Roland Roadshow Band because they own all the Rolands from 001 to 999 and are not afraid to use them. Don't ask for their musical style, the cover sez it all.
mp3 I 320kbps I 73 minutes I 168mb I link in comments
There's not much info about Five-H-T, actually long time I thought the artist name was Neurotransmitter Electronic Dub. The album is their only release and one of three releases by London's Hypoxia Records, really "less known", see. Let me add they could as well name theirselves The Roland Roadshow Band because they own all the Rolands from 001 to 999 and are not afraid to use them. Don't ask for their musical style, the cover sez it all.
mp3 I 320kbps I 73 minutes I 168mb I link in comments
Can you steal what's already stolen?
Do you want to know what I was doing last weeks instead of posting tons of albums? I crossed the border to the Wild East, my quest being to find the answer to one serious question on my mind: Can you steal what's already stolen?
Understand, I'm far from idealising what I'm doing here but at least I try to post original material that isn't widely available around the net. I try my best to keep this place cozy and warm with a personal touch. I won't fool you, blogging like this isn't so hard. It only takes me to read through piles of requests and comments, go to the attic, dig in the box, wash my dusty hands, rip and tag, find the covers somewhere, write some short text and post it. In return I get another pile of mail, with smilies and warm thankyous this time.
Then one day my posts started to leak. Some of the records I post here are so rare or outstanding it's easy to track them with the Gugol search engine so I could see them popping up on various forums, download sites and "blogs", mostly of israeli, russian, ukrainian and (it only gets better) belarussian provenience. Since the early days of music sharing blogs I felt proud to be quoted by "older" bloggers, and when I linked their posts, I always did it with taste and respect. Needless to say that these rascals just repack and uploaded my files on filesharing servers with tons of pop-ups and a good cash-for-downloads rewards.
Actually first time around it made me feel sort of proud because the first to go were my own Electronic Colorations compilations (btw still the most dowloaded posts on this blog ;-). Clearly those guys from the wild east mistaken them for real industry releases, with the faux covers and all that jazz. Then the plot thickened and my posts were stolen on daily basis. I tried to fight back.. only to find myself knee-deep in pointless conversations: "How do you knowing this albums is your blog?" "Read the bloody ID3 tag, punk!" Holy mackerel, I even had to threaten certain russian "blogger" with Gugol complaint to stop him from reposting my stuff without any connection to my blog. Seriously how can you communicate with someone who wrote: Will not I understand what is wrong with that? I got in your bloge, and that I pleased me - added to the blog. Humiliating, to say the least.
So instead of posting like crazy I was searching through the forums and sites I could find, downloading my own stuff from exotic servers, tagging the rascal posts as STOLEN in big red lettering and having mindless chats with I.R.Baboons with cultural deficits. Did it help any? Well not that someone would say sorry or remove the links but the theft ratio dropped rapidly - which I'm afraid is mainly a result of the lack of activity on Future Vintage.
There's a brighter side to this - in the past weeks I had enough time to make up my mind what the next discography blog will be. Ladies and gents, meet the new member of my family of blogs - Rising High Records. First I had in mind Talkin' Loud as there's constant demand for older releases of this acid jazz giant, then I realised that I have almost complete collection of Rising High albums (some of the stuff already appeared here with great success). Almost, of course, so expect a want list to appear soon with appeal to help me with the completion. It worked well with The CTI never sleeps, then with A Private Collection, let's see if we can make it again.
Also I started compiling two new volumes of Electronic Colorations, The Vocal Edition and The Ambient Edition should be ready sooner than much later ;-)
Stay tuned!
Understand, I'm far from idealising what I'm doing here but at least I try to post original material that isn't widely available around the net. I try my best to keep this place cozy and warm with a personal touch. I won't fool you, blogging like this isn't so hard. It only takes me to read through piles of requests and comments, go to the attic, dig in the box, wash my dusty hands, rip and tag, find the covers somewhere, write some short text and post it. In return I get another pile of mail, with smilies and warm thankyous this time.
Then one day my posts started to leak. Some of the records I post here are so rare or outstanding it's easy to track them with the Gugol search engine so I could see them popping up on various forums, download sites and "blogs", mostly of israeli, russian, ukrainian and (it only gets better) belarussian provenience. Since the early days of music sharing blogs I felt proud to be quoted by "older" bloggers, and when I linked their posts, I always did it with taste and respect. Needless to say that these rascals just repack and uploaded my files on filesharing servers with tons of pop-ups and a good cash-for-downloads rewards.
Actually first time around it made me feel sort of proud because the first to go were my own Electronic Colorations compilations (btw still the most dowloaded posts on this blog ;-). Clearly those guys from the wild east mistaken them for real industry releases, with the faux covers and all that jazz. Then the plot thickened and my posts were stolen on daily basis. I tried to fight back.. only to find myself knee-deep in pointless conversations: "How do you knowing this albums is your blog?" "Read the bloody ID3 tag, punk!" Holy mackerel, I even had to threaten certain russian "blogger" with Gugol complaint to stop him from reposting my stuff without any connection to my blog. Seriously how can you communicate with someone who wrote: Will not I understand what is wrong with that? I got in your bloge, and that I pleased me - added to the blog. Humiliating, to say the least.
So instead of posting like crazy I was searching through the forums and sites I could find, downloading my own stuff from exotic servers, tagging the rascal posts as STOLEN in big red lettering and having mindless chats with I.R.Baboons with cultural deficits. Did it help any? Well not that someone would say sorry or remove the links but the theft ratio dropped rapidly - which I'm afraid is mainly a result of the lack of activity on Future Vintage.
There's a brighter side to this - in the past weeks I had enough time to make up my mind what the next discography blog will be. Ladies and gents, meet the new member of my family of blogs - Rising High Records. First I had in mind Talkin' Loud as there's constant demand for older releases of this acid jazz giant, then I realised that I have almost complete collection of Rising High albums (some of the stuff already appeared here with great success). Almost, of course, so expect a want list to appear soon with appeal to help me with the completion. It worked well with The CTI never sleeps, then with A Private Collection, let's see if we can make it again.
Also I started compiling two new volumes of Electronic Colorations, The Vocal Edition and The Ambient Edition should be ready sooner than much later ;-)
Stay tuned!
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