Portals: Classic Trance Loops (Hypnotised)

 
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Our next deep dive for the Portals series sees a revisit to a genre of music that heavily influenced ASIP growing up. Yes, cheese-and-chords in their full glory; classic Trance music.

Love it or hate it, I embrace classic Trance music for its brilliance of the time, and the impact it had on me (and indeed electronic music) growing up. I’ve mentioned before how the chill-out side of Trance music was one of the many avenues to open me up to more electronic ambient music. But this isn’t the path we ended up taking for this Portals feature…

This mix doesn’t come about by chance, or due to the fact that Trance is back in style (thanks to a number of techno DJs integrating some big Trance hits into their sets, or full releases getting the remix treatment 25 years later). It’s a mix I have considered making for a long time, where I could make use of my shelves full of Trance vinyl. But over the past year or so, I have been in conversation with Arjan Rietveld who has recently published an entire book called ‘Hypnotised: A Journey Through Trance Music (1990-2005)’ - a deep dive/encyclopedia on the classic Trance sound, that covers “its proto to seminal periods, through to its ascendance and glory years”, across “500 essential records, 75 record labels and 25 albums, with in-depth interviews with 35 influential artists and label owners”. [buy]

It’s the first book of its kind, and for anyone who enjoys the sweet spot of classic Trance music in the late 90’s and early 00’s, it’s an unmissable factoid and commentary on the prime era of the scene. I wanted to support this new encyclopedic endeavor even further and had the idea to pull together some kind of mix here on ASIP to also shine a light on the launch of the book; on the many angles of classic Trance music; and also invite Arjan to provide a bit more detail surrounding his passion project (which follows further below) to round out the feature into a full-on Trance deep dive.

Originally, I wanted to pull together the ambient-leaning side of Trance music - a side that is often misunderstood as questionable chill out music (i.e the ‘Chilled Euphoria’ series) or when done well, many of Global Underground’s Electric Calm mixes by The Forth, and the second CD of this Platipus Beginners Guide. But what may have been originally conceived as an Ambient Trance mix for this Portals feature, quickly took a new direction.

For me to highlight the many Ambient Trance genres, sub-genres and styles, became a daunting task. It’s something that can go many ways depending on your upbringing (and geographic location), such as early 90’s psy/goa in style, acid+breaks, Ambitrance, Euro-trance remixes, or even the 00’s Space-Ambient style. All are often grouped around an ‘Ambient Trance’ notion, depending on your own subjective experiences, and it quickly became a massive task to whittle it down to one mix without going all genre-police on myself. So instead, I came up with a different concept and approach, taking inspiration from Arjan’s book title ‘Hypnotised’, the period, labels and artists that are a part of the book, and the idea of providing “a journey through Trance music”... 

What could be more hypnotizing than Trance music itself? 

The result is the accompanying mix, titled Classic Trance Loops, which was created by sampling specific segments of vinyl records from my collection.

Each sample was ripped, digitized, and played back/edited live on CDJ’s looping feature, and further re-recorded as a continuous max~3-minute looped section. Then, it was all compiled into one mix in Ableton. (Note, I fully understand there is likely a much easier way to do this with various bits of gear, samplers, Ableton etc, but I enjoyed the process of doing it this way, as it both made me revisit my record collection and mess with my CDJs, which is a treat and a rarity nowadays - I’m a tactile DJ at heart). 

Once the core of the mix was compiled in Ableton, I realized it could do with some finessing by someone who knew a lot more about the tool than I do. (I know enough to be dangerous, and with 50+ tracks, multiple sample levels, vinyl noise, and tonnes of loops, it needed a bit of love and external ears). So, as lost brothers in Trance, and one of the best DJs I know, I handed the project off to my good friend todos, who ran the project through his extremely detail-oriented ear, to clean up the sound, artifacts, levels, adding some effects, and giving it a polish (as much as I could have set him up to polish it anyway - ‘You can’t polish a turd, but you can throw glitter on it’, the wise man once said). The end result is a true collaboration between us both which I’m also very proud of making happen. todos will modestly tell you he didn’t do much, but trust me, he did, and I publicly apologize here to todos for so many versions back and forth!!

Ultimately, the mix is a quick-moving snapshot of some of the finest classic Trance moments, without you ever needing to hit the club (unless you’re ok dancing and waiting forever for the drop). It tantalizes those memorable moments found in breakdowns or the euphoric signature synth lines, reminding you of special melodies that will undoubtedly come flooding back in a second. Plenty of classic Trance tracks and loops were recorded in preparation and were unfortunately left on the chopping board, but it was a tough enough job to get these ones sounding (relatively) coherent.

Note, it’s not the expected ambient that you see around these parts either, if that’s what you’re here for. But it is definitely sequenced for more downs than ups; suiting a more horizontal/storied listen;  and is hopefully a journey within itself. In a similar way to how I approached the Portals KLF (A New Dimension) mix, it’s meant to be a fun listen and to compliment this feature as a whole. We hope it stirs some moments of joy and reflection to whatever clubs, fields, beaches, or mega-clubs you grew up listening to this music in. Bedroom DJ’s unite.

If the music and mix itself wasn’t enough to take you back to the euphoric highs of Gatecrasher, Home, Amnesia, Cream, et al, then a take a read of a slightly deeper dive into the UK impact on this classic Trance sound, courtesy of Hypnotised author, Arjan Rietveld.

British labels: sanctuaries of trance

[Text by Arjan Rietveld, based on the book ‘Hypnotised A Journey Through Trance Music’]

The United Kingdom played an elemental role in the development of trance music across the globe. Aside from the thriving club scene making moves within the country during the roaring nineties, a string of independently operated record labels had already stepped up to chart new musical territories.

In the early nineties, British artists such as Jeremy Dickens, Paul Oakenfold and Simon Berry noted the potential of electronic music and quickly seized the opportunity to set up their own ventures. Each of them started to release material from themselves as well as their network of friends. Meanwhile, 12’’ vinyl records were in demand, as both DJs and collectors preferred the format. Henceforth, it wasn’t unusual for those early labels to sell five-digit quantities of a single record.

Looking back, the most successful ventures took a more broad-minded musical approach, and by doing so, found new paths for the electronic sound to reinvent and expand. Following their efforts, those artists who set up a label themselves also crafted excellent opportunities to put themselves on the global music map. They were able to create a wide network across the industry, whilst also having their name directly connected to each and every record that came out on their label.

Founded in 1986, FFRR was the first label to cast its nets far and wide when it came to dance music. The platform made some big moves in signing a stable of top-shelf hip-hop and R&B acts, early house producers as well as electronic artists within its first years of existence. In 1989, Paul Oakenfold set up Perfecto as a natural extension of his Spectrum club night. In consecutive years, Hooj Choons (1991), React (1991) and Platipus (1993) were added to the ever-growing list of defining electronic music imprints that reached far beyond British territories. 

In the slipstream of these platforms, specialised labels such as A Trance Communication Release, Bedrock, Deviant, Silver Planet and Xtravaganza stepped up to offer neatly curated releases. Meanwhile, platforms like Global Underground and Renaissance jumped into the opportunity of pushing the artist-led mix series format, thereby playing a decisive role in making the ‘late’ progressive trance sound available to a more diverse and global audience.

The commercial success of the independent market didn’t pass unnoticed. As a response, various major publishers set up trance-dedicated sub-branches that put their competitive edge to good use to penetrate the market and reap maximum benefits from the continuously growing market that trance then represented. Publishers such as EMI (with its Additive and Positive branches) and Mercury (with Manifesto) pushed more commercial sounding dance acts to the fore. For instance, dance acts such as Fragma, Ian Van Dahl and Lasgo were all familiar with popular British TV programs like Top Of The Pops.

With the competition between actors raging, the digital shift of paradigm that came with the new millennium created new challenges for independent labels. Many labels were simply not able to cope with the sudden upsurge of illegal downloads from websites such as Napster and Soulseek - and its negative impact on physical sales. Most platforms - including Hooj, Platipus and React - soon vanished into thin air, or magically resurfaced only years later. 

One exception is Oakenfold’s Perfecto. The imprint managed to withstand the test of time by becoming more flexible and adapting their policies to this intricate new reality. Interestingly, the label still puts out high-principled, and mostly goa-infused, material on a regular basis. After over thirty years of operation, that’s an achievement in its own right. - Arjan Rietveld

~

Trance Loops, was sampled, recorded and mixed by ASIP. Engineered, further effects, finesse and icing-on-the-cake by todos. 

Listen on Soundcloud, Mixcloud, Youtube (below) or the ASIP Podcast.

Download MP3

Tracklist:

(Tracks are all loops - bar one, I think - in rough order of play, some play numerous times, or play over/with multiple other tracks. Some, may be specific remixes that I have lost full naming of through the process of re-naming and sampling, unfortunately, but I’ve done my best to name the specific remix if applicable). 

Jonah - Sssst (Listen) [VC] [1999]
Robert Miles - Children [Platipus] [1995]
Sasha & Maria - Be As One [Deconstruction] [1996]
Sasha  - Xpander [Deconstruction] [1999]
Frontside - Dammerung [Venus] [2003]
Albion - Air [Platipus] [1998]
Freefall ft Jan Johnston - Skydive [Renaissance] [1998]
Nalin & Kane - Beachball [ffrr] [1998]
Schiller - Das Glockenspiel [Data] [2001]
C.M - Dream Universe [Hooj] [1998] 
Jam & Spoon - Stella [R&S] [1992]
Blank & Jones - Cream [Deviant] [1999]
Lost Tribe - Gamemaster [Hooj] [1999]
Lost Witness - Happiness Happening (Lange Remix) [Ministry] [1999]
Robert Miles - Children [Platipus] [1995]
Ayla - Ayla (DJ Taucher Mix) [Positiva] [1999]
Kamaya Painters - Wasteland (Hitchhiker remix) [Data] [1999]
Push - Universal Nation [Inferno] [1999]
Atlantis vs Avatar - Fiji (Lange mix) [Inferno] [1999]
Skip Raiders feat. Jada - Another Day (Brainbug mix) [Perfecto] [1999]
Brainbug - Another Day (Perfecto remix) [Additive][1996]
CRW - I Feel Love [Nukluez] [2000]
Jam & Spoon - My First Fantastic F.F [R&S] [1992]
Energy 52 - Cafe Del Mar (Solar Stone remix) [Hooj] [1997]
Art of Trance - Madagascar (Michael Woods Chill-Out remix) [Platipus] [2002] 
Space Manoeuvres - Stage One [Hooj] [1999]
Junk Project - Composure [Universal Prime Breaks] [1998]
Pete Lazonby - Sacred Cycles [Hooj] [1994]
BT - Flaming June (BT + PVD mix) [Perfecto] [1997]
Agnelli & Nelson - Embrace [Xtravaganza] [2000]
Nalin & Kane - Beachball [ffrr] [1998]
Salt Tank - Eugina (Reactivation mix) [Lost Language] [2000]
Binary Finary - 2000 (Jam X & DuMond's Rmx) [Orbit records] [2000]
Energy 52 - Cafe Del Mar (Nalin & Kane mix) [1998] [Hooj]
Age of Love - Age of Love [React] [1998]
Da Hool - Meet Her At The Love Parade (Nalin & Kane remix) [Kosmo] [1997]
Taucher - Waters (Waters III) [Quad] [1998]
Stef, Pako & Frederik – Seaside Atmosphere (Evolutions Donkey Derby Mix) [Coded][1999]
Paul Van Dyk - For An Angel (Way Out West remix) [Deviant] [1998]
Space Manoeuvres - Stage One [Hooj] [1999]
Faithless - Salva Mea (DTs Mix Show Edit) [Arista] [1997]
BBE - Seven Days & One Week (Kai Tracid Remix) [Urban] [1999]
Three Drives - Greece 2000 [ZYX music] [1998]
Agnelli & Nelson - Hudson St [Xtravanganza] [2000]
X-Cabs - Neuro 99 (Additive mix) [Hook] [1999]
Moonman - Galaxia [Heat] [2000]|
Y Traxx - Mystery Land (Fontaine & Vern mix) [FFRR] [1998]

 

ASIP - (Live vinyl mix on 9128.live, 9/25/2021)

 
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It's hard to dedicate good amounts of time to listening to physical records, so when I had a few hours this weekend, I decided to play some of my most recent records that have been piling up on my "un-filed" shelf (everyone has one of those, right? just-in, unorganized, unplayed, etc?!)

I hit the record button without any destination in mind and ported it into 9128.live (as I often do in these ad-hoc instances) and set forth with no agenda.

It starts a little unsure in style, as I try to feel out where I want to take it, and a few dodgy transitions for not knowing the records too well yet, but the universe quickly pushes me into an IDM/synth-heavy world.

I rarely post mixes off the cuff, as I normally obsess over the details and let the moment be the moment, but figured this one might be a good one to explore given the amount of recent LP material on Bandcamp. So here we are, warts-and-all. Enjoy!

Listen on Soundcloud, Mixcloud, or the ASIP Podcast.

Download

Tracklist (by album/LP) + Bandcamp links (where possible)

1. Mu tate - Let Me Put Myself Together [Bandcamp]
2. Tapes - Silence Please [Bandcamp]
3. Anatolian Weapons - Mantili EP [Bandcamp]
4. Saphileaum - Transpersonal Experience [Bandcamp]
5. Niko Tzoukmanis - Hope Is The Sister Of Despair [Bandcamp]
6. Still In My Arms: Compiled by Bayu and Moopie (Boc Scadet - Sel Alterat) [Bandcamp]
7. Loess - Totems [Bandcamp]
8. Joe McBride & Jack Lever ‎– 21.12 / 30.03 [Discogs]
9. James Bernard/Influx - Reminiscence [Bandcamp]
10. Brabuhr Q-ih (Whylie - RDM17-05) [Bandcamp]
11. Helium - The Works E.P. [Bandcamp]
12. Niko Tzoukmanis - Hope Is The Sister Of Despair [Bandcamp]
13. Brabuhr Q-ih (Whylie - ABT22-01 [Bandcamp]
14. Ochre - An Eye to Windward [Bandcamp]
15. Nadia Struiwigh - Pax Aurora [Bandcamp]
16. Jo Johnson - Weaving [Bandcamp]
17. Anatolian Weapons / Hector Zazou with Laurie Anderson - An Afterthought / Into Your Dreams [Bandcamp]
18. Anushka Chkheidze - Halfie [Bandcamp]

 

isolatedmix 113 - Sunju Hargun

 
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We’ve fallen a little behind the monthly schedule with isolated mixes recently, but that’s mainly because the artists lined up have been working hard on some very special journeys for us all. Getting back into the swing of things now, our latest mix comes from an artist who I got to know through a small online group that obsesses over Trance music, and ultimately helped us bring to life our recent Rapture Network 9128.live takeover, helping organize and provide the brilliant logo/identity for the festival and t-shirts.

When he and I are not obsessing over all types of ambient and psychedelic trance music, Sunju Hargun has been busy launching his new label, Siamese Twins Records, which since 2020 has not only been an outlet for some of his own work, but also served as an introduction to many pan-Asian artists through compilations such as Kāthā, and Vinyan, presenting a spectrum of “Eastern psychedelia”. The compilations represent a great starting point for many new artists stemming from a local scene, and one that I am excited about digging deeper into through both Sunju and his new label curation.

A hypnotic sound bath in which tribally-rooted ambient morphs into one entity. Drones, live instruments and esoteric textures are transformed into a contemporary Kāthā interpretation.

Coincidentally, during my trip to Hidden Sounds record store in London, I had picked up a remix EP from Sunju’s label, that delved into the slightly trancier side of his tastes (and label). It was a fleeting visit where the shop owner Alex loaded me up with so many nice bits, that I had hardly stopped to look at the artists and labels in my bag and was purely grabbing stuff on sound - always an exciting tactic for exploring new records when you get them home and realize you ended up supporting someone you enjoy based on music alone.

It’s with great pleasure to have Sunju behind the decks for this isolatedmix and a get peek into his own influences that undoubtedly shape his own productions, mixes and label output…

Hi Sunju, can you give us an intro to your musical upbringing?

I’m of Indian descent, born and raised in Thailand with some roots from Japan. I find love and happiness in connecting with people through music. I co-run the Siamese Twins records record label focusing on psychedelic sounds from the East. I’m also a part of the Karma Klique collective organizing parties in nature across Thailand with proceeds going to local social causes.

I was surrounded by lots of music when I was young. Lots of people whose music is sought after in the local Thai jazz/blues wave were my father’s friends, and some of that music was connected to psychedelic rock as well. Around that time was also another side of music which was an integral part of my life, came from my mother’s passion for Indian art and traditional Hindu soundtracks from the early 60’s to 70’s.

We are both deep Trance fans at heart - but how did you get into the ambient side of music?

At the time I was living in Shanghai, my friends would host intimate house sessions every other weekend to experience ‘trip’ gatherings with the music we felt connected to and grow our little prog-trance family by inviting other ravers we met along the way. Most of us were music nerds of the group that had to contribute to certain hours of the night to share our playlists, and I was mostly in charge of sunrise. Although I was not familiar with the term Ambient back then, instead referred to it as Reprise/Chillout'. Having the pleasure to breathe through the early 2000’s Prog era, I was heavily inspired by compilations from Global Underground, Renaissance & Producers like Satoshi Tommie, Spooky, Starkid, Leama, and Rabbit in the moon are just a few to mention that were a gateway to falling deeply in love with it.

Your new label Siamese Twins Records has made an excellent start, can you tell us a bit about the approach?

Thank you so much, very happy to receive great support and words from you about it.

It has been very community-driven as it's built upon mutual connections and friendships we made over the last five years running events with Karma Klique. We would invite artists from across the Asian region that gained our interest and with a similar ethos. There is a lot of mainstream electronic music here, but luckily there are also a lot of amazing artists, event organizers, record stores and labels that stubbornly do their own thing with a pure love for the art. While connecting with them often music they were working on was shared which we felt deserved a good home. This is also how we connected with Yoshi Nori who runs our sister label 禁JIN from Taipei and is one of the four co-founders of the Siamese Twins label.

The idea from the start was to embrace Asian identity and focus on the more psychedelic sound spectrum which can be both slow as fast. We release ambient, curated as long trips, compilations, but are also releasing trippy dancefloor orientated material ideally to be played at sunrise during a forest rave. We like to mix it up, stay weird. We care a lot about the total process from start to finish with lots of love and attention to detail. We approach it multi-dimensional and a way to have a dialogue with other expressions of Asian culture which shows in Taychin Dunnvatanachit’s artwork approach.

We hope to keep on building on these fundamentals. It’s very much our own thing and approach.


What is the ambient music scene like in Thailand? How do you try and stay connected locally?

Yes, Bangkok is a special city that I'm happy to call home.

The ambient movement is still quite young, but in the past year alone there might have been a spark of interest towards it being more appreciated by locals mainly because of spending plenty of time at home during the lockdown period. There is also a wave of music makers and collectives popping out at the moment who are heavily promoting it - A wonderful shift, with the hope that it earns a feature in festivals and gatherings on the horizon. The community of quality electronic music in Bangkok is tightly connected through record stores like More Rice and Zudrangma that promote a wide variety of world and electronic music. With the addition of a brand new local online-based radio called “BCR” that has managed to bring artists and friends to share music together during this time when clubs aren’t allowed to open.


You're a great visual artist too, is your music and art symbiotic in approach?

I would like to think there is an underlying secret connection towards some form of visual identity with my approach to music. In the past, I experienced moments of having these images built from dreams that became starting points to an idea of creating a track. Does not happen often, but when it does - I welcome it!

The mix feels very uplifting, especially near the end. What role does ambient music play in your life at the moment?

Ambient music helped me to understand sound layering in a whole different perspective. Over the past two years, I've especially embraced more experimentation in the studio and introduced sounds from various cultures rooted in Asia. This helped a lot to push creative boundaries. When possible I try to spend time learning more about sound’s behavior as well and how daily noise from our surroundings can impact us. Keeping my eyes & ears wide open to observe the smallest details.

Where was the mix prepared and what is the idea behind it?

The mix was recorded at home at approximately 10:30 am on a rainy morning. The concept behind the mix was to include tracks that are influencing me at the moment. I'm finding myself drawn towards music from Japanese producers more and more these days and wanted to share some of those discoveries alongside other favourite labels and promos from friends. The mix itself carries a story that feels fluid with a lot of focus on space, texture, and a hint of nostalgic memories. I hope the listeners will enjoy it and feel the same way.

~

Listen on Soundcloud, Mixcloud, or the ASIP Podcast.

Download.

Tracklist:

01. Adi - Haz
02. Androne - Signs of life
03. Yagya – Old Dreams And Memories
04. Yumi Iwaki - Sleepy Fog
05. Pataphysical - Moonlit Picnic
06. Vivian Koch - Who
07. Lemna - Moments In Eternal Recurrence
08. Celestial Trax - New Masters of Psychedelic Ambience
09. Avsluta - Meditation 16
10. BLNDR - Callopsis
11. Vivian Koch - Closed (Yosemite Version)
12. JakoJako - Ochros
13. Only Thingz - Eyes Wide Open
14. Kosei Fukuda - Sky Clair (Uchi Remix)
15. Underworld - Dark & Long (Most 'Ospitable)
16. Talvin Singh - Butterfly

~

Sunju Hargun | Soundcloud | Bandcamp | Instagram | Bandcamp (Siamese Twins)

 

isolatedmix 112 - Suna

 
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So many of the sets that have been a part of 9128.live these past few years have been outstanding, and some artists have even been able to make a couple of appearances across multiple takeovers. One of those artists who ticks both these boxes is Suna.

Based in Seoul, Suna made her first appearance in our world for the Astral Industries 9128.live takeover over a year ago, and was then invited back by Joachim Spieth for the Affin takeover earlier this year. Her set for this takeover was spellbinding, and I was obliged to ask Suna to present this mix once again for the isolatedmix series, for even more people to enjoy.

For those who are new to Suna, she plays a crucial part in the burgeoning electronic scene in Seoul - one I have heard amazing things about but yet to experience. As part of the infamous club vurt, Suna can often be heard as part of the lineup gracing the infamous concrete bunker with her carefully crafted ambient sets, of hypnotic deep techno, or just as busy running things behind the scenes.

ASIP - Thank you, Suna, for allowing us to republish this mix. It was one of my favorites from the 9128.live Affin takeover!

Suna - First of all, I feel very grateful to have an opportunity to take part in 9128.live, I enjoyed working on it.

Can you tell us a bit about yourself and your role at vurt?

vurt. is a crew that seeks the pure spirit of underground culture and timeless electronic music. We hold a slogan, 'Ancient Future'. Before opening vurt., I often felt there's a systemic problem that DJs cannot improve their music with their own identity. DJs were asked to compromise our musical direction that could have been related to the revenue of clubs, and new trial and challenges were not accepted. Superficiality was the only dominating concept, wearing the mask of the underground. I felt strongly that we are in need of a venue that DJs can build up their musical style through experiences, experiments and improvements.

vurt. wants to make everything possible, developing and realizing pure music that hold each one's character and identity. We keep the olds, welcome the new, and bridges various generations and their knowledge and experiences. 

How has vurt been impacted by the past few years? And what do you see as the future of clubs in this new world?

Like every other club in the world at the moment, vurt. has been influenced by Covid19 big time. 

Last year, the Korean government started to shut down clubs officially, and even before several months from that point, we were advised(morel like coerced) to keep shutting down. 

When we were having such a big difficulty without receiving any financial support or aid from the government, many local and international artists helped us.

Alex from Cassegrain released an album called <in_vurt> with many other artists, and they donated the sales revenue. I don't know how many times one gets to experience such a special gift, I still haven't figured out how I can pay them back. I feel indescribably grateful. After that vurt. and two other clubs in Seoul, Faust and Volnost joined forces and made a VFV Club project. We raised funds via a streaming event. Things were still on pause, and the pain was roaming in the air. I gained lots of energy to move forward while meeting people who were in the same shoes. Just by talking about how the camera is, how the streaming is, I felt like it gives me power. In the retrospect, it was a meaningful time to get to understand further about each other, before that event we three didn't really have that active communication. I thank all the listeners and people who donated. We also got great spiritual supports from loving friends of vurt., and the financial support from Jaegermeister was a meaningful help as well. So far, it was a miraculous time that we could hang in. 

We couldn't just shut the door, sit down and wait, so now we turned the venue into a bar and focusing on ambient music than techno. Before the pandemic, we were running vurt. as an ambient bar during the weekdays so the transition was somewhat natural. Now, we are doing exhibitions once every two months, we showcase the artists who have connections to vurt.'s identity. The latest exhibition last month was very meaningful and special. The artists were rather young, all based in Seoul and regulars of vurt., and for the last few years we have grown together. They were students who study art and photography, it was difficult to make an opportunity to do something together when we were running as a club, but at this point when things are paused because of the disease, they utilized our venue and created their narratives. The title of the exhibition was 'Symptoms', and it was about various symptoms that are being created while being deferred, and the hopes that are jumping in. While the exhibiting period, I felt the venue was revived by the young friends who have visited here countlessly and grown up together with us. When the venue lost its role, and we were getting tired of it, they brought the new hope to us. I felt strongly about the younger generation's power. 

However, it is a sorrowful, desolating thing to see that techno music cannot be played here, which was built and existed for that very reason. I keep thinking about how it could function was a club, in this confusing time.  

Can you summarize your approach to the mix you prepared?

I was invited by Joachim Spieth last January, and joined 9128 live - Affin invites to play. 

I like to deliver the vitalities that are newly created when one track meets another in my set. I also want to communicate emotionally, via various strange sounds that are related to the terra incognita. It would be a great pleasure for me if I could give a moment as a present when the listener's consciousness wakes up responding by deepened, spacious sounds. 

The mix holds a wish to heal our bodies and minds that are damaged by the sense of loss because of the prolonged pandemic.

~

Listen on Soundcloud, Mixcloud, or the ASIP Podcast.

Download

Tracklist:

1. Joachim Spieth - P 680 [Affin]
2. The Abyss Within Us - Life in a Circle - Part 1. [Astral Industries]
3. Biosphere - Gilberg [The Senja Recordings]
4. Kassel Jaeger - Fog Constellation (approaching)
5. Kassel Jaeger - Paris Mustangs
6. MonoLogue - A1 [Chemical Tapes]
7. Guy Hobsbawm - Brumaire [Mysteries Of the Deep]
8. Ab Uno - Sophia [Mahorka']
9. The Caretaker - In the deep and dark hours of the night [History Always Favours The Winners]
10. hakobune - Seamless and Here [Patient Sounds]
11. MonoLogue - A2 [Chemical Tapes]
12. Ryuichi Sakamoto - Andata [Commmons]
13. Saenïnvey - The Big Travel [Eilean Rec.]
14. Magna Pia - The Mirror [AWRY]

~

Suna | Soundcloud

 

Ute #45 Mikkel Rev

 

Wow, it’s been a while since I have posted a featured mix on here. But this one is truly deserved.

As you probably know by now after ready the introduction to the Marius Bø isolatedmix, I am a big fan of the Ute collective, and one of the key figures of the collective, Mikkel Rev (also known as Omformer) has prepared this rather special mix of unreleased/upcoming material.

What I can tell you, is that some of this won’t remain unreleased for too long ;-)

A superb journey from one of today’s most exciting producers. Varied, melodic and an immense respect for the classic trance ambient sound.