The preview for the ever-great Danny Scrilla‘s »Lighter« has been on Soundcloud for four months now and we haven’t stopped celebrating it since. Want that track to finally drop!
Daniel Haaksman just shared the latest Man Recordings release with us which is an EP by one of our favourite producers out there – WILDLIFE!. It’s called »Pastiche« and features four excellent tracks:
On »DNO« WILDLIFE! & J-Wow deliver slowed down kuduroesque rhythm patterns paired with heavy sub-bass action, while the Toddla T collabo »Hear Dat« swings between grimey dancehall and post-apocalyptic soca madness. On »Paragon« WILDLIFE! and Haaksman take things up to 150 bpm, clashing a Juke/Footwork influenced percussion section with chopped-up vocal bits and genre-defying electronica weirdness. WILDLIFE! rounds things up, with dub influenced half-time smasher »Clappaz«.
For the release, Suze published an interview with Sam on Mixpak in which he talks about the EP, his ucoming album and his favourite soundclashes amongst other things:
I got to a point where the whole European dancehall and soundsystem scene just didn’t interest me anymore. And that’s still the case. I can’t really listen to German or Swiss or Italian sounds pretending to be Jamaican on stage. I can’t listen to that. That was also one of the reasons why I started WILDLIFE!, I wanted to do something rooted in my world and where I’m coming from, from my background, from my environment. I wanted to stop pretending to be a Jamaican soundsystem operator. I became a simple fan, I’m not trying to be in that scene but I still love listening to clashes and the latest new tunes but I don’t have the aim of being the next Ricky Trooper, which was the case when I was 18 years old [laughs].
Asia-Afrika Sound System from Indonesia got in touch to share their latest mix which they released in collaboration with local street wear clothing brand Tuffstuff.
»Tuffdub« features
heavy downtempo riddims, hype and a danceable rub a dub style mixed with Ras Muhamad’s vocals take listeners to another dimension of Reggae culture.