Interview + Mix: Acid Washed

DATE:
January 21st, 2011
CATEGORIES:
Interviews, Mixtapes
REACTIONS: 0

Good boys go to heaven. Bad boys go everywhere. That’s right. French duo Acid Washed have taken us everywhere with the sounds of their self-titled debut album, which was released on Record Makers last year. The duo of Andrew Claristidge and Richard D’Alpert creates a fusion of late nineties filter house and DFA disco anthems that acknowledges the influence of Chicago and Detroit. The brilliant visuals of Anthony Burrill fit perfectly with their music. Acid Washed are coming for the first time to Thessaloniki, Greece today (21/1) at Partizan as a special guest of the very popular ‘Can You Relate?’ parties. They will bring cosmic tunes for the party tonight…

La.Ga.Sta.: It all started with ‘General Motors, Detroit, America’. Is there any story behind this track?
Andrew Claristidge: We made this track when GM went bankrupt. Detroit has a strong meaning when you make electronic music: techno was invented over there. This track is about this. It is kinda an homage to this city.
Richard D’Alpert: I always wanted to create an anthem which would express the soul of the XXe century, which is I think the industrialization, and its heart, the working class people. I grew up in a very industrialized area, I’ve seen it live, and I’ve seen it dying. If we add a musical incarnation – here, the Detroit techno movement, lead by some proeminent Black musicians like in UR – then we have the perfect expression of my intention. I’ve always wanted to make that track as a dedication. And thanks to Andrew, we made it possible.

Why Acid Washed?
Andrew Claristidge: Cause it sounds great! It is also good memories from my childhood and something I would not wear anymore.
Richard D’Alpert: Because of my friend Jenny, who found the name!

Could you imagine your music without visuals?
Andrew Claristidge: In a way yes and in another way no! In a car driving across great landscapes in the US. But what Anthony Burrill did for us is fitting so well. The visuals are so perfect with the music.
Richard D’Alpert: They both interact, and for me they are definitely part of the same genesis.

What has influenced you in the past years?
Andrew Claristidge: Too many influences to mention one.
Richard D’Alpert: The American Repetitive music scene (Steve Reich, Terry Riley, John Adams, etc.), the NDW & the Beach Boys.

What excites you in today’s French electronic scene?
Andrew Claristidge: Still Daft Punk, Koudlam, Turzi, Arnaud Rebotini, Digikid84, Danton Eeprom, the Social Club…But there are so many more! The French has advanced like never before
Richard D’Alpert: My mate Kavinsky and his next album, Romain Turzi, Youngunz, the scene around the Social Club, the House of Moda parties organized by Arnaud Lassince, and many things more! Oh and yeah, La Gaîté Lyrique, the new upcoming place of music & numeric arts, and a label: InFiné.

Paris or Berlin? Which city inspires you most?
Andrew Claristidge: Berlin cause I am living here and Paris cause I am not living there. Those 2 cities are both inspiring, I can not make a choice.
Richard D’Alpert: Berlin for the chill. But definitely Paris for the thrill.

What turns you on?
Andrew Claristidge: My fiancée. And every kinda analog gear!
Richard D’Alpert: Travelling all the time. The infinite complexity, magic of the world’s landscapes, and faces of its people.

Which is your favorite destination?
Andrew Claristidge: Back to Berlin.
Richard D’Alpert: Los Angeles.

Which song do you love to listen to while drive your car?
Andrew Claristidge: Sebastien Tellier’s ‘La Ritournelle’ and Alan Vega’s ‘Shadazz’.
Richard D’Alpert: ‘Nightcall’ by Kavinsky and ‘Scheherazade’ by Rimsky-Korsakov.

What’s your plans for 2011?
Andrew Claristidge: Be better than I was in 2010.
Richard D’Alpert: Make it till 2012. And finishing my movie on time!

Acid Washed have made a mix exclusive for La.Ga.Sta. It features the new Anteros & Thanaton killer remix of Washed’s ‘Change’. Download it now!

Acid Washed La.Ga.Sta. Mix Tracklist:
01. Snoop Doggy Dogg: ‘Sensual Seduction’
02. Moullinex: ‘Catalina’
03. Eli Escobar: ‘Love Thing Part 3′ [Mike Simonetti Remix]
04. The Glimmers: ‘U Rocked My World’ [Pete Herbert & Tristan De Cuna Remix]
05. Ian O´Donovan: ‘A Modern Romance’
06. Sharam Jey: ‘Turning Back’
07. Acid Washed: ‘Change’ [ Anteros & Thanaton Remix]

Download the mix here.

As a bonus, here’s Acid Washed’s latest remix of Casey Spooner’s new single ‘Spanish Teenager’ for your downloading pleasure. Enjoy!

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Casey Spooner feat. Jake Shears: ‘Spanish Teenager’ [Acid Washed Remix] [mp3]

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Interview + Mixtape: Tape To Tape

DATE:
December 7th, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews, Mixtapes
REACTIONS: 3

Artwork: Markos Moraitis

For those who follow Lagasta closely, our love for the London-based dance duo Tape To Tape is very well known. Little is known about these newcomers, which is exactly their purpose, ‘to let their music do the talking’. However much you look for press photos and bio, the only thing you will find is their two amazing EP’s ‘The Devil Made Me Do It’ and ‘Pure & Easy’, which were released this year through Headman’s Relish label. Due to their forthcoming appearance in Athens, Greece this Saturday (11/12 at Yoga Bala, as special guests of Sally Spektra parties), Tape To Tape introduced themselves to us and gave us the pleasure of making an exclusive Mix for Lagasta.
Spread the love from Tape To Tape…

La.Ga.Sta.: How it all started?
Tape To Tape: It all started in the summer of 2009 after we found a mutual love of all forms of electronica. So we went into the studio to see what would be the result, it came in the form of our first EP ‘The Devil Made Me Do It’. When this was completed we were really excited by the outcome and asked our friends The C90s to remix Part 1 of the EP. It then found its way over to Relish and Robi Insinnia (Headman) heard it and loved it. The rest as they say is history!

How would you describe your sound?
Tape To Tape’s sound is really just based on our emotions and influences.

TAPE TO TAPE – THE DEVIL MADE ME DO IT I ( RELISH RECORDS )

What has influenced you in the past years?
We have so many influences from music from the past but would definitely say our main inspirations for the Tape To Tape project have been early house music producers such as Mr. Fingers and Marshall Jefferson, Kraftwerk, Neu and of course Giorgio Moroder up to modern day dance artists such as Daniel Wang, Morgan Geist, and LCD Soundsystem.

What are you most excited about right now?
We are definitely most excited right now by our remix of Black Strobe ‘Me & Madonna’, which is being relesed through Kitsune. Regarding artists and records there has been some great new music this year. Artists we are excited about right now are Nicolas Jaar, Kink & Neville Watson and Azari & III. Bxcentric and JR Seaton also seem to be producing some cool tracks and remixes. A track that has been getting the best reactions currently in our sets is from the unknown artist Tyson with his track ‘Die On The Dancefloor’. Definitely one to watch.

BLACK STROBE : Me & Madonna ( tape to tape remix )

Which is the ideal place to listen to your music?
As tape to tape are currently releasing tracks for the dancefloor we would have to say the most ideal place to listen to our releases would be in a club, preferably Fabric nightclub with its bodysonic soundsystem!

What do you love and hate most in London?
London is great for its melting pot of music, arts and culture but definitely one thing it lacks is sunshine!

Top-3 albums of 2010…
There seemed to be a lack of great albums released this year, but three that have been played a lot are:
Four Tet: ‘There Is Love In You’
Gil Scott-Heron: ‘I’m New Here’
Matthew Dear: ‘Black City’

Which is the last tape you bought?
The last tape we bought was Shit Robot’s ‘From The Cradle To The Rave’.

What’s next for Tape To Tape?
We will start working on our new single early next year with the promise of making this a big dancefloor track with a few surprises thrown. I suppose our next step would be our debut album.

Which tape do you love to listen to while driving your car?
Right now we have been listening to our Tape To Tape exclusive MIx for our favourite blog Lagasta! For this Mix we wanted to create something that could be listened to in the car, but still had elements of a club set. We really like the finished result and hope you like it too. Enjoy!

tape to tape : the lagasta mix

Tracklist:
01. Azari & III: ‘Into The Night’ [Nicolas Jaar Mix]
02. Headman feat SOS: ‘Blue Boys’ [Chmmr Remix]
03. Solomun: ‘Love Recycled 2′
04. Kink & Neville Watson: ‘City 2 City’
05. Metro Area: ‘Muira’ [Snippet]
06. Murphy Jax: ‘It’s The Music’
07. Metro Area: ‘Muira’
08. Black Strobe: ‘Me & Madonna [Tape To Tape Remix]
09. Dom Thomas: ‘Disco Workout’
10. Etienne De Crecy: ‘No Brain’ [Serge Santiago Remix/Tape To Tape intro re-edit]
11. Kink & Neville Watson: ‘Metropole’
12. Last Rhythm: ‘Last Rhythm’

Download the exclusive Tape To Tape Lagasta Mix HERE.

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Interview: Monarchy

DATE:
December 1st, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews
REACTIONS: 0

In orbit with Monarchy. The mysterious London-based electro duo are coming for the first time in Thessaloniki, Greece this Friday (3/12) at Partizan as a special guest of the very popular ‘Can You Relate?’ parties. Monarchy landed at Last Gas Station for an interview about their pop music, remixes and their obsession with space: “Space is now our only hope to escape from this dusty planet”. We are floating with Monarchy in space…

La.Ga.Sta.: What is Monarchy?
Monarchy: Monarchy is a duo. It’s also an ideal, a theory and emotion trapped inside a cube. We are taking this emotion with us, and exploring the world.

Monarchy is connected with space. What does space mean to you?
Space represents hope, escape, and aspiration. With the decline of religion and a limited Earth, space is now our only hope to escape from this dusty planet. It gives us the inspiration that this world isn’t the only world, that there are limitless possibilities, that there is relief from the grind and depression of day-to-day living in this society. But at the same time, it is a metaphor. Because we can escape from this world inwards. So we project Monarchy into space, but actually it’s a journey inwards to our core, to understand ourselves, and what it is to be human.

Which is your favorite planet and why?
Gliese 581g is probably my favourite. It is likely that water could exist on it’s surface, and the Gleise planetary system has a number of interesting potential Earth-like planets around it.

There is a lot of mystery around Monarchy. What is hidden behind your masks?
Maybe you would like us to say that we were burnt by acid in a jealous attack by our ex lovers, but actually we hide our identity behind the masks. By having obscured identities, it allows us to express ourselves more honestly, and also to create music without ego. It’s all about the music, and allows the music to breath on it’s own.

How can you describe the sound of your debut album and when it is going to be released?
The album will be released very early in 2011. The album is a journey, each song represents a conflict or emotion we have experienced. There’s loneliness in the sound, the coldness of deep space, but at the same time there’s a glimmer of hope, and a bond to the other people who resonate with our struggle with what it means to be human in this world. People who share this struggle will understand the album.

Is your music a way to escape reality?
It is, but it is also a way to understand what reality is. It is like meditation. By abstracting the thought process you think more deeply. By abstracting reality you start to understand it.

Which is the ideal place to listen to your album?
When the world is beating down on you, when you need to escape, that is the time to put on our album.

With which criteria you choose the tracks you are about to remix? Is there a song you had recently rejected?
We can’t tell you which songs we reject, that is a loss of faith. But for us it’s about what we can bring to the song, what we can twist in it to make it a Monarchy track. Sometimes it is quite immediate, such as the OMD remix. At other times, it is more complex. To be honest, we did not listen to the Kylie track before saying we would do it. When we heard it we didn’t know what we could do to it to make it Monarchy. So we stretched out her vocals 800%, Justin Beiber style, and then cut it up to create a new chord progression that we liked, and built it up from there. It doesn’t sound very much like the original, but it has Kylie all the way through it, which we love.

How does it feel like to “Dance in the Dark” with Lady Gaga?
You can feel her penis rubbing against you, which is interesting. We had never danced with a hermaphrodite before. Lady Gaga is amazing, we think she’s a true pop icon, pushing pop forward and being experimental where so many others are being artistically lazy. But it’s more for what is around her that we love her. Her music is good, but the Gaga message as a whole is what we really get excited about.

Which is your favorite destination?
East London is amazing. So vibrant and diverse. We really love Paris, and for completely different reasons, we also love Berlin. But everywhere we have been has their special charm and something to love. From Guangzhou to Havana, New York to Yekaterinburg, we have learnt something from all these places.

Top 3 albums and tracks of 2010…
Songs we love:
Crystal Castles – ‘Not In Love’ (feat. Robert Smith)
DJ Hell feat. Brian Ferry – ‘U Can Dance’ (Tim Goldsworthy Remix)
Robyn – ‘Indestructible’ (A-Trak Remix)
Albums we love:
Grizzly Bear – “Veckatimest”
The Chemical Brothers- “Further
Hot Chip – “One Life Stand”

What are your future plans?
We will be releasing our next single early in 2011, it will be ‘Maybe I’m Crazy’. Then another single and the album around March. We intend to tour a lot.  And keep writing. Just keep on writing music, and bringing it to people in whatever way we can. We also intend to master another language.

What is your biggest expectation for 2011?
Music continues to excite us, and we really look forward to hearing new bands, and also some of our favourite bands releasing new material. Cinema has been quite amazing lately, with 3D really taking the experience to an enhanced level. Maybe there will be some great art-house cinema mixing 3D CGI with dark themes. Technology will take another jump forward in 2011, and we will also get closer to making space travel accessible to civilians with an increased presence of private companies investing in space.

If Monarchy was a planet which one would that be?
A gas giant, slowly orbiting its sun, safely beyond the habitable zone, communicating in slow-speak with it’s attendant moons.

Kylie Minogue: Better Than Today (Monarchy Kylie Through The Wormhole Remix)

Download Monarchy’s new remix of Kylie’s ‘Better Than Today’ here.

In case you misssed it, grab Monarchy’s amazing winter mix here.

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Interview: Rex The Dog

DATE:
November 18th, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews
REACTIONS: 6

An interview with a dog? Not any dog. Rex The Dog is coming for the first time in Athens this Saturday (20/11) at Philipp Champagne Bar, as a special guest of of the “BeDazzler” parties (free entrance). We asked the famous Rex The Dog to join us for a ride. Beep. Beep. Bop. Klonk!!!

My favourite destination is…
…anywhere with FOOD AND GIRLS.
My co-driver is…
…boring!
In the trunk I carry…
…a blanket and tyre and a broken Ensoniq DP4+ (it’s the truth).
I leave behind…
…a goddam mess.
The car stereo plays…
…everything right now. Most of it is boring. Not my decision.
I speed up when…
…I eat chocolate or rat.
I hit the brake when…
…I see RATS OR GIRLS!
If I see a hitch hiker…
…ha ha, not my decision but if we pick one up, then I kiss them.
If I lose my way…
…I follow my wet nose.
If I run out of gas…
…I walk.
If I wasn’t a dog…
…I would be a dinosaur and kick everybody’s ass, tyrannosaurus REX!
My future plans are…
…sleeping, eating, licking and kissing your face!

Whooop!

Triangle Walks (Rex The Dog Remix Radio Edit) by Fever Ray

Download it here.

Rex The Dog – Live @ Loveland Festival Amsterdam 14th August 2010 by rexthedog1980

Download it here.

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Interview + Mix: Bottin

DATE:
November 3rd, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews, Mixtapes
REACTIONS: 2

Disco king Bottin is coming for the first time in Thessaloniki this Friday (5/11) at Partizan as a special guest of the popular ‘Can You Relate?’ parties and promises a “disco horror” night. The Venice-based musician, producer and dj talked to Lagasta about disco, disco and disco. Yes, Italians Do It Better and Bottin is here to prove it. Related!

Lagasta: Discocracy or Discocrazy?
Bottin: Discocracy doesn’t really mean anything. I really like the sound of the word itself. It then evolved in the kind of masonic artwork that Francesco Meneghini designed for the Eskimo 12″. I sort of like the idea of a secret society promoting disco in obscure ways. Many stores and reviewers mistaken the word for Discocrazy, which makes me smile. For me disco is basically an umbrella term I use for the dance music I like to play out, not only proper disco. Tracks belonging to difference genres, but that are all musically enthralling and not just heavy banging or chainsaw sounding teen electro.

When was your first night at Discotheque?
I was born in 1977 so I was too young to experience the real disco times. Also I wasn’t interested in dance music in the 90s (as a teenager). I was more into acid jazz and funk.

What made you turn to Disco?
Not sure…It was maybe a backwards process in researching where the music I like was coming from. What I like about disco is that whereas typical dance mostly relies on basic beats and minimal basslines elements, disco is a more complex blend of rhythmical, melodic and harmonic elements. There are different layers to it and different ways to listen to it. It’s music that was done by musicians, not by djs. Sometimes they overdid it and soaked the good funk elements in heavy strings arrangements or excessively soulful vocals. Other times they made masterpieces that still sound more modern and more adventurous than contemporary electronica.

What has influenced you in the past years?
Actually, I live in my autistic bubble. No, really I don’t really follow the contemporary “nu disco” scene. Sometimes I find a new record that I like and then I play it out at shows. But all my musical influences come from the past, at least from 30 years ago. Again, I find it very hard to discover interesting music ideas in contemporary productions. Also I have a lot of fun digging out strange unknown records at flea markets! Can’t really beat those discoveries with any new record or, worse, re-edit.

What makes you “Disco” in Venice?
Nobody cares or knows about disco here. And I do not make much publicity of my productions and dj tours, so I’m not helping at all to spread the word. But just recently I was having breakfast in this café at the foot of Rialto bridge and I heard this epic instrumental disco mix playing on the radio. I asked the bartender what it was and it turned out it was a mixtape he did himself in the 70s! He used to be a proper disco dj and told me about his records collection, the “professional dj” license he had to earn, about all the promos the label would send him (he wouldn’t do trades unfortunately). Funny and interesting stories. So, now I know I’m not entirely alone in this town.

How can you escape from a “Disco Horror”?
You don’t. If you think it through, you’ll soon enough realize that you, me, us (the disco freaks) are the horror!

Which are your favoutire tracks at the moment?
I really like Paolo Conte’s new album ‘Nelson’. There’s one track in it, I won’t tell which one, that I’m planning to do a bootleg remix of.

Which is your favourite destination?
Anywhere I haven’t been to already! I like to explore. Although I must say that the more I travel, the more I learned to appreciate my geographical home, which I identify with the Mediterranean countries and cultures. From Ibiza to Istanbul and everything in between really!

Which songs would you love to listen to if you had a car?
I used to have a car. It was a white 4×4 Fiat Panda, old school model. I sold it to an ethnologist who does field research in the African deserts. I heard the Panda has been painted yellow and it’s probably driving into a dune right now. In that scenario I would definitely listen to La Bionda’s ‘Sandstorm’.

What do you love and hate about the Italo-Disco revival?
I neither love nor hate it. I mean there are very many great Italo tracks, especially the not so poppy ones. There are very deep Italo gems that I really love. Truth is that at nearly 90% of Italo is rubbish and musically uninteresting, so not really worth resurrecting. Also most people say Italo this, Italo that, but have little or no idea what Italo was or is. I’ve recently seen an Italo compilation (on a English label) which included Spanish and French songs. I guess it all sounded like Italian to them!

Will disco never die?
Never! Just like rock’n'roll. And polka.

Top-3 things to do when you wake up in Venice?
1. Wake up early, say at around 6am and enjoy the hectic movements of boat deliveries as well as hard working trashmen. It like a parallel universe, but they are really what keep Venice afloat.
2. Go to caffé Lavena in St Mark’s square and have coffee there, inside, at the bar: not sitting down in the square sieged by filthy pigeons.
3. Hear the sirens announcing an exceptionally high tide and subsequently stay in bed until it’s safe to go out without the aid of rubber boots.

What are your plans for 2011?
I’ve been lucky to play in almost 20 countries already. I’d like to reach 25 or even 30 with next year. That mean I’d really love to go to places I haven’t been to yet. Also I’m working a new album, which will hopefully be ready in 2011. So all that, plus having my Russian synthesizer, a Formanta Polivoks, fixed. It has been in the repair shop of over a year now, but I’m keeping the faith!

 

Bottin shares with us his brand new ‘Discocracy’ Mix:

Tracklist:
01. BFR: ‘BFR’ [Unsigned demo]
02. Change: ‘The End’ [Linosaur Edit]
03. Roberto Auser and Alden Tyrell: ‘Blondes & Brunettes’ [Club Mix]
04. Harkin & Raney: ‘Word To The Master’
05. Severed Heads: ‘All Saints Day’ [Bottin's Severed Headit]
06. Cos-Mes: ‘Chaosexotica’
07. Rotary 76: ‘Cotillon’
08. Bottin: ‘Discocracy’
09. Clio: ‘Faces’
10. Isadora Juice: ‘Donna Automatica’

Grab it HERE [51 MB]

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Interview: The Swiss

DATE:
October 27th, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews
REACTIONS: 2

The last time they were in Athens our feet hurt from dancing. Our favourite live disco band The Swiss from Adelaide is back in town. Tonight the three piece (Sidwho?, Tony Mitolo and Luke Million) are performing at Bios. Do us a favour and don’t miss this one. The Swiss found some the time to drop a line to Last Gas Station about disco, shaking hips, bubbles, French champagne, fast cars, and bodybuilding. Get ready for an epic, disco, synth journey!

La.Ga.Sta.: Why Swiss and not Aussie?
The Swiss: That’s quite funny we’ve been saying that “Australia”, would be a great name for a band. But I think that it would only work outside of Australia. Same goes with The Swiss. It sounds exotic, it is worlds apart from Australia, culturally, geographically, and climate wise too. I just hope that it makes sense in Switzerland.

How would you describe your sound?
We have been told that we are Dance, Disco, Boutique Disco, Progressive Disco, Disco House, Live Disco Disco Bisco Disco, Moustache Disco. So I guess we are … Disco.

What has influenced you in the past years?
Many things have influenced the band over the years. Film, music, literature, sex, fast cars, and bodybuilding just to name a few. As individuals we are into different styles of music. When we come together those influences come out in our playing and form to make what is now The Swiss.

What turns you on?
Shaking hips, bopping bums and sweaty palms.

Where are your favourite places to play?
This is very hard to answer. In the end I guess no matter where we are in the world, once we start playing and the people are dancing you could be anywhere. It doesn’t really change. I mean other than the venue, the sound, the food and a different language for us not to speak it ends up being the same. That’s the great thing about music. It is truly a global art form that transcends international boundaries.

What is missing from the dance music scene nowadays?
There is less of some things and more of others. I don’t think it’s hard to find what you are looking for with a little research. From what I have been lucky enough to see and be a part of in different parts of the world it seems to be a thriving, positive and super fun scene full of productive, nice, helpful people with a few idiots thrown in for good measure.

How do you see today’s Australian electro scene?
It feels like there is almost a second wave of acts coming out of Australia. Acts like the Bag Raiders and Miami Horror releasing debut full-length albums this year is a great sign of things to come. It’s a very exciting time with new and old faces doing good things.

Which are your favoutire tracks at the moment?
Sidwho?: Logg – ‘Lay it on the line’
Luke Million: Patrice Rushen – ‘Forget Me Nots’
Tony Mitolo: Carte Blanche – ‘Do! Do! Do!’

Which is your favourite destination?
Earth.

Which songs do you love to listen to while driving your car?
I lost my license for the 5th time. I get it back when we go back to Australia. Plus I have an old Vespa which doesn’t have a stereo. Luke listens to classical music because his car speakers are blown and it’s the only genre that doesn’t distort them and Sid seems to always have Arthur Russell on whenever I am in his car.

What are you most excited about right now?
Playing these shows in Europe. I have been really busy over the last few weeks and we have been sidetracked thinking about other things. It has only just hit me now that within 8 hours I will be in Rome getting ready to play the first of the 10 shows we are doing over the next 2 weeks. I personally can’t wait to play some of our new music for you guys. Yeah!!!

Which is the best “Bubble Bath” to use? You should know by now…
Ha! Well…I guess the only baths we like are the ones that are full of people with the bubbles coming overflowing French Champagne.

Will disco never die?
I can honestly say…NO. Whether people call it Disco, or House, or Techno, or whatever. There will always be people dancing to that tribal bass drum going bang! Bang!Bang! Bang!. Thinking about it makes me smile.

Should we expect a full album in 2011?
Yes and we are excited.

 

So, put on your dancing shoes and dance the night away…

Bubble Bath (radio edit) by The Swiss

Movement Part 1 by The Swiss

Download it here

Annie – Songs Remind Me Of You (The Swiss & Donnie Sloan remix) by The Swiss

Download it here

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Interview + Mixtape: Mustang

DATE:
October 21st, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews, Mixtapes
REACTIONS: 9

[Photo: Guillaume Kayacan]

We don’t need a Mustang car, cause we have the Mustang boys! Mustang are Renaud Deru and Andy Faisca. Both are fans of analogue synths, Japanese food and old Italo Disco’s spectral sounds but also fans of Pink Floyd, Talk Talk and The Cure. They released their amazing debut EP ‘Chameleon Circus’ on Gomma last February and since then they delivered remixes for Vitalic, The KDMS, Morcheeba, Silvervince, amongst others and recently disco edits for Duran Duran and Valérie Dore. Now, the newest shooting stars of the Belgian electro scene are coming to Athens this Saturday (23/10) at Philipp Champagne Bar for the opening night of the “BeDazzler” parties! Read the interview and make sure to download Mustang’s exclusive mix for La.Ga.Sta. below:

La.Ga.Sta.: What’s the story behind the name?
Renaud Deru: In fact, there’s no story. We are not especially fond neither of cars nor of horses, but, ok, Mustangs are great cars and I’d love to have one. When we were looking for a name (hard period in our life !), after some ridiculous and not so fancy ideas, I woke up with “Mustang” in my mind. It was like a revelation. I don’t know why. I called Andy, and he said “I had the same vision last night”… I promise you, we don’t eat magic-mushrooms. Sincerely, I always feared answering that question.

How would you describe your work?
We make music, with our heart and our souls, without any view on specific musical movements. Our music is not simply nu-disco, not very electro, not that house and not only pop. It’s just music we like! I can say that we have more a club vision for our remixes and a pop vision for our own tracks. We want to make people dance and make love at the same time on our productions.

What has influenced you most in the past years?
We have lots of different musical influences, like Pink Floyd, Talk Talk, Santana, The Alan Parson Project, The Cure, from rock to disco to classic house music. And of course our respective origins: Andy is an Hispano-Portuguese born in Belgium, I’m 100% Belgian beef.

What turns you on?
First, a beautiful brown-haired girl with tanned skin and deep clear eyes. And a great DJ gig in a great place in front of a great crowd, definitely!

How do you see today’s Belgium electro scene?
Very productive, friendly and open-minded. We supported each other in interviews and promo mixes (hello Villa, hello Stephen The Magician, hello Mickey, hello Vito Aeroplane, hello Montevideo!). I feel like it’s a little bit like what happened in Berlin 6 years ago. You’ll see, in 4 years, the whole European music-scene will come to live in Brussels ! Ah ah ah!

Which is your favourite destination?
New-York for the cheesburgers, shopping and magnetism, Marrakech for Chicken Lemon Tajine, perfumes and the sympathy of the inhabitants, Ibiza for the grilled fishes and the beauty of its numerous paradisiac creeks.

Where are your favourite places to play?
Libertine Supersport in Brussels. Yeah, where else!

Which is your favourite track at the moment?
Aeroplane: Superstar (The Krays Remix)

What are you most excited about right now?
Our new E.P on Abracada Recordings, will be out early December!

If you had a Mustang, which songs would you love to listen while driving it?
7he Myriads: ‘Traveller’
Al Stewart: ‘Year Of The Cat’

Which is your favourite car movie?
“Un Amour De Coccinelle”.

What are your plans for the rest of 2010?
Producing, remixing, traveling and world domination!

 

Here is Mustang’s exclusive mix for La.Ga.Sta. It’s simply Mustang-licious!

Mustang Lagasta Mix by Last Gas Station

Tracklist:
01. Goldfrapp: ‘Believer [Little Loud Remix]‘
02. Casey Spooner: ‘Spanish Teenager [Mustang remix]‘
03. Clare Maguire: ‘Ain’t Nobody [Coyote Remix]‘
04. Visti & Meyland : Stars [Rodion & Mammarella Μix]‘
05. Gypsy & The Cat: ‘Piper’s Song [Aeroplane Remix]‘
06. Hot Chip: Take It In [Osborne Remix]‘
07. Findlay Brown: Promised Land [Hypnolove Mix]‘
08. 7he Myriads: ‘Traveller’
09. The Glass: ‘Four Four Letter [Black Van Remix]‘
10. Yeasayer: ‘Madder Red [Munk Remix]‘
11. Diskokaine: Hall Of Shame [Hannulelauri Remix]‘

Download it HERE and enjoy the ride!

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Interview: Rory Phillips

DATE:
October 6th, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews
REACTIONS: 0

[Photo by Gabriel Green]

Last Gas Station has called Rory Phillips. One of our favourite DJs and producers is coming to Thessaloniki this Friday (8/10) at Art House as a special guest DJ of the very popular “Can You Relate?” parties. Before dancing to his mind-blowing remixes (we had an amazing time with him in Athens) he talked to us about his trademark telephone/headphone, his remixes, London, music and he revealed his secret wish to become a travel agent. Don’t you dare quit djing Rory!

You’ve been busy this year remixing The Golden Filter, Scissor Sisters, Crystal Castles…have you done anything else recently we may hear about this Friday at Art House in Thessaloniki?
It actually feels like I haven’t done much this year because I’ve only had a couple of things released but there’s actually about 5 remixes in limbo right now thanks to the frustrating way labels seem to work, they are all completed and accepted, just waiting to be released.

Can you imagine yourself going back and using headphones instead of your telephone?
I can’t imagine it. The thing is with the telephone, i started using it not as gimmick, rather that design wise it’s really handy when you are djing, and i’ve used one ever since my first DJ set over 10 years ago. I’ve used headphones when going back to back with friends but it definitely feels strange.

If something bad happened to you whom would you call?
My mum.

What do you love and hate most in London?
I love the sheer range of music that passes through the city, the creativity and how the arts are easily accessible, i hate that it can be incredibly fickle.

What has influenced you most in the past years?
John Peel.

What turns you on?
I love the sound of breaking glass.

If you weren’t making music, what do you think you’d be doing?
I’m giving it all up soon to become a travel agent.

What’s the worst job you’ve ever had?
DJ.

Where are your favourite places to play?
Dublin, Osaka & Philadelphia are always fantastic. I’ve had a great time every time I’ve played Athens so hopefully this will stretch to Thessaloniki.

What is missing from the dance music scene nowadays?
Mystique and discovery.

Which is your favourite destination?
Anywhere by train.

What are your favourite tracks at the moment?
Warpaint: ‘Undertow’
Justine & The Victorian Punks: ‘Beautiful Dreamer’
Factory Floor: ‘Lying’

What ringtone do you have on your mobile phone?
I never have one. Vibrate forever.

Which song do you love to listen to while driving your car?
I can’t drive but i did do a ‘night drive’ themed mix tape for the White Light mix series.

What are your plans for the rest of 2010?
Another Hungry Beat 12″, some really exciting Durrr nights in October & December and a couple of top secret collaborations.

The xx – Crystalised (Rory Phillips Mix)

Download it here

Can You Relate? with Rory Phillips: Friday October 8 @ Art House in Thessaloniki.
Be there!!!

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Interview: Flight Facilities

DATE:
June 30th, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews
REACTIONS: 1

This the final call for flight 0145 to Syndey. We jump on board with Flight Facilities, wearing T-shirts ‘Crave You’. From the speakers we can hear the captain’s words, followed by electro disco beats. Enjoy the flight…

How did you choose the name Flight Facilities?
One of us had a grandfather who owned a company by the same name. It had the same logo too. But it wasn’t a musical project. It was a regional airline. It was also partnered with a search and rescue company. It all disappeared sometime in the 90s when he passed away so we thought the name and image were too good to leave behind. Hopefully it can maintain the same good reputation.

Can you fly a plane?
Not legally. But one of us can. A few times. The same flight company in the 90s obviously had a plane or two so it just became like your crazy grandfather letting you drive the car…. in the sky.

There’s a lot of mystery around your true identities. Why all this secrecy?
Because today, everyone identifies with the artists themselves. It’s a big step for someone to start listening to and enjoying a new musician or group. We just wanted people to enjoy our music for what it was before they found out who we were and judged it based on that. We both love thinking Daft Punk are a couple of robots. It adds another dimension to the music.

What kind of…flight facilities do you offer?
Right now we can offer some hand luggage, a half full bottle of water, some duty free alcohol and a muffin. We’re actually sitting in the airport on our way to dj Beni’s wedding.

What are you craving the most?
Some sleeping pills for the way home. And maybe a cheap T-shirt manufacturer to make some FF shirts to give out to everyone.

What turns you on?
Stewardesses. That might sound like a typical answer for us…. but seriously. Stewardesses.

What is missing from the dance music scene in nowadays?
The dance music scene has lost a bit of direction recently. There are more new artists making better music than ever but there doesn’t seem to be that current super power that always used to exist. For example there was the Justice wave and the Soulwax stronghold but no one as of now has become the new huge thing. Not to say that those guys aren’t incredible. They were responsible for some pretty good nights on the dance floor. If anything we think Aeroplane has started a good thing with their monthly mixtapes, showing a strong direction and giving all the djs and party people some more good, new music. That’s what it’s really all about.

What are your plans for the rest of 2010?
Well we’re going to be working with Louie Austen on our next original in the next few days. If we get it all right, we’ll have that finished and released later this year. Otherwise we’ve finished a remix of James Curd’s ‘Got To Have’. We also did a remix collaboration with a friend of ours, Tim Fuchs. That’s a remix of ‘Miami’ by Foals. Also in our computer we have a remix of Like Woah!, aka Ted & Francis. So we think we have enough ammunition to get us through the rest of the year. Unless everyone hates everything we put out, in which case we better get busy….. or busier.

Can you recommend 3 albums that everybody should listen to?
‘Sexuality’ by Sebastian Tellier. We can listen to that end to end any day. It’s unbelievable.
‘Destroy Rock ‘n’ Roll’ by Mylo. That was the dance music Bible. So many incredible musical dance tracks. Nothing stupid and noisy.
‘Thriller’ by Michael Jackson. We doubt there is anyone who hasn’t heard this. Doesn’t stop it from being one of the best albums ever.

Which is your favourite destination?
We haven’t travelled enough to know yet. You might have to ask us that question again in a year. We’ve got a lot of places we need to see first.

In which flight do you think your music fits best?
A long haul. We seem to have an inability to write anything less than 6 minutes long. It’s only fitting that our long music should fit with a long flight. Even though the short flights are much easier to deal with. Maybe that’s why pop music is pop music.

Which song do you love to listen to while driving your car?
‘Drive Your Car’ by Grovesnor or ’1979′ by The Smashing Pumpkins. We also like to do both those things. Maybe we should make the ultimate driving song: ‘Smashing Pumpkins while we drive your car in 1979 with Grovesnor’.

Do you have something to declare?
Not yet. We’re the new guys. We’re still trying to keep a low profile until a few more people jump on board. (Sounds like the answer of two guys with drugs in their ass, right?).

 

> Flight Facilities Minimix for Mega Tour (tracklist on reactions):

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Download it here

>> Aeroplane vs Friendly Fires vs Flight Facilities: ‘I Crave Paris’

Download it here

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The Knife: ‘Tomorrow, In A Year’

DATE:
January 6th, 2010
CATEGORIES:
Interviews, mpFree, News
REACTIONS: 3

The Knife, in collaboration with Mt. Sims and Planningtorock, are to release the studio version of the opera “Tomorrow, In A Year”, on the 1st March 2010 on Rabid Records. Commissioned by Danish performance group Hotel Pro Forma to write the music for their opera based on Charles Darwin and his book “On the Origin of the Species”, The Knife decided to make this a collaborative process, working with artists Mt. Sims and Planningtorock for the first time, to capture the huge width of the Darwin and evolution theme.

Small ‘Gas’ Talk with Olof Dreijer:

What made you decide to write an electro-opera?

Hotel Pro Forma invited us to make the music to their opera about Charles Darwin and the evolution with a focus on biology and geology. They set the framework and theme. I had been working with music for modern dance and feature film before and I wanted to continue on this track so I was excited to take on this project. Me and Karin invited the musicians Mt. Sims and Planningtorock to try a more collaborative process for the first time. This turned out to be very successful, I think the most exciting music in the piece is due to the collaboration. I’ve been very happy to take part of Darwins texts, mainly to understand that he emphasised non hierarchical variation and diversity rather than development and evolution. Before I mainly thought about social darwinism when I heard the name Darwin but now I understand that’s the big misunderstanding due the political climate of the early 1900′s.

What was the biggest difficulty in this project?

Finding what we as musicans can tell about this scientific theme that hasn’t been already told by scientists. We can only give a feeling of what evolution is. Also to write lyrics based on a 1800′s language in way that we can relate to it withour it becoming too pretentious. Also it was crucial to find a balance between conceptual and emotional.

What is humanity’s greatest enemy?

There is no other species as dangerous as the human so it is of course itself.

The first track to be taken from the album, called “Colouring Of Pigeons” and is available for free download. Grab it here

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The Knife: “Colouring Of Pigeons”

Hotel Pro Forma and The Knife’s Darwin electro-opera “Tomorrow, In A Year” plays at the Pallas Theatre, Athens (8 -9 January 2010). More info here

update: The Knife’s entire new album “Tomorrow, in a year” is now available for streaming More info here

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