Mutek 2015 – Metro News Canada
I was thrilled to share my music passionate music and techno geekery with Canada, in this review of Mutek 2015 that was printed in the Metro Canada, and ran nationally.
If I were stuck on a desert island, here are a few things I might bring...
I was thrilled to share my music passionate music and techno geekery with Canada, in this review of Mutek 2015 that was printed in the Metro Canada, and ran nationally.
French hip-hop and electro-house fans are in shock after news that famed French-Tunisian DJ Mehdi (Mehdi Favéris-Essadi) has passed at age 34. He was reportedly killed in ‘accident’ Sept. 13.
Frenetic, psychedelic, and dark are just some of the ways to describe Flim’s dissonant anthem, Mind Control, the title track of this neuromancing 5-track EP.
Set over a rolling baseline and hard-hitting hi-hat, Flim’s fractured voice decries: “I am not a magic man”, in his native Thai, clashing beautifully with the otherworldly synth that sounds out across the track as it reaches into the dark recesses of the imagination.
Flim’s original is followed by four superb remixes led by Skymate, of Umek’s 1605 label, whose signature hardgroove techno style creates a dj friendly funk that will compel partiers hands to the air. Canadian producer, Benny Knox, uses a hard thundering kick to create a driving psychedelic experience that never stops pounding the brain. The EP also features the return of France’s HDRX to Maetta, who delivers a dark remix which combines droning pads with a deep bassline to create a digital world both pleasant and disturbing as it penetrates your skull. Similar things can be said for Von Pixel’s rendition, where he’s created a truly digitalized soundscape that forces neurons into a glitchy, Gibson-esque universe to exist in.
Flim might not be a magic man, but this dark and techy EP is magic enough.
Boiler Room touched down on our first frigid Monday night of the season for a surprise show hosted by the inimitable Fritz Helder (Bathurst Bus Route reprezent!) featuring Egyptrixx, Basic Soul Unit, Nautiluss, Kevin McPhee, Bruce Trail and headlined by Martyn going back to back …
Teki Latex & DJ Orgasmic (Sound Pellegrino Thermal Team) have been in business for over ten years making music and now curating the Sound Pellegrino label out of Paris, selecting the finest in up and coming sounds and styles. Read more about them and …
Interview by Jesse Ship
Amanda Warner (aka MNDR) has been living a pretty serious musician’s life, moving from her hometown of Fargo, North Dakota to Oakland to New York, all in the name of music and exploration. She’s been touring hard since 2009 and was on her third music gathering of the weekend when we caught up at Montreal’s Osheaga Festival—which is fitting since she’s actually secretly French Canadian (well, half of her is). But that half has built bonds with other Canadian divas like Austra and Emily Haines’ band Metric, both of whom she’s remixed in the past year. Singles are still trickling out from her 2012 album Feed Me Diamonds, with another one in production, and she’ll soon be releasing a tune with RAC and Bloc Party’s Kele Okereke. Mon dieu!
There’s a lot of uncertainty as to how to pronounce your artist name. Set us straight!
It’s just the letters M-N-D-R. It’s the DJ/IDM name that I used in the Bay Area, a combination of my legal name Amanda Warner. I had a lot of criticism with that at first, but now with artists like SBTRKT, it’s lifted. I will claim that I paved the first no-vowel road officially in 2004.
So what do you do for fun in New York?
I have a party called Youth Group that I throw with another DJ friend named Musa who DJs for Spank Rock. The party is starting to make tech-house and downloadable dance singles as part of the party/label. We will be releasing those in the fall; it’s a footwork, tech-house, dirty-bird genre. We call it that because the party’s on a Wednesday; it works across the board.
What sort of music influences you?
I moved to Oakland to be at the US center for techno and tech-house. I like labels like dirtybird and Kid 606’s Tigerbeat6. So that’s my world. For the Feed Me Diamondsalbum, I wanted to make a straightforward pop album; not something electro-pop-defining but I have a feature coming out with RAC that will be more electronic-sounding.
Did signing to Ultra influence that?
Patrick [Moxey, Ultra’s owner] wanted to sign a pop project, not so much an EDM thing. I am definitely an artist that they don’t usually sign but they’re growing the label and signed some more hybrid acts like myself and TOKiMONSTA.
How did you meet Connor Cruise?
I played on The Late Show with David Letterman and his dad, whom you may know, Tom Cruise, was the guest. He threw an after-party where Connor DJed. He asked if he could do the remix and I agreed. He’s really young but he’s a great DJ—totally not bullshit. I think he’ll do well.
Feed Me Diamonds is a reference to the performance artist Marina Abramovic. Can you tell us more about that?
I think when you’re writing pop songs and trying to be really honest in your writing, you have to go to really scary emotional places. She was doing her MoMA sitting-and-staring piece [The Artist Is Present] for 30 days where she sat for eight hours straight. I thought, “Oh, I love her so much,” and in my research I found she claimed her father was murdered by being fed diamonds, a tactic used to kill kings and queens. If you do that, it rips your GIs apart and you bleed out. But it’s a beautiful metaphor and I knew it would be a great song idea. Lyrically, I go through different phases when I write songs. This album was very personal and politically motivated. I draw a lot of inspiration from sounds, beats, music that I love, which is mainly electronic. It’s a marriage of both. Prior to that, it was mostly just beats and sounds. Now it’s fun to be motivated lyrically as well; it’s a different creative thing.
By Jesse Ship Parisian producers Teki Latex (aka Julien Pradeyrol) and DJ Orgasmic (aka Cédric Caillol) first met decades ago while skiing the French alps. Over the years, they’ve continued their adventures together through various music undertakings like the seminal French electro-rap group TTC, the …
Danish electronic DJ/producer Trentemøller is currently working on a soundtrack to an apocalyptic painting hanging in the Danish National Gallery. The 15th century piece of unknown Spanish origin depicts a scene from the book of Revelations where the angels of God follow Lucifer, rather than the archangel …

If Andy Stott is the future, then the future is dark. Very dark. The celebrated producer of 2012’s sleeper hit album, Luxury Problems played at Mansion’s Foundry series in the Blk Box Theatre, beneath the Great Hall on Saturday night.

His set was a technical exploration of negative space in sounds found in the more recent ‘knackered house’ trend that seems to have skipped over to our shores. It’s a term Stott helped define, and that comprises first generation dubstep sounds (the dark and moody stuff that had no radio presence outside of UK pirate radio) that’s manipulated into techno, industrial, and a skeletal drum and bass.

Andy’s genius is that he’s managed to select stripped down tunes that keep everything but their basic rhythmic elements, yet still kept your body shaking with the repetitive metal clicks, clanks, and shuffley dungeon sounds.

Like most kinks and S&M perversions, there was an innate cerebral appeal to Stott’s music that had the full house spontaneoulsy roaring for more. What was so amazing was that he managed to make something so minimal and devoid of colour into something so incredibly addictive and danceable. In our true nature, we must all be nihilistic, recession-wallowing zombies to make us crave these primal rickety beats.
Photos by Alejandro Santiago
Don’t touch that dial, it’s got FLIM on it! Toronto via Thailand, with a skip in Montreal, now living it up in Nice on the Côte D’Azure, Flim is a friendly dreadlocked face from the land of smiles. Flim’s so excited about his Belladonna – …