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Mixbone EP

Eric Copeland

Mixbone EP

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Eric Copeland
Titel
Mixbone EP
Label
DFA
Artikel-Nr.
00129382
EAN
829732259315
Release-Date
23.11.2018
Musicstyle
Electronica
Konfiguration
2x12" Vinyl Maxi
Lagerbestand
Nicht auf Lager, Lieferzeit 3-10 Tage (soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
17,99 € *
On the Mixbone EP, two tracks from Eric Copeland's 2017 record Goofballs get reworked by five of... mehr
Produktinformationen "Mixbone EP"
On the Mixbone EP, two tracks from Eric Copeland's 2017 record Goofballs get reworked by five of leftfield electronic music's heaviest hitters. The Goofballs LP finds the Black Dice founding member conducting hectic, dancefloor-oriented experiments; The Vinyl Factory called it a "mangled, spangled journey into the fringes of industrial disco and hallucinatory club tackle." Mixbone capitalizes on this direction with remixes that recontextualize and reshape the propulsive energy of the original songs into wholly different forms. New York techno powerhouse and Allergy Season boss Physical Therapy contributes two aptly named takes on "Mixer Shredder" - the "Tegel Mix" churns with industrial EBM low-end, and the breakbeat and wubby bassline make the "Gatwick Mix" unmistakably English. NHK yx Koyxen remixes Eric for the second time, with a jittery and woozy electro interpretation of "Neckbone." Cooper Saver, best known for his Far Away parties in Los Angeles, turns in one of the most unexpected remixes, keeping it 4/4 and creating what sounds like Shep Pettibone making acid house. Coming off of her 2017 EP on Technicolour/Ninja Tune, Machine Woman decided to remix both tracks. With "Neckbone," she adds a barely-discernible robotic narrative vocal, allegedly about Ryan Gosling. "Mixer Shredder," on the other hand, travels from hissy lo-fi techno into something quite tranquil and beautiful. And with previous releases on 1080p, Freakout Cult, and Wania, Vancouver's LNS channels the melodic electro tones of classic Bleep-era Warp, like a lost track from LFO or Drexciya. "Danceable" might not be the first word one thinks of when describing Eric Copeland's solo releases. But in a manner not dissimilar to the way Black Dice shaped the parameters of experimental music, the remixes here expand the limits of what the club can and should look like.
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