Night Slugs » review http://nightslugs.net Tue, 26 Apr 2016 11:21:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.1 Pitchfork on Allstars http://nightslugs.net/pitchfork-on-allstars http://nightslugs.net/pitchfork-on-allstars#comments Sat, 16 Feb 2013 15:41:28 +0000 admin http://nightslugs.net/?p=2690 “Novel without being gimmicky, body-moving without being overbearing, these are all selections that point towards a rewarding future for one of the most exciting labels in bass music.”

Pitchfork on Allstars

If you want a sense of where things are headed in bass music through the near future, it’s always a good idea to keep tabs on the Night Slugs label– not because it adheres to or forecasts any specific scenes and movements, but because it doesn’t. Its identity in a post-Soundcloud world hinges on extending the UK bass diaspora far outside the confines of Bok Bok and L-Vis 1990′s London– all the way to Los Angeles (Kingdom), Toronto (Egyptrixx), even Savannah, Georgia (Helix), and Lawrence, Kansas (MORRI$). And the Night Slugs sound, such as it is, isn’t merely compatible with but hotly anticipates so many potential directions for underground and aboveground club music, all while revealing a deep and adventurous postmodern enthusiasm for its decades of heritage. Run though their three-year catalogue and you’ll hear adventurous integrations of boogie funk and electro, deep house, Second Summer of Love rave, first-gen two-step, pirate-radio grime, and white-label dubstep. The label’s sonic commonalities mostly extend to a garage-inflected sensibility, a thing for feverishly intricate yet danceable drum tracks, and an intangible mood of refined hyperactivity– enough to make for a trustworthy imprint, while still keeping its style fairly unconstricted.

Like the first volume of the Night Slugs Allstars seriesNight Slugs Allstars Volume 2 ties together highlights from the roster’s most visible and pivotal members. Its label-sampler format draws off a lot of previously released material, though there are just as many potentially overlooked deep cuts as there are top-tier favorites. It’s practically a given that this is a collection for people who’ve already checked out Volume 1, whether it was their introduction to the label or a culmination of everything they’d already grown to appreciate about it. But it also reveals subtler pleasures at work under the label’s purview. There’s nothing on here with the instant gravitational pull of Volume 1‘s appearance by Girl Unit‘s go-berserk “Wut”, the breakthrough single that cranked up the label’s early buzz 2 1/2 years ago. But Volume 2 does a lot to show just how much ground one label can really cover.

The handful of new and/or unheard tracks are enough to bolster the ranks and give the diehards something to look forward to, but they’re not the kinds of afterthoughts that come across as fans-only barrel-scrapings. L-Vis 1990 delivers “Not Mad”, a twitchy stomp of a cut that pits an off-kilter shuffle-beat bassline against nervous chuckles, xylophone rolls, and 85 pop-funk synthesizers. Girl Unit’s “Double Take Part II” reconfigures the last minute or so of the Club Rez original so that the shivery slow-jam R&B coda stands alone as its own song– becoming his most accessibly moving track to date. The East Coast contingent turns in a couple gems, too. The all-tension/no-release drift of Kingdom’s “Bank Head” is the most provocative track on the compilation, constructing a whole track off the kind of anticipatory clap-drummed, sweeping chord build that usually prefigures some kind of big sonic epiphany that never actually arrives. (It should work wonders as a DJ set opener.) Egyptrixx’s “Adult” is a bit more intense– there’s something to it that feels like the austere future-noir drum and bass of late 90s Photek wrapped around a post-dubstep chassis– but its ebb and flow pumps laser-cut chords and all-caps bass over an efficiently propulsive rhythm track that lets a lot of air in between the beats.

The rest of the collection is filled out by singles, b-sides, remixes, and deep EP tracks that point towards a more crossover-friendly direction for the label– one that’s trimmed away some of the over-the-top bombast while still prioritizing a sense of rhythmic intricacy. It’s a smartly selected cross section that covers a lot of bases: Kingdom’s tense horror-flick homage “Stalker Ha”, the glowing, prismatic techno of Jam City‘s “How We Relate to the Body”, the luxuriant longing of L-Vis 1990′s Javeon McCarthy deep house feature “Lost in Love (Night Slugs Street Mix)”, and Helix’s frenetic, understatedly titled kick/snare apocalypse “Drum Track”. Novel without being gimmicky, body-moving without being overbearing, these are all selections that point towards a rewarding future for one of the most exciting labels in bass music. Whether or not they’re pointing the way for some scene or another, the artists of Night Slugs definitely know where they want to go themselves.

Words by: Nate Patrin

 

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Pitchfork on Bible Eyes http://nightslugs.net/2011/03/04/pitchfork-on-bible-eyes/ http://nightslugs.net/2011/03/04/pitchfork-on-bible-eyes/#comments Fri, 04 Mar 2011 18:59:25 +0000 Bok Bok http://nightslugs.net/?p=953 Read what they have to say here.

And don't forget to catch him live @ Night Slugs # 17 this Friday]]>
Pitchfork give Egyptrixx’s debut album Bible Eyes a score of 8.1

Read what they have to say here: pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/15041-bible-eyes

And don’t forget to catch him live @ Night Slugs # 17 this Friday

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Pitchfork review Allstars Vol 1 http://nightslugs.net/2010/12/11/pitchfork-review-allstars-vol-1/ http://nightslugs.net/2010/12/11/pitchfork-review-allstars-vol-1/#comments Sat, 11 Dec 2010 03:27:21 +0000 Bok Bok http://nightslugs.net/?p=783 Mike Powel reviews Allstars Vol 1 on Pitchfork

"airhorns are implied throughout" ]]>
Mike Powel reviews Allstars Vol 1 on Pitchfork:

“Some of the synths here are noxious enough to peel paint from the walls, and though the futurist crunk of Girl Unit’s “Wut” is the only song to feature an actual airhorn, airhorns are implied throughout.”

“Night Slugs’ record covers– all designed by co-founder and label contributor Bok Bok– are always combinations of black and one or two other colors, presented in various shades. Usually, the image is geometric and semi-architectural (a suspension bridge and car; glowing pistons spelling out words), but presented against a completely black background in a way that makes them look iconic, like they’re without space or landscape. I mention them because they’re a strong analogue for the label’s musical style: Not only do the bright colors sing in the darkness, but they’re given a proper spectrum. In the same way the tracks remind me that there’s a lot of range to be extracted from the seemingly monotonous blast of a rave synth, the covers remind me that hot pink can get as close to purple as it can to white– range in places you might expect to be limited. Listen to this comp more than a few times and you’ll probably start to hear chasms between stuff like Bok Bok & Cubic Zirconia’s “Reclash (Dub)” and Girl Unit’s ever-luxurious “Wut”. The palettes are similar, but the ends to which they’re used– and the moods they evoke– are different.”

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