Canadian producer Dylan Khotin-Foote clears out an ancient hard drive on 'Archive 13-15', slapping together a set of raw Roland house produced on a TR-606, TR-707, SH-101 and Juno 106.
Fans of Khotin's 1080p debut "Hello World" will be pleased to hear that the material here was recorded in the same era, discovered after booting up a decaying Gateway laptop. Some of the material made it to Soundcloud back in the day, but most of it's aired here for the first time.
The sound is, as you'd expect, indicative of the Canadian lo-fi house wave that captured the imagination almost a decade ago. But Khotin's take feels less cynical and more musical - his competent use of analog hardware is admirable, and his ability to coax lucid funk from unexpected sources is remarkable. Good stuff.
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Canadian producer Dylan Khotin-Foote clears out an ancient hard drive on 'Archive 13-15', slapping together a set of raw Roland house produced on a TR-606, TR-707, SH-101 and Juno 106.
Fans of Khotin's 1080p debut "Hello World" will be pleased to hear that the material here was recorded in the same era, discovered after booting up a decaying Gateway laptop. Some of the material made it to Soundcloud back in the day, but most of it's aired here for the first time.
The sound is, as you'd expect, indicative of the Canadian lo-fi house wave that captured the imagination almost a decade ago. But Khotin's take feels less cynical and more musical - his competent use of analog hardware is admirable, and his ability to coax lucid funk from unexpected sources is remarkable. Good stuff.
Canadian producer Dylan Khotin-Foote clears out an ancient hard drive on 'Archive 13-15', slapping together a set of raw Roland house produced on a TR-606, TR-707, SH-101 and Juno 106.
Fans of Khotin's 1080p debut "Hello World" will be pleased to hear that the material here was recorded in the same era, discovered after booting up a decaying Gateway laptop. Some of the material made it to Soundcloud back in the day, but most of it's aired here for the first time.
The sound is, as you'd expect, indicative of the Canadian lo-fi house wave that captured the imagination almost a decade ago. But Khotin's take feels less cynical and more musical - his competent use of analog hardware is admirable, and his ability to coax lucid funk from unexpected sources is remarkable. Good stuff.
Canadian producer Dylan Khotin-Foote clears out an ancient hard drive on 'Archive 13-15', slapping together a set of raw Roland house produced on a TR-606, TR-707, SH-101 and Juno 106.
Fans of Khotin's 1080p debut "Hello World" will be pleased to hear that the material here was recorded in the same era, discovered after booting up a decaying Gateway laptop. Some of the material made it to Soundcloud back in the day, but most of it's aired here for the first time.
The sound is, as you'd expect, indicative of the Canadian lo-fi house wave that captured the imagination almost a decade ago. But Khotin's take feels less cynical and more musical - his competent use of analog hardware is admirable, and his ability to coax lucid funk from unexpected sources is remarkable. Good stuff.