Different Lekstrix (L-Vis 1990 Mix)
After circulating for what seems like years 'pon dubplate, Numbers drop the direct current of Mr Mageeka's 'Different Lekstrix'. When it first cropped up on one of Marcus Nasty's radio Rinse-offs the blogosphere and forums were set alight with folk trying to figure out what the hell it was. Now, nearly 12 months down the line and it's a regular fixture in the sets of DVA, Kode 9, Jackmaster, Geeneus and just about any other DJ worth tracking right now. We'd have to rank it next to Martin Kemp's 'No Charisma' for the sheer rinse-and-repeat factor, with that cartoonish synthline sounding juicier on every play. L-Vis 1990 is roped in on remix detail, giving it a slow burning swing with escalating synth pads and a potent, squidgy-black bass to co-ordinate heads, torsos and toes. In a word, this is unmissable. To the future!
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After circulating for what seems like years 'pon dubplate, Numbers drop the direct current of Mr Mageeka's 'Different Lekstrix'. When it first cropped up on one of Marcus Nasty's radio Rinse-offs the blogosphere and forums were set alight with folk trying to figure out what the hell it was. Now, nearly 12 months down the line and it's a regular fixture in the sets of DVA, Kode 9, Jackmaster, Geeneus and just about any other DJ worth tracking right now. We'd have to rank it next to Martin Kemp's 'No Charisma' for the sheer rinse-and-repeat factor, with that cartoonish synthline sounding juicier on every play. L-Vis 1990 is roped in on remix detail, giving it a slow burning swing with escalating synth pads and a potent, squidgy-black bass to co-ordinate heads, torsos and toes. In a word, this is unmissable. To the future!
After circulating for what seems like years 'pon dubplate, Numbers drop the direct current of Mr Mageeka's 'Different Lekstrix'. When it first cropped up on one of Marcus Nasty's radio Rinse-offs the blogosphere and forums were set alight with folk trying to figure out what the hell it was. Now, nearly 12 months down the line and it's a regular fixture in the sets of DVA, Kode 9, Jackmaster, Geeneus and just about any other DJ worth tracking right now. We'd have to rank it next to Martin Kemp's 'No Charisma' for the sheer rinse-and-repeat factor, with that cartoonish synthline sounding juicier on every play. L-Vis 1990 is roped in on remix detail, giving it a slow burning swing with escalating synth pads and a potent, squidgy-black bass to co-ordinate heads, torsos and toes. In a word, this is unmissable. To the future!
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After circulating for what seems like years 'pon dubplate, Numbers drop the direct current of Mr Mageeka's 'Different Lekstrix'. When it first cropped up on one of Marcus Nasty's radio Rinse-offs the blogosphere and forums were set alight with folk trying to figure out what the hell it was. Now, nearly 12 months down the line and it's a regular fixture in the sets of DVA, Kode 9, Jackmaster, Geeneus and just about any other DJ worth tracking right now. We'd have to rank it next to Martin Kemp's 'No Charisma' for the sheer rinse-and-repeat factor, with that cartoonish synthline sounding juicier on every play. L-Vis 1990 is roped in on remix detail, giving it a slow burning swing with escalating synth pads and a potent, squidgy-black bass to co-ordinate heads, torsos and toes. In a word, this is unmissable. To the future!