Millie & Andrea are Miles Whittaker and Andy Stott, labelmates at Modern Love who collaborated on an occasional series of 12" releases of jungle, garage and techno hybrids between 2008 and 2010. It's been four years since we last heard from them but they now return with "Drop The Vowels", their debut album.
Produced fast and loose through late 2013 / early 2014, it's an album that recalls the strict and stripped funk of Anthony Shakir as much as it does Leila's incredible debut 'Like Weather' and A Guy Called Gerald's 'Black Secret Technology', eschewing the dark aesthetic both producers are best known for in favour of something much more visceral.
Opener GIF RIFF brings to life a Gamelan edit stripped bare before the over-compressed 'Stay Ugly' breaks out with a tumbling, broken arrangement situated somewhere between Richard D James and Jai Paul. "Temper Tantrum" and "Spectral Source" follow, tracks originally released on the second and third Daphne EP's respectively, the former a rugged rave anthem tempered by blue strings, the latter a proper dancefloor destroyer recalling Shake's mighty 'Madmen'.
'Corrosive' flits between a fillibrating, arpeggiated steppers rhythm and a brutal jungle breakdown, while 'Drop The Vowels' further explores and strips bare bass & drums before the slow but jacking warehouse killer "Back Down" provides pure percussive abandon. Quay ends the set with something quieter, a sublime coda made entirely from field recordings. It brings to a close an album borne from a love of both pop and club music, made to evoke an adrenalised, hedonistic, as well as an emotional response.
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Millie & Andrea are Miles Whittaker and Andy Stott, labelmates at Modern Love who collaborated on an occasional series of 12" releases of jungle, garage and techno hybrids between 2008 and 2010. It's been four years since we last heard from them but they now return with "Drop The Vowels", their debut album.
Produced fast and loose through late 2013 / early 2014, it's an album that recalls the strict and stripped funk of Anthony Shakir as much as it does Leila's incredible debut 'Like Weather' and A Guy Called Gerald's 'Black Secret Technology', eschewing the dark aesthetic both producers are best known for in favour of something much more visceral.
Opener GIF RIFF brings to life a Gamelan edit stripped bare before the over-compressed 'Stay Ugly' breaks out with a tumbling, broken arrangement situated somewhere between Richard D James and Jai Paul. "Temper Tantrum" and "Spectral Source" follow, tracks originally released on the second and third Daphne EP's respectively, the former a rugged rave anthem tempered by blue strings, the latter a proper dancefloor destroyer recalling Shake's mighty 'Madmen'.
'Corrosive' flits between a fillibrating, arpeggiated steppers rhythm and a brutal jungle breakdown, while 'Drop The Vowels' further explores and strips bare bass & drums before the slow but jacking warehouse killer "Back Down" provides pure percussive abandon. Quay ends the set with something quieter, a sublime coda made entirely from field recordings. It brings to a close an album borne from a love of both pop and club music, made to evoke an adrenalised, hedonistic, as well as an emotional response.
Millie & Andrea are Miles Whittaker and Andy Stott, labelmates at Modern Love who collaborated on an occasional series of 12" releases of jungle, garage and techno hybrids between 2008 and 2010. It's been four years since we last heard from them but they now return with "Drop The Vowels", their debut album.
Produced fast and loose through late 2013 / early 2014, it's an album that recalls the strict and stripped funk of Anthony Shakir as much as it does Leila's incredible debut 'Like Weather' and A Guy Called Gerald's 'Black Secret Technology', eschewing the dark aesthetic both producers are best known for in favour of something much more visceral.
Opener GIF RIFF brings to life a Gamelan edit stripped bare before the over-compressed 'Stay Ugly' breaks out with a tumbling, broken arrangement situated somewhere between Richard D James and Jai Paul. "Temper Tantrum" and "Spectral Source" follow, tracks originally released on the second and third Daphne EP's respectively, the former a rugged rave anthem tempered by blue strings, the latter a proper dancefloor destroyer recalling Shake's mighty 'Madmen'.
'Corrosive' flits between a fillibrating, arpeggiated steppers rhythm and a brutal jungle breakdown, while 'Drop The Vowels' further explores and strips bare bass & drums before the slow but jacking warehouse killer "Back Down" provides pure percussive abandon. Quay ends the set with something quieter, a sublime coda made entirely from field recordings. It brings to a close an album borne from a love of both pop and club music, made to evoke an adrenalised, hedonistic, as well as an emotional response.
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Millie & Andrea are Miles Whittaker and Andy Stott, labelmates at Modern Love who collaborated on an occasional series of 12" releases of jungle, garage and techno hybrids between 2008 and 2010. It's been four years since we last heard from them but they now return with "Drop The Vowels", their debut album.
Produced fast and loose through late 2013 / early 2014, it's an album that recalls the strict and stripped funk of Anthony Shakir as much as it does Leila's incredible debut 'Like Weather' and A Guy Called Gerald's 'Black Secret Technology', eschewing the dark aesthetic both producers are best known for in favour of something much more visceral.
Opener GIF RIFF brings to life a Gamelan edit stripped bare before the over-compressed 'Stay Ugly' breaks out with a tumbling, broken arrangement situated somewhere between Richard D James and Jai Paul. "Temper Tantrum" and "Spectral Source" follow, tracks originally released on the second and third Daphne EP's respectively, the former a rugged rave anthem tempered by blue strings, the latter a proper dancefloor destroyer recalling Shake's mighty 'Madmen'.
'Corrosive' flits between a fillibrating, arpeggiated steppers rhythm and a brutal jungle breakdown, while 'Drop The Vowels' further explores and strips bare bass & drums before the slow but jacking warehouse killer "Back Down" provides pure percussive abandon. Quay ends the set with something quieter, a sublime coda made entirely from field recordings. It brings to a close an album borne from a love of both pop and club music, made to evoke an adrenalised, hedonistic, as well as an emotional response.