Scorching new EP from shady UK collective LHF, preparing the ground for their hotly anticipated debut album. The group have built their reputation on a particularly cinematic, auteurist vision of dubstep, embroidered with memorable samples, and Cities Of Technology is no exception: the Double Helix-built 'Supreme Architecture' conveys a dread somewhere between The Bug's haunted dancehall and Wu Tang's 36 Chambers. 'LDN' is even more deadly, a minimal stepper driven by puckering synth stabs, dissonant strings and echo-plexed dub-chords, all set in the most noxious atmospherics imaginable. Amen Ra's 'Essence Investigation' chills Maddslinky-style rollage down to a hip-hop-paced swagger, but the toughest flex comes from No Fixed Abode's 'Indian Street Slang', the half step endoskeleton of which acts as lightning rod for some powerful ethnic frequencies.
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Scorching new EP from shady UK collective LHF, preparing the ground for their hotly anticipated debut album. The group have built their reputation on a particularly cinematic, auteurist vision of dubstep, embroidered with memorable samples, and Cities Of Technology is no exception: the Double Helix-built 'Supreme Architecture' conveys a dread somewhere between The Bug's haunted dancehall and Wu Tang's 36 Chambers. 'LDN' is even more deadly, a minimal stepper driven by puckering synth stabs, dissonant strings and echo-plexed dub-chords, all set in the most noxious atmospherics imaginable. Amen Ra's 'Essence Investigation' chills Maddslinky-style rollage down to a hip-hop-paced swagger, but the toughest flex comes from No Fixed Abode's 'Indian Street Slang', the half step endoskeleton of which acts as lightning rod for some powerful ethnic frequencies.
Scorching new EP from shady UK collective LHF, preparing the ground for their hotly anticipated debut album. The group have built their reputation on a particularly cinematic, auteurist vision of dubstep, embroidered with memorable samples, and Cities Of Technology is no exception: the Double Helix-built 'Supreme Architecture' conveys a dread somewhere between The Bug's haunted dancehall and Wu Tang's 36 Chambers. 'LDN' is even more deadly, a minimal stepper driven by puckering synth stabs, dissonant strings and echo-plexed dub-chords, all set in the most noxious atmospherics imaginable. Amen Ra's 'Essence Investigation' chills Maddslinky-style rollage down to a hip-hop-paced swagger, but the toughest flex comes from No Fixed Abode's 'Indian Street Slang', the half step endoskeleton of which acts as lightning rod for some powerful ethnic frequencies.
Scorching new EP from shady UK collective LHF, preparing the ground for their hotly anticipated debut album. The group have built their reputation on a particularly cinematic, auteurist vision of dubstep, embroidered with memorable samples, and Cities Of Technology is no exception: the Double Helix-built 'Supreme Architecture' conveys a dread somewhere between The Bug's haunted dancehall and Wu Tang's 36 Chambers. 'LDN' is even more deadly, a minimal stepper driven by puckering synth stabs, dissonant strings and echo-plexed dub-chords, all set in the most noxious atmospherics imaginable. Amen Ra's 'Essence Investigation' chills Maddslinky-style rollage down to a hip-hop-paced swagger, but the toughest flex comes from No Fixed Abode's 'Indian Street Slang', the half step endoskeleton of which acts as lightning rod for some powerful ethnic frequencies.