UK soul futurist Steve Spacek sticks to his “hi oh es lab” (iOS) tekkers with typically louche, warm and inviting results following his 2018 album for Floating Points’ Eglo Records
Now doing it for burgeoning UK jazz and beats label Black Focus Records (Kamaal Williams), Spacek dishes up what he calls “a bunch of house riddims” in the distinctive style that he’s ploughed for over 20 years. But where his early band recordings with Spacek were elaborate studio affairs, in recent years he’s favoured a peripatetic mode of productions, making beats on his iPhone with apps that allow him to work organically and free-flowing, whenever he likes.
As found on 2018’s ‘Natural Sci-Fi’ album, he continues to get great results from the instant iPhone method of creation on ‘Houses’, trading on a classic brand of jazz-funk inspired dance music, but doing it with a tiny fraction of the kit used in the records he references. Its production values may not necessarily make for “club bangers”, but it does allow him to catch amn all-important vibe between the percolated shimmy of ‘Waiting 4 You’, the natty step of ‘Where We Go’ his sweetly off-kilter roller ‘Tell Me’, and the rude rag of ‘Love 4 Nano’, while lending an unusual, even surreal intimacy to the likes of his soulful downstroke ‘Single Stream’.
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180g vinyl with download code.
Available To Order (Estimated Shipping between 7-14 Working Days)
This item is to the best of our knowledge available to us from the supplier and should ship to you within the time-frame indicated. If there are any unforeseen issues with availability we will notify you immediately
UK soul futurist Steve Spacek sticks to his “hi oh es lab” (iOS) tekkers with typically louche, warm and inviting results following his 2018 album for Floating Points’ Eglo Records
Now doing it for burgeoning UK jazz and beats label Black Focus Records (Kamaal Williams), Spacek dishes up what he calls “a bunch of house riddims” in the distinctive style that he’s ploughed for over 20 years. But where his early band recordings with Spacek were elaborate studio affairs, in recent years he’s favoured a peripatetic mode of productions, making beats on his iPhone with apps that allow him to work organically and free-flowing, whenever he likes.
As found on 2018’s ‘Natural Sci-Fi’ album, he continues to get great results from the instant iPhone method of creation on ‘Houses’, trading on a classic brand of jazz-funk inspired dance music, but doing it with a tiny fraction of the kit used in the records he references. Its production values may not necessarily make for “club bangers”, but it does allow him to catch amn all-important vibe between the percolated shimmy of ‘Waiting 4 You’, the natty step of ‘Where We Go’ his sweetly off-kilter roller ‘Tell Me’, and the rude rag of ‘Love 4 Nano’, while lending an unusual, even surreal intimacy to the likes of his soulful downstroke ‘Single Stream’.
CD version includes 4 bonus tracks.
Available To Order (Estimated Shipping between 1-3 Working Days)
This item is to the best of our knowledge available to us from the supplier and should ship to you within the time-frame indicated. If there are any unforeseen issues with availability we will notify you immediately
UK soul futurist Steve Spacek sticks to his “hi oh es lab” (iOS) tekkers with typically louche, warm and inviting results following his 2018 album for Floating Points’ Eglo Records
Now doing it for burgeoning UK jazz and beats label Black Focus Records (Kamaal Williams), Spacek dishes up what he calls “a bunch of house riddims” in the distinctive style that he’s ploughed for over 20 years. But where his early band recordings with Spacek were elaborate studio affairs, in recent years he’s favoured a peripatetic mode of productions, making beats on his iPhone with apps that allow him to work organically and free-flowing, whenever he likes.
As found on 2018’s ‘Natural Sci-Fi’ album, he continues to get great results from the instant iPhone method of creation on ‘Houses’, trading on a classic brand of jazz-funk inspired dance music, but doing it with a tiny fraction of the kit used in the records he references. Its production values may not necessarily make for “club bangers”, but it does allow him to catch amn all-important vibe between the percolated shimmy of ‘Waiting 4 You’, the natty step of ‘Where We Go’ his sweetly off-kilter roller ‘Tell Me’, and the rude rag of ‘Love 4 Nano’, while lending an unusual, even surreal intimacy to the likes of his soulful downstroke ‘Single Stream’.