Uganda’s Swordman Kitala and Anna Homler aka Breadwoman appear on this set of dancehall-adjacent screwballs for fans of STILL, Equiknoxx, Duppy Gun Productions, The Bug.
Soft-Bodied Humans is an alias of the UK’s David McNamee, who’s best known as Cut a Lonely Figure for reels on The Tapeworm and his Blue Tapes label, but here expressing a cranky sidespin on mutant dancehall. It slots hand in glove to Gang of Ducks’ dare to differ sound with wonky variants of grime, synth-pop, industrial ragga and the chewy bits between those styles’, and could just of easily come out on Hakuna Kulala, clearly sharing the UG label’s mutant steez.
Between its reverberating beat-less intro and cinematic chaos of the closer, there’s pterodactyl-attacked Kongo dancehall voiced by Swordsman Kitala on standout ‘Core-Braver’, and what sounds like The Bug meets Christos Chondropoulos’ AI cyberfolk in ‘Minos’ ft. Abysmal Growls, with Japanese MC, Pakin stepping on the coiled grime of ‘Globe’ like a prime Equiknoxx workout. Anna Homler graces the album’s eeriest in ‘Battra’, and ‘Bat People’ delivers ice cold grime in a Filter Dread fashion.
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Uganda’s Swordman Kitala and Anna Homler aka Breadwoman appear on this set of dancehall-adjacent screwballs for fans of STILL, Equiknoxx, Duppy Gun Productions, The Bug.
Soft-Bodied Humans is an alias of the UK’s David McNamee, who’s best known as Cut a Lonely Figure for reels on The Tapeworm and his Blue Tapes label, but here expressing a cranky sidespin on mutant dancehall. It slots hand in glove to Gang of Ducks’ dare to differ sound with wonky variants of grime, synth-pop, industrial ragga and the chewy bits between those styles’, and could just of easily come out on Hakuna Kulala, clearly sharing the UG label’s mutant steez.
Between its reverberating beat-less intro and cinematic chaos of the closer, there’s pterodactyl-attacked Kongo dancehall voiced by Swordsman Kitala on standout ‘Core-Braver’, and what sounds like The Bug meets Christos Chondropoulos’ AI cyberfolk in ‘Minos’ ft. Abysmal Growls, with Japanese MC, Pakin stepping on the coiled grime of ‘Globe’ like a prime Equiknoxx workout. Anna Homler graces the album’s eeriest in ‘Battra’, and ‘Bat People’ delivers ice cold grime in a Filter Dread fashion.
Uganda’s Swordman Kitala and Anna Homler aka Breadwoman appear on this set of dancehall-adjacent screwballs for fans of STILL, Equiknoxx, Duppy Gun Productions, The Bug.
Soft-Bodied Humans is an alias of the UK’s David McNamee, who’s best known as Cut a Lonely Figure for reels on The Tapeworm and his Blue Tapes label, but here expressing a cranky sidespin on mutant dancehall. It slots hand in glove to Gang of Ducks’ dare to differ sound with wonky variants of grime, synth-pop, industrial ragga and the chewy bits between those styles’, and could just of easily come out on Hakuna Kulala, clearly sharing the UG label’s mutant steez.
Between its reverberating beat-less intro and cinematic chaos of the closer, there’s pterodactyl-attacked Kongo dancehall voiced by Swordsman Kitala on standout ‘Core-Braver’, and what sounds like The Bug meets Christos Chondropoulos’ AI cyberfolk in ‘Minos’ ft. Abysmal Growls, with Japanese MC, Pakin stepping on the coiled grime of ‘Globe’ like a prime Equiknoxx workout. Anna Homler graces the album’s eeriest in ‘Battra’, and ‘Bat People’ delivers ice cold grime in a Filter Dread fashion.
Uganda’s Swordman Kitala and Anna Homler aka Breadwoman appear on this set of dancehall-adjacent screwballs for fans of STILL, Equiknoxx, Duppy Gun Productions, The Bug.
Soft-Bodied Humans is an alias of the UK’s David McNamee, who’s best known as Cut a Lonely Figure for reels on The Tapeworm and his Blue Tapes label, but here expressing a cranky sidespin on mutant dancehall. It slots hand in glove to Gang of Ducks’ dare to differ sound with wonky variants of grime, synth-pop, industrial ragga and the chewy bits between those styles’, and could just of easily come out on Hakuna Kulala, clearly sharing the UG label’s mutant steez.
Between its reverberating beat-less intro and cinematic chaos of the closer, there’s pterodactyl-attacked Kongo dancehall voiced by Swordsman Kitala on standout ‘Core-Braver’, and what sounds like The Bug meets Christos Chondropoulos’ AI cyberfolk in ‘Minos’ ft. Abysmal Growls, with Japanese MC, Pakin stepping on the coiled grime of ‘Globe’ like a prime Equiknoxx workout. Anna Homler graces the album’s eeriest in ‘Battra’, and ‘Bat People’ delivers ice cold grime in a Filter Dread fashion.