Unalloyed, Unlicensed, All Night!
Raster-Noton bring the excellent, erratic Unun series to a close with some of Jesse Osborne-Lanthier’s most reactive and ‘floor-penetrating productions; bringing elements of EDM, trance and hooj room choons to the boil with a steadfast tolerance for dancefloor/electronic extremity and physicality.
Since 2010, the Berlin/Montreal-based musician has steadily carved a niche between the eyes of modern styles in an almost exponential exploration of styles, persistently short-circuiting dancefloor conventions with a combination of avant-garde strategy and extreme sonics which has lead to some of the most fascinating electronic music in recent years for the likes of Rabit’s Halcyon Veil and Shapednoise’s Cosmo Rhythmatic.
Make no mistake, though: Unalloyed, Unlicensed, All Night is Osborne-Lanthier’s most direct and up-for-it material; a masterful, off-the-cuff demonstration of how to mess with modern templates, using online production tutorials as the jump-off for a quartet of dancefloor mongrels riddled with EDM’s most virulent, effective tics.
At the front Blackwell Dynonetics’ tight, fractal knot of spasming dub chords and footwork spatter comes off like Second Woman linking with Rian Treanor, before The Zika Slam revs ups like some visceral Powell and EVOL collaboration, and the crushing swagger of Integrated Sensor Is Structure sounds like Lurka duelling with Byetone, leaving the dembow bounce and escalating hardstyle synths of Lick And A Promise to ramp like some fierce Kamixlo or Florentino winner.
This one is lands hard on all the right buttons. Can’t wait to hear them loud in the club.
Highly recommended!
View more
Raster-Noton bring the excellent, erratic Unun series to a close with some of Jesse Osborne-Lanthier’s most reactive and ‘floor-penetrating productions; bringing elements of EDM, trance and hooj room choons to the boil with a steadfast tolerance for dancefloor/electronic extremity and physicality.
Since 2010, the Berlin/Montreal-based musician has steadily carved a niche between the eyes of modern styles in an almost exponential exploration of styles, persistently short-circuiting dancefloor conventions with a combination of avant-garde strategy and extreme sonics which has lead to some of the most fascinating electronic music in recent years for the likes of Rabit’s Halcyon Veil and Shapednoise’s Cosmo Rhythmatic.
Make no mistake, though: Unalloyed, Unlicensed, All Night is Osborne-Lanthier’s most direct and up-for-it material; a masterful, off-the-cuff demonstration of how to mess with modern templates, using online production tutorials as the jump-off for a quartet of dancefloor mongrels riddled with EDM’s most virulent, effective tics.
At the front Blackwell Dynonetics’ tight, fractal knot of spasming dub chords and footwork spatter comes off like Second Woman linking with Rian Treanor, before The Zika Slam revs ups like some visceral Powell and EVOL collaboration, and the crushing swagger of Integrated Sensor Is Structure sounds like Lurka duelling with Byetone, leaving the dembow bounce and escalating hardstyle synths of Lick And A Promise to ramp like some fierce Kamixlo or Florentino winner.
This one is lands hard on all the right buttons. Can’t wait to hear them loud in the club.
Highly recommended!
Raster-Noton bring the excellent, erratic Unun series to a close with some of Jesse Osborne-Lanthier’s most reactive and ‘floor-penetrating productions; bringing elements of EDM, trance and hooj room choons to the boil with a steadfast tolerance for dancefloor/electronic extremity and physicality.
Since 2010, the Berlin/Montreal-based musician has steadily carved a niche between the eyes of modern styles in an almost exponential exploration of styles, persistently short-circuiting dancefloor conventions with a combination of avant-garde strategy and extreme sonics which has lead to some of the most fascinating electronic music in recent years for the likes of Rabit’s Halcyon Veil and Shapednoise’s Cosmo Rhythmatic.
Make no mistake, though: Unalloyed, Unlicensed, All Night is Osborne-Lanthier’s most direct and up-for-it material; a masterful, off-the-cuff demonstration of how to mess with modern templates, using online production tutorials as the jump-off for a quartet of dancefloor mongrels riddled with EDM’s most virulent, effective tics.
At the front Blackwell Dynonetics’ tight, fractal knot of spasming dub chords and footwork spatter comes off like Second Woman linking with Rian Treanor, before The Zika Slam revs ups like some visceral Powell and EVOL collaboration, and the crushing swagger of Integrated Sensor Is Structure sounds like Lurka duelling with Byetone, leaving the dembow bounce and escalating hardstyle synths of Lick And A Promise to ramp like some fierce Kamixlo or Florentino winner.
This one is lands hard on all the right buttons. Can’t wait to hear them loud in the club.
Highly recommended!
Raster-Noton bring the excellent, erratic Unun series to a close with some of Jesse Osborne-Lanthier’s most reactive and ‘floor-penetrating productions; bringing elements of EDM, trance and hooj room choons to the boil with a steadfast tolerance for dancefloor/electronic extremity and physicality.
Since 2010, the Berlin/Montreal-based musician has steadily carved a niche between the eyes of modern styles in an almost exponential exploration of styles, persistently short-circuiting dancefloor conventions with a combination of avant-garde strategy and extreme sonics which has lead to some of the most fascinating electronic music in recent years for the likes of Rabit’s Halcyon Veil and Shapednoise’s Cosmo Rhythmatic.
Make no mistake, though: Unalloyed, Unlicensed, All Night is Osborne-Lanthier’s most direct and up-for-it material; a masterful, off-the-cuff demonstration of how to mess with modern templates, using online production tutorials as the jump-off for a quartet of dancefloor mongrels riddled with EDM’s most virulent, effective tics.
At the front Blackwell Dynonetics’ tight, fractal knot of spasming dub chords and footwork spatter comes off like Second Woman linking with Rian Treanor, before The Zika Slam revs ups like some visceral Powell and EVOL collaboration, and the crushing swagger of Integrated Sensor Is Structure sounds like Lurka duelling with Byetone, leaving the dembow bounce and escalating hardstyle synths of Lick And A Promise to ramp like some fierce Kamixlo or Florentino winner.
This one is lands hard on all the right buttons. Can’t wait to hear them loud in the club.
Highly recommended!
Out of Stock
Raster-Noton bring the excellent, erratic Unun series to a close with some of Jesse Osborne-Lanthier’s most reactive and ‘floor-penetrating productions; bringing elements of EDM, trance and hooj room choons to the boil with a steadfast tolerance for dancefloor/electronic extremity and physicality.
Since 2010, the Berlin/Montreal-based musician has steadily carved a niche between the eyes of modern styles in an almost exponential exploration of styles, persistently short-circuiting dancefloor conventions with a combination of avant-garde strategy and extreme sonics which has lead to some of the most fascinating electronic music in recent years for the likes of Rabit’s Halcyon Veil and Shapednoise’s Cosmo Rhythmatic.
Make no mistake, though: Unalloyed, Unlicensed, All Night is Osborne-Lanthier’s most direct and up-for-it material; a masterful, off-the-cuff demonstration of how to mess with modern templates, using online production tutorials as the jump-off for a quartet of dancefloor mongrels riddled with EDM’s most virulent, effective tics.
At the front Blackwell Dynonetics’ tight, fractal knot of spasming dub chords and footwork spatter comes off like Second Woman linking with Rian Treanor, before The Zika Slam revs ups like some visceral Powell and EVOL collaboration, and the crushing swagger of Integrated Sensor Is Structure sounds like Lurka duelling with Byetone, leaving the dembow bounce and escalating hardstyle synths of Lick And A Promise to ramp like some fierce Kamixlo or Florentino winner.
This one is lands hard on all the right buttons. Can’t wait to hear them loud in the club.
Highly recommended!