the_xx

The XX – Angels 0 (0)

"Angels" is a song by English indie pop group The xx, released as a digital download on 17 July 2012 by Young Turks. It was the lead single for their 2012 album Coexist. The song was written by guitarist Romy Madley Croft, bassist Oliver Sim, and percussionist Jamie xx, who also produced it. View More The XX – Angels 0 (0)
the_xx

The XX – VCR 0 (0)

"VCR" is the fourth single by The xx, from their self-titled debut album. The single was first released in the UK on 24 January 2010. The song was also featured on the episode "Black Friday" from the television series Lie to Me. Music critic Robert Christgau named it the tenth best single of the year. View More The XX – VCR 0 (0)
the_xx

The XX – Crystalised 0 (0)

According to music critic Robert Christgau, "Crystalised" uses a musical structure similar to "VCR", "hooky ostinato riff embellished with a few subtle effects, leading to a soft vocal. The exaggerated drawl of bassist Oliver Sim precedes the more human-scale croon of guitarist Romy Madley Croft." Croft and Sim shared lead vocals, which Rachel Kowal from NPR said are "delivered in a sexy call and response fashion that is reminiscent of the duets" by Canadian indie pop band Stars on their 2004 album Set Yourself on Fire, "minus all the antagonism associated with ex-lovers." View More The XX – Crystalised 0 (0)
don diablo

Don Diablo – Tonight 0 (0)

After the last cross-label collaboration proved to be a smashing success, Don Diablo is back for more. He has gone back in time once again to bring back to life another house classic, and this time from American house label Sleeping Bag Records. The band ‘Class Action’ hit their stride in the 1980s as disco gave way to house music. The band’s biggest hit was ‘Weekend’, which peaked at #9 on the Billboard Dance charts in 1983. View More Don Diablo – Tonight 0 (0)
Sivik

SIVIK – Winter Collection 0 (0)

SIVIK wraps up his new EP, Winter Collection, with the final original track, “Black Light” and a re-mastered version of his previous Spring EP’s hit song, “High.” With SIVIK’s excellent electronic-pop sensibility this 4-track EP is definitely a crowd-pleasing album that you might like to have in your music stash. Check it out! View More SIVIK – Winter Collection 0 (0)
RHODES

Rhodes – Wishes 0 (0)

Hitimpulse dropped a stellar remix of Rhodes’ ‘Wishes’ this week. The remix brings a chilled down drum and bass vibe to the original while keeping the integrity of the vocals. All in all it is a captivating, haunting beautiful track that deserves at the very least a listen. View More Rhodes – Wishes 0 (0)
eric prydz

Eric Prydz – Opus 0 (0)

Opus is a very good album from Eric Prydz. What can’t be said about about him? As far as electronic musicians are concerned, there’s few artists that can even compare to the Swedish DJ/producer. To progressive house music (and I mean, REAL progressive house) he attains the same status that Paul Van Dyk or Armin Van Buuren have for trance; he is the king, the G.O.A.T.. His unwavering dedication to his sound and his utter disregard for any current industry trends have earned him unanimous respect, and his consistency throughout the years, both with his his self titled work and side projects, Pryda and Cirez D. View More Eric Prydz – Opus 0 (0)
Electric Forest

Electric Forest – Lineup 0 (0)

Well, the time of preparation for festival season is upon us. Few festivals garner as much attention and retain so much control over the EDM populace as Electric Forest. And for good reason, the multi-day event has consistently featured some of the highest production value and was one of the first breakout festivals after it transformed from Rothbury. This year is no different, and we now have a first glimpse of this year’s incarnation of the show. As the lineup below can attest, the people over at Insomniac are pulling out the big guns. View More Electric Forest – Lineup 0 (0)
ben yoo suk

Ben Yoo Suk – Salvation 0 (0)

Salvation is an original remix from an young artist, Ben Yoo Suk originally from Zürich. From age 8 years Ben taking music lessons with the cello and the piano two years later came about. He was playing on these two instruments until he discovers electronics music on YouTube tutorials and starts  to create his own tracks. View More Ben Yoo Suk – Salvation 0 (0)
honor

Honor – Never Off (Hot Since 82 Remix) 0 (0)

Up and coming artist, Honor, has seen a lot of love for her debut single ‘Never Off’. The powerful and emotional track caught the attention of UK Techno producer Hot Since 82, who decided to put his own twist to the track using a deep Techno melody. Though the only vocals used in the remix are ‘never off’, that’s all you need to become the perfect fit for a hot EDM track. Stay on the lookout for Honor – ‘Never Off (Hot Since 82 Remix)’, which releases on February 4th! View More Honor – Never Off (Hot Since 82 Remix) 0 (0)
mark

Shahmen – Mark 0 (0)

Shahmen - Mark is a beautiful electronic music with some bass boost for you. Shahmen is a duo made of producer SENSE, from Amsterdam, and rapper B L S aka Bless, from Los Angeles. The Shahmen sound is a dance between moments of pure tonal bliss and dark, hard, banging beats with original narratives. View More Shahmen – Mark 0 (0)
radiohead

Radiohead – Spectre 0 (0)

Sam Smith wrote the actual theme to ;Spectre, the 24th James Bond film (and possibly the last to feature actor Daniel Craig in the lead role). Radiohead only wrote a prospective one—long the stuff of myths, or literal bets. Both are sinister, irresolute ballads for piano and orchestra, but Smith's tune is more overtly triumphant, with typical mini-climaxes that place it firmly in the tradition of healthily overwrought Bond anthems, like "Skyfall". Smith used ominous spy-thriller horns, weaved through instrumental vamps, and pithy, anti-heroic lyrics: "I'm prepared for this," he sings, "I never shoot to miss/But I feel like a storm is coming." Radiohead's discarded anthem has some of this soupiness. But the marks it hits are unexpected—it pulls back hastily from anthemic orchestral breaks—so in some sense, it's exactly what one would expect from a slow-burning Radiohead theme for a modern, self-serious Bond flick. There's a jerky, Yorke-ian piano chord pattern. The vamp is an open forum for the decaying orchestral swoops that are the stamp of a Jonny Greenwood soundtrack. Phil Selway's jazzy drum figures allow "Spectre" to come into its own—a welcome "Pyramid Song" sequel. It possesses all the melodrama of a good Bond song but only a hint of the kitsch. If it wasn't for Yorke's delicate, forlorn vocal—just a few angelic falsetto notes, gradually bent out of shape, embellishing a typically vague, pointillistic lyric—the song might risk sounding like a rote retread of previous work. Instead, "Spectre" turns out to be one of the finest Radiohead songs in some years, much more than a one-off curiosity. At this point, both Yorke and Greenwood have become interested in writing program music; if narrative limitations can yield something like "Spectre," a concept album might be Radiohead's best possible next act. View More Radiohead – Spectre 0 (0)
the range

The Range – Florida 0 (0)

The electronic musician James Hinton, who peforms music as the Range, has worn the same hat and buttoned-up shirt combo each time I’ve seen him perform. There’s something comfortably consistent about it, and that can be said of his music, too. For instance, his new album, Potential, feels very much like a refined continuation of 2013’s Nonfiction. In some ways, it comes off like its second part, more than an entirely new entity. This is praise. Nonfiction found a way to make moving, emotionally resonant electronic music from seemingly not much more than YouTube samples and a great sense of dynamics and melody. Like Nonfiction, Potential features YouTube clips of anonymous people who bolster and humanize Hinton's compositions. Hinton explains: "I found each person by using a small set of search terms on YouTube... I endeavored to tie the songs of Potential together by telling my own story alongside the stories of the people I sampled." The words are sometimes moving, sometimes textural, and they can often bloom as amazing hooks—even if they didn't sound polished in their original form. On "Florida," for example, a shaky a cappella cover of Ariana Grande's "You'll Never Know" becomes a star turn in Hinton's hands. He threads the woman's voice through a mix of spritely electronics that bring to mind Nobukazu Takemura, twinkling steel drums, and an infectious dynamic upswing to create a dance-floor anthem. Listening to her in this new context, you begin to see what she heard inside her head when she decided to upload her clip to the internet. And it's beautiful. View More The Range – Florida 0 (0)