UK Music Jobs Blog

Posts Tagged ‘Electro’

Single Review – Red Blooded Women – ‘Enjoy The Silence’

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

SINGLE REVIEW
ARTIST – Red Blooded Women
TRACK NAME – Enjoy The Silence
RELEASE DATE – Sunday 19th April 2009
AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD FROM - http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=307913277&s=143444

 

Its a brave move releasing a cover of a Depeche Mode classic so soon after another girl band but unlike The Saturday’s insipid number for Comic Relief, Red Blooded Women’s take on Enjoy The Silence is a tasty electro pop homage that is both haunting and ridiculously catchy.

ENJOY THE SILENCE

ENJOY THE SILENCE

Production on the track is top notch with the girls vocals resonating strongly against a backdrop of synths and sweeping piano. This retains all the quality of the original while remaining fresh, modern and exciting! Great job all round.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Oxjam 2009 & UK Music Jobs

Monday, April 13th, 2009

On Thursday 12th March 2009, UK Music Jobs hosted their 2nd Oxjam event at East London’s legendary venue 93 Feet East. Over 180 people turned up to see the brilliant performances, enjoy a few beers and do their bit for a great cause.

First on stage were the scorching hot electro/pop band My Tiger My Timing, playing a full set including debut single ‘This Is Not The Fire’ produced by Andy Spence of New Young Pony Club fame. Oozing charisma with great tunes and and more musical talent than you can shake a stick at, MTMT kicked off proceedings with a bang.

Next up we had DJ/Musician Butcherd Beats, featuring guest vocalists Kelli-Leigh & A_Jazz, Mobo Award winning rap artist Wizdom from Green Jade, world class percussionist Beats De Vyne and European Break Dance Champion Bboy Jjui. The Butcher brought a touch of old skool Ibiza to 93 Feet East, mixing R&B, break beat and classic house along with dropping a pretty astonishing drum n’ bass track ‘Blind Reality’ which sent the crowd wild and confirmed Butcherd Beats as an artist of incredible range and talent.

Headlining our event were three sexy, sassy electro pop princesses, Red Blooded Women. Showering the adoring crowd with their trademark quips and banter, the girls launched into a stonking set including their single ‘Enjoy The Silence’ currently at number 12 in the UK commercial pop chart.

The total amount raised from ticket sales was a whopping £722 so thank you to all those who came down and supported the night.

See you next year!

The UK Music Jobs team.

Photos – Kate Khullar © 2009

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Single Review – My Tiger My Timing – ‘This Is Not The Fire’

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

SINGLE REVIEW
ARTIST – My Tiger My Timing
TRACK NAME – This Is Not The Fire
RELEASE DATE – Monday 6th April 2009
AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER - http://indiestore.7digital.com/silvermusicmachine


 

My Tiger My Timing have spent recent months making waves via their live shows up and down the country and now officially arrive with their debut single ‘This Is Not the Fire’.

Already impressing both the music press and radio, the track has been championed on Radio 2, 6 Music and playlisted by X-FM. With lyrics hinting at a disintegrating relationship, the male/female vocals give double meaning to the term ‘dual’ and take this electro-pop gem to an appropriately intense crescendo.

On production duties, New Young Pony Club’s Andy Spence adds a synth-polish to proceedings and manages to import that bands knack for coolly detached pop music that expertly blends guitar and synth.  This is My Tiger My Timing’s show though, easily side-stepping any comparisons with their contemporaries with a staccato delivery that is all their own. This tiger has hit the ground running.

James Long

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

FIELD DAY 2008 – Review

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

 

By Tim Weissberg

Word association time. I say “Field Day 2007”, you, or at least most of the Field Day 2008 previews, say “teething problems.” Yes, you’ve probably heard it all by now – the toilet queues, the four bar staff spread between two bars and the three-hour crush to get one of them to serve you a drink. Ironically, the one thing you probably wouldn’t have heard was the music, especially when Justice, a duo not exactly known for their peaceful sets, took to the stage at the end of the night. Well at least it was sunny.

This year, Eat Your Own Ears promised it would be better and that there would be a professional company brought in to ensure the punters could hear the music, buy their drinks and then make room for more. Ok, thought the dubious public, let’s give in another try.

And then the heavens opened. Rain at a British festival is certainly nothing unusual and most people just got on with it as normal. The only problems arose when it really started to pour. Those people with umbrellas decided to put them up and those that didn’t made beelines for the tents. This provided me with two bugbears.

First off, the bloody umbrellas. Seriously, if you are going to a festival and it looks like rain, wear a waterproof with a hood, leave the umbrella at home. During Les Savy Fav, a band which centres its live shows around the visual antics of front man Tim Harrington, my view was entirely obscured by a sea of selfish umbrella wielders. Occasionally I caught a flash of the stage to see Harrington’s belly spilling out over his tight white jeans. The sound was about as good as the general view, no not the view of Tim’s fetching ginger-haired stomach, which indicated that maybe a few lessons from last year were still to be learned.

Second, the tents. Yes, they may be undercover, but they will not stretch to accommodate everyone looking for shelter. My attempt to see Crookers in the Bugged Out! tent was thwarted by everyone fleeing the umbrellas outside and piling into the already packed area. To add insult to injury, just as I’d fought my way through the tide and into the open, they went and dropped Wearing My Rolex by Wiley. What timing.

Right, after that slight excursion into self-indulgence, let’s get back to the event. The bar situation was infinitely better. There were more and they were big. The bar staff were not so good though. But then maybe I was asking for trouble by veering from the sensible festival drinks order of beer and cider. I’ve no idea what drinks I came away with but by that stage no one in my round seemed to mind. Red Bull Cola, on a side note, is disgusting and I can see why the more traditional cola drinks had run dry. Toilet-wise there still appeared to be a problem. This was indicated by the very long lines of women snaking out of the porterloo clusters and the extended periods of absence by female members of our group. At least that was their excuse. There was less of a problem for the men, especially since someone – official or not – had put a set or portable urinals in the woods by the bandstand.

From what I could gather, half of London’s police had been invited along. The place was crawling with them. Ok, I know that people will be of the view that the police are there for the good of everyone and if you’re not doing anything wrong then you’ve nothing to worry about, but when it gets to the stage where one of my friends is stopped and searched three times before even clearing the gates, maybe the presence was a little heavy handed. For the second time that day I also had my entry into the Bugged Out! tent blocked by crowds, this time all in uniform, looking like they were about to form a police cordon around the entire tent. I don’t know, maybe James Holden is particularly popular with the Met Police. His acid-dripping set certainly sounded amazing from outside.

It wasn’t all doom and gloom. The steam pouring out of the Bloggers Delight tent may have made it look as if it was on fire and inside, musically, it was. Mikki Most and Ian Robinson played a blinding set of upbeat electro that made any gripes about the day disappear.

The night was rounded off by Simian Mobile Disco’s live set in the Adventures In The Beetroot Field/NME tent. Again, it was ridiculously packed to begin with but the other headliners, such as Foals and Richie Hawtin, soon thinned the crowd down to a level where some upper body movement was possible as opposed to the rhythmic head bopping. Standing still, obviously, was not an option.

In conclusion, there were a lot of things right with Field Day 2008 but a few things were still wrong. Maybe next year, they’ll get it right. And, if this year’s line up is anything to go by, I’m sure I’ll be tempted, yet again, to give it a chance.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Simian Mobile Disco – Fabriclive.41 Review

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

By Tim Weissberg

I remember the first time I heard Simian Mobile Disco play a set. It was in Room 2 of Fabric about two years ago. During that period I was spending at least once a week trawling the electro nights of London clubs and listening, on the whole, to the same tunes being played in various different orders. SMD were different. Yes, they played the up-to-date belters that were packing out most of the more cutting-edge dancefloors at the time but they added something a bit different – the belters that had people flocking to the floor in years gone by. Due to nothing more than the passing of time, I can’t remember a great deal of the actual songs played but the original version of Utah Saint’s Something Good and The Thin White Duke reworking of Felix Da Housecat’s Silver Screen Shower Scene – one of my all time favourite tunes ­­– stuck in my mind.

But enough of then, this is now. And now’s SMD have arrived with the latest, 41st, mix album in the aforementioned London club’s monthly series called, well, Fabriclive.41: Simian Mobile Disco.

Prior to listening the mix I was quite excited about the prospect of a SMD selection. I was expecting something along the lines of the offerings by the likes of Mr Da Housecat remixing Jacques Lu Cont, Cut Copy, The Glimmers and James Lavelle. What made these mixes stand out was their genre-spanning diversity. Maybe they weren’t an exact reflection of what you’d hear the DJs spinning in a club, but they were perfect selections to listen to at home or a house party. Which is kind of the point of the Fabriclive CDs, isn’t it?

However, upon listening to the album I found that this was not to be the case. There was no real excursions, save for album closer Nite Flight by The Walker Brother, from the blippy electro that SMD have been playing out for a long time now. There are, however, some quality past, present and future classics on there, such as Green Velvet’s Flash, Erotic Discourse by the Paul Woolford presented Bobby Peru, Hercules And Love Affair’s surely-to-be-seminal Blind (Serge Santiago Version) and SMD’s own Simple.

Without wanting it to sound like a criticism, if you are after a mix album that recreates a banging late-night dancefloor that stays just on the right side of repetitive, this is a great album. For those of you hoping for a great party album, akin to the Mobile Disco’s earlier sets, with the odd surprise thrown in, maybe try one of the Fabriclive albums mentioned above.

Tracklisting:

1. Infernal Dance Of King Kastechi (clean version) – Firebird
2. Don – Sisters Of Transistor
3. Simple – Simian Mobile Disco
4. Blind (Serge Santiago version) – Hercules & Love Affair
5. Space Warrior – Smith & Hack
6. Joystick – Discodeine
7. Chasm – Shit Robot
8. Up Tool – Perc & Fractal
9. Miura – Metro Area
10. Crack El – Worthy
11. Suite Equestria – Moon Dog
12. Huncut Hacuka – Fine Cut Bodies
13. Aemono – Bentobox
14. Reward Is Cheese – Deadmau5 & Jelo
15. Sleep Deprivation (Simon Baker remix) – Simian Mobile Disco
16. Chomper – Popof
17. Cindy Electronium – Raymond Scott
18. Erotic Discourse – Paul Woolford & Bobby Peru
19. Pitch Control – Moebius Plank Neumeier
20. Spastik – Plastikman
21. Flash – Green Velvet
22. Night Flights (album version) – The Walker Brothers

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Robyn Live UK Tour Dates

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Robyn

If you have yet to catch one of the music industry’s finest, Swedish electro pop sensation Robyn at her previous shows then we are imploring you to get your assess in gear and book tickets to one of her UK dates this month.

The show promises to be bigger, better, sweatier and sexier than her previous outings and having been to many of the London shows already we can guarantee that you won’t want to miss out.   Support will be provided by the brilliant Sam Sparro.

Click one the links below to get your tickets now!!

June 07 – Birmingham: Carling Academy
June 08 – London: Astoria
June 10 – Manchester: Academy 2
June 11 – Norwich: UEA
June 12 – Bristol: Carling Academy

For more information on Robyn visit – www.robyn.com

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!



If you have any difficulties using UK Music Jobs email us at: uk-info@music-jobs.com

A part of the Music Jobs Ltd network

Locations | Job Descriptions | Company Directory | Blog | Links | Contact Us | FAQ | About | Browser | Freelancer Profiles | Posted Jobs | Sitemap
Advertising | Airline Services | Allied Health | Animal Welfare | Architecture | Automotive | Aviation | Banking | Beauty and Health | Catering | Cleaning | Clinical Research and Medicine | Construction | Creative | Criminal and Justice | Customer Service | Defence | Electronics | Engineering | Environment and Earth Science | Events | Executive | Farming | Fashion | Financial | Financial Services | Graduate | Higher Education | Heritage | Hospitality | Housing and Regeneration | HR | Insurance | IT | Languages | Legal | Leisure | Logistics | Manufacturing | Marketing | Medical and Dental | Music | Not For Profit | Nursing and Midwifery | Oil Gas and Power | Performing Arts | Pharmaceutical | Press and Publishing | Property | Public Sector | Radio | Railways | Recruitment | Retail | Sales | Primary and Secondary Education | Secretarial | Security | Social Care | Sport | Technical and Science Writing | Telecoms | Trade and Labour | Travel and Tourism | Visual Arts and Crafts |