Review: Pawsa and Adventures of Stevie V breathe new life into an iconic dance classic with an exhilarating update, a gesture of Pawsa's innovative production skills adding a fresh dimension to Adventures of Stevie V's timeless vocals. The 'Extended Mix' is a pulsating journey through house music's vibrant landscape, capturing the raw energy of the original while injecting a contemporary twist. On the flip, David Morales delivers a masterful remix, his 'Sold Out Mix' taking the track into deeper, more soulful territory. A real double-sided gem.
Review: Pawsa has a reputation for delivering perfect party-starting music, often via funky, sub-heavy takes on tech-house. Who better, then, to remix The Adventires of Stevie V's infectious 1989 anthem 'Dirty Cash' - arguably, Jungle Brothers' 'I'll House You' aside, the most famous hip-house record of all time. Pawsa's 'Extended Mix' (side A) retains the warehouse-ready vibe of the original, placing the vocals, stabs and some wiggly new acid lines atop a squelchy TB-303 bassline and pumping house beats. Over on the B-side there's another chance to savour David Morales' 'Sold Out' mix, a slower, deeper, dreamier and lightly breakbeat driven interpretation that naturally earned plenty of plays when it was first released way back in 1990.
I'm Losing Control (extended Bass-ment club mix) (8:01)
Review: Dark Entries presents a reissue of Shawn Pittman's 1989 Dreams, an obscure and highly sought-after private press gem produced and written by Art Forest. An undersung figure in the development of the late 80's Detroit techno sound, Forest collaborated with, produced, or penned material for many of the key players in the movement, including Inner City, Suburban Knight, and the Belleville Three themselves (on Kreem's "Triangle of Love"). This reissue gives Forest's own productions some shine while providing a thrill for both dancers and collectors.
Review: For the latest volume in Running Back's sporadic 'Super Sound Singles' series of reissues, boss Gerd Janson takes us back to 1989 and Professor Supercool's 'If You Love Somebody' - a baggy, loose-limbed and saucer-eyed revision of the Blow Monkeys track of the same name that's long been rumoured to be the work of the band themselves. It is undoubtedly of its' time - think loved-up vocals, bustling breakbeats, rubbery double bass, glassy-eyed sonics and tactile piano stabs - but sounds as current and fresh now as it did at the tail end of the 80s. The original full vocal mix sits on side A, while the stripped-back 1989 instrumental can be found on side B alongside a fine Gerd Janson edit tailor-made for 21st century dancefloors.
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