Review: Current darlings of the deep house Wolf Music continue on with what they do best on these three reliable dancefloor fillers courtesy of Bristol's Thrilogy. First up "Heaven" and its uplifting piano roll complete with jazz vocals and a pumping swing fuelled beat does the business quite well. Next we've got "Hold Me In Your Arms" which takes things deeper, with sultry female backing vocals and rolling bassline.. But the uplifting piano roll remains; don't worry! Lastly the K 98 remix of "heaven" injects some serious stomp and tempo into the track that tears through the speakers with its hard house intensity.
Review: Here's something to raise a smile: remixes of a pair of Kerri Chandler cuts from Bristol-based, Futureboogie and Applepips-affiliated twosome Behling & Simpson. First up, they tackle "Heaven", turning the 2011 original into a rolling chunk of piano-laden soulful house. It has a real classic feel - more so than their usual fare, at least - and makes great use of Christopher McCray's delicious vocal. Flip for the veteran production partnership's interpretation of "Peace of Mind" (first released on the Ozone EP), which adds a few winding synths and a little contemporary deep house bounce to Chandler's typically warm and luscious original. Like the A-side, it has a classic house feel, but just does enough to appease the needs of modern dancefloors.
Review: Legendary UK band Depeche Mode signal their return with Heaven, a 12" prelude to their 13th studio album Delta Machine which arrives brandishing four remixes that reflect their highly respected profile. Any record that features Blawan and Matthew Dear on remix duties is big news and both artists excel here; the former indulging his thick set claustrophobic wall rattling tendencies on a Dub version that submerges Dave Gahan's sad refrain deep in the murk. Matthew Dear offers another sly nod to his split musical personalities with one of his trademark "Vs Audion" efforts whilst The Orb's Thomas Fehlman introduces a new alias in Steps To Heaven. Look out for the charmingly dramatic revision from French newcomer Owlle too!
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