out now: Marcel Fengler – Enigma [Ostgut Ton]

 

Artist:
Marcel Fengler

 

Title:
Enigma

 

Label:
Ostgut Ton

 

Cat#:
O-TON 41

 

Release Date:
27th September 2010

 

Format:
12 inch & digital

 

Tracks:
01.
Rapture

02.
RazKaz

03.
Enigma

 

Press Info:
Berghain resident Marcel Fengler is one of the frontmen of raw and forward pushing techno. Judging by his previous three EPs for the label, it’s clear to see how Fengler’s work revolves around a love for tough, angular and edgy tools for the floor. This fourth offering continues the energy with three jacking, factory-forged tracks leading us further down his mysterious path.

Like a hot-headed live jam in a humid Chicago basement, ‘Rapture’ gathers up all the energy of classic house, infuses it with a pacy no-nonsense progression and then throws it into the deepend. Rumbling bass and straight, raw percussion make this a perfectly funky blend of high and low, downstairs and up.

‘RazKaz’ jumps off the platter with nervous intensity as a warbling synth scape massages itself into our consciousness. Heavy percussion underpins this tender fugue with ear-pleasing texture and grit. The track summises that special place in electronic music where unfamiliar melodic elements play on the emotions, warming and provoking thought, while driving the dance instinct ever forward.

The B side carries the deeper voyage that is ‘Enigma’. Droning, melancholic tones swirl organically under the heavy barrage of chattering drums and Fengler’s trademark fizzing hats. A moment of transience, this powerful recording allows for inner reflection while pinning us to the groove devotedly.

 

Snippets:

 

Buy Vinyl:
Ostgut Ton
Deejay.de
Hardwax
Bleep
more soon

 

Buy Download:
Beatport
Junodownload
Hardwax
Bleep
Boomkat
Clone Digital
TraxSource
iTunes
more soon

 

Commercial Streaming Services:
Tidal
Spotify
Apple Music
Deezer

 

Websites:
Marcel Fengler
Ostgut Ton

 

out now: L.B. Dub Corp – Take It Down (In Dub) [Ostgut Ton]

 

Artist:
L.B. Dub Corp

 

Title:
Take It Down (In Dub)

 

Label:
Ostgut Ton

 

Cat#:
O-TON 39

 

Release Date:
2nd August 2010

 

Format:
12inch & digital

 

Tracklist:
01.
Take It Down (In Dub)

02.
It’s What You Feel

 

Press Info:
After only a handful of productions and remixes under the illusive moniker, British techno pioneer Luke Slater’s ‘L.B. Dub Corp’ arrives on Ostgut Ton in its latest electronic mutation. ‘Take It Down (In Dub)’ is a fiery, extended experiment in dub textures. With powerfully reduced club energy at its core, Slater takes his time in heating up his tight and dynamic onset of sound, slowly unleashing a heavy twisted funnel of steam and metal that resounds throughout. Seemingly lighter in its approach, ‘It’s What You Feel’ strikes a melodic note early on and sustains it with artful presence and classic house vibes. This rare L.B. Dub Corp appearance allows us the chance to enjoy the gracious, esoteric and entrancing end of Luke Slater’s creative spectrum.

 

Listen:

 

Video:

 

Buy Vinyl:
Hardwax
deejay.de
more links soon

 

Buy Digital:
Ostgut Ton Shop
Hardwax
JunoDownload
Beatport Classic
TraxSource
more links soon

 

Booking:
Octopus Agents

 

Websites:
Luke Slater
Ostgut Ton

 

out now: Shed – The Traveller [Ostgut Ton]

 

Artist:
Shed

 

Title:
The Traveller

 

Label:
Ostgut Ton

 

Cat#:
OSTGUTCD13 | OSTGUTLP06

 

Release Date:
30th August 2010

 

Format:
CD, 2×12″ & digital

 

Tracklist:
01.
STP 2

02.
Keep Time

03.
The Bot

04.
Atmo – Action

05.
44A (Hard Wax forever!)

06.
…Can’t Feel It

07.
Mayday

08.
No Way!

09.
HDRTM

10.
My R-Class

11.
Final Experiment

12.
The Traveller

13.
Hello Bleep!

14.
Leave Things

 

Press Info :
Does techno music really need the album format? Let‘s put it differently: can techno work outside the established boundaries of the 12“? A look back into history shows little convincing examples. Dancefloor tracks, made for DJ‘s, follow a structure which require a damn perfect dancefloor in your living room in order to adequately absorb that very energy. A good album must offer more than a couple of dancefloor anthems, mixed with some ambient interludes and the obligatory downbeat experiment, has to be more substantial than a paint-box for your euphoric memories of perfect nights long gone.

With „The Traveller“, Shed‘s second album for Ostgut Ton, the Berlin-based producer is proving everybody wrong who gave up on the idea of the techno album. „The Traveller“ is not the perfectly planned out escape into the safe haven where even more perfect tools worship the primetime DJ, but an ode to the heart of electronic dance music, still pumping loud and vigorous. For Shed, that very heartbeat was never clearer, more concise and genre-defining than in the UK in the early 90s. Detroit, Chicago, Berlin: get in line, you‘ve had your time. Needless to say that Shed is not in this to become the copycat of some of rave music‘s perfect key moments. Shed translates this clearly defined time frame into an attitude, which up to this day opens both our hearts and ears in the blinking of an eye. „The Traveller“ is not another chapter in the ongoing history of the „anything goes“ cult, not an overcooked stew praising the power of eclecticism, but simply an example of untaimed fascination for sound. And possibilities. Frankly, Shed masters this almost naive approach perfectly and slaps the guards of the status quo straight in the face.

Again and again, Shed pulls little melodies from the depths of his studio and lets us discover our enthusiasm for the moment anew. Welcome back, we missed you dearly. He applies breakbeats bearing more history than the 909 bassdrum where the 4/4 attack would have been the obvious choice, grants grandpa acid only a brief yet overwhelming guest appearance and deals with minimal dancemusic‘s heritage in a completely new, unexplored way. Always present: euphoria. With „The Traveller“, Shed manages the intangible and translates techno tracks into a shorter, yet crisper format, plays with tempi and moods. And yet each and every beat is right where it belongs, helping to merge every ingredient into an adventurous trip through a night one always dreams of and yet hardly ever gets.

At the same time, „The Traveller“ is all but frumpy, quite the opposite. Those who expect the album to be the soundtrack for an all-inclusive weekender for techno pensioners, will be very disappointed. The album resonates from start to finish, is full of ideas, speaks dubstep and choses radical approaches where other producers opt for the emergency exit of the lowest common denominators. „The Traveller“ is the perfect base for everybody still willing to take a chance.

There is more to Shed, though. With „Wax“ and „Equalized“, he created two labels solely dedicated to his still strong admiration for the classic „track culture“. After the release of his debut album „Shedding The Past“ in 2008, this was a spot-on playground to experiment and play around with new ideas. On an album though these tracks would not have worked. An album deserves something different. „The Traveller“ is a shining example of this approach.

 

Listen:
@ Beatport

 

Buy Vinyl:
Juno.co.uk
Deejay.de
djshop.de
Amazon GER
more soon

 

Buy CD:
Kompakt
Amazon GER
Deejay.de
djshop.de
Juno.co.uk
more soon

 

Buy Digital:
see re-release on The Final Experiment

 

Websites:
Shed
Ostgut Ton

 

© Photo By Birgit Kaulfuss

out now: Marcel Dettmann – Dettmann [Ostgut Ton]

 

Artist:
Marcel Dettmann

 

Title:
Dettmann

 

Label:
Ostgut Ton

 

Cat#:
OSTGUTCD12 | OSTGUTLP05

 

Release Date:
26. April 2010

 

Format:
CD, 3xLP & digital

 

Tracklist:
01)
Quasi (Intro)

02)
Argon

03)
Screen

04)
Motive

05)
Drawing

06)
Reticle

07)
Irritant

08)
Captivate

09)
Silex

10)
Home

11)
Viscous

12)
Taris (Outro)

 

Info (English):
The name says it all. Dettmann is the debut long player of Berghain’s resident DJ, producer and remixer Marcel Dettmann – and what an album it is. Intrinsically tied to the myth that is Berghain by now, the attached label Ostgut Ton and at the same time with the regeneration of no-frill, cleansed and powerful electronic music, Marcel Dettmann managed a daring feat: the production of a truly absorbing and veritable techno album.

Framed by “Quasi” and “Taris” as intro respectively outro, Spread out over ten tracks, Dettmann transports the raw energy, the rough aesthetics and the simple grace of techno. A Berliner-by-choice, the difficult format doesn’t bog him down. Neither does he give in to exhausting finger exercises that try to supersede his learned trade, nor does he confront the listener with hasty or brutal tracks that would rather feel at home pressed on a 12-Inch in a DJ-case. Tracks like „Reticle“, „Drawing“, „Captivate“ or „Silex“ seem like the convergence of his striking efforts and discography up until now. On the one hand you have his straight up and independent outfit MDR, on the other hand there is his remix work (e.g. recent interpretations of Mikkel Metal, Fever Ray or Junior Boys) and last but not least it has to be in tune with his passion as a disc jockey.

You get contemplative moments with almost weightless layers of sound that get used like melodies or chords, rotating with condensed, intensified and sappy snatches. Rigour and austere beauty go hand in hand. Surprisingly enough, with a genre that aware of its own history, Dettmann never falls prey to the dangerous and seductive nature of nostalgia. The very special and beloved yearning for a good old time that is often at the side of producers who try not to grandstand. However, Dettmann sounds as fresh and self-contained as techno nowadays can be. And more so, it once and for all establishes its eponym as a genre mainstay.

And what about the man himself? What does Marcel Dettmann care for with an album? “I like music with a depth that I can feel. There is no formula for that. It could be a concept album or one that makes use of various styles.” However described or classified, his own is a successful meditation about the art form we call techno.

 

Info (German):
Nomen est omen. Dettmann ist das Debütalbum des gleichnamigen Berghain-Resident-DJs, Produzenten und Labelbetreibers – und was für eines.

Fest verbunden mit dem Mythos Berghain, der zugehörigen Labeladresse Ostgut Ton und der damit einhergehenden Regeneration schnörkelloser, entschlackter und kraftvoller elektronischer Musik, gelingt Marcel Dettmann mit seinem Erstling ein äußerst seltenes Kunststück: die Fertigung eines wahrhaftigen und fesselnden Technoalbums.

„Eingerahmt von „Quasi“ und „Taris“, transportiert Dettmann auf zehn Stücken erfrischend unverkrampft die rohe Energie und kühle Ästhetik von Techno. Der Berliner Produzent verzettelt sich in diesem bockigen Format weder in anstrengenden Fingerübungen, die über sein angestammtes Handwerk hinausweisen wollen, noch übergibt er dem Zuhörer ungestüme oder leichtfertige Tracks, die sich ausschließlich auf 12-Zoll und in DJ-Taschen heimisch fühlen würden. Stücke wie „Reticle“, „Drawing“, „Captivate“ oder „Silex“ wirken wie eine Konzentration seines bisherigen Schaffens und seiner beachtlichen Veröffentlichungsgeschichte. Da gibt es einerseits die eigene unabhängige und kompromisslosen Plattform MDR, andererseits seine Arbeit als Remixer (jüngst unter anderem für Mikkel Metal, Fever Ray oder die Junior Boys) und nicht zuletzt den Dialog mit seiner Funktion als Discjockey.

Kontemplative Momente, in denen scheinbar schwebende Soundschichten wie Melodien und Akkorden eingesetzt werden, wechseln sich ab mit verdichteten, komprimierten und markigen Augenblicken – ruppige Strenge folgt auf herbe Schönheit. Dabei fällt Dettmann erstaunlicherweise nie der gefährlichen und verführerischen Nostalgie anheim. Jener Sehnsucht nach alten Zeiten, die sich in den letzten Jahren oft als lähmende Geliebte an die Seite von Produzenten schlich, die sich nicht der Effekthascherei bedienen wollten. Dettmann hingegen klingt auf ganzer Länge so frisch und in sich geschlossen, wie Techno in diesen Tagen nur klingen kann und etabliert seinen Namensgeber endgültig als nicht mehr wegzudenkende und obligatorische Größe.

Und Dettmann selbst? Auf die Frage, was ihn persönlich an einem Album interessiert: „Ich mag Musik die Tiefe hat, bei der ich etwas empfinde. Dafür gibt es keine Formel. Das kann ein Konzept Album sein oder eines, das sich an verschiedenen Stilen bedient.“ Wie auch immer man nun sein eigenes klassifizieren mag, Marcel Dettmanns Meditation über den Zustand der Kunstform ist jedenfalls durch und durch gelungen.

 

Listen:

 

Buy:
Hardwax (vinyl)
Juno.co.uk (vinyl)
Juno.co.uk (CD)
Deejay.de (vinyl)
DJshop.de (vinyl)
Amazon GER (CD)
Amazon UK (CD)
Amazon US (CD)
zero-inch (digital)
Beatport (digital)
JunoDownload (digital)

 

Websites:
Marcel Dettmann
Ostgut Ton

 

upcoming OSTGUT TON records from Ben Klock, André Galluzzi, Shed …

Some facts and some rumours … According to DE:Bug magazine there will be some very nice releases on the Berghain label OSTGUT TON – including a mix cd by Ben Klock, a 12 inch by André Galluzzi and the second Ostgut album by Shed.

This year OSTGUT TON will celebrate its 5th anniversary. Some rumours say that there will be a compilation to dignify this event.