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Black Body Radiation

by October

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LAWNMOWERS (Fan)
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LAWNMOWERS (Fan) Dark synthy goodness! Favorite track: Ritual.
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1.
Ritual 04:05
2.
3.
Body Chant 06:13
4.
Blood Feud 08:35
5.
6.
7.
Slow Release 06:54
8.
Syrup 04:49

about

Resident Advisor Review:

I've seen October DJ a few times over the years, and while the music he plays varies, the way he plays it stays pretty much the same. The opposite of a flashy mixer, Julian Raymond Smith lets each track soak fully into the pores of the dance floor before he unfussily brings in something else. The success of such a patient approach depends on a particular type of track: one that can command a crowd over extended periods, whether through sheer force or a heightened sense of drama.

Smith's long-germinating debut album, a bodyshock of post-punk techno called Black Body Radiation, consists solely of these sorts of tracks. In other respects it's a new look for the Bristol producer; he's better known for flying the house flag when everybody else in the city was still making dubstep. His style has changed, but the qualities Smith strives for in his music are more present than ever: extreme dance floor pressure, a bold sense of style and the odd madcap flourish nobody else could get away with.

Smith works with a limited toolbox, most of it brought out on opener "Ritual." There's the yammering bassline, the biscuit-tin kick drum, the sweet synth pads offering wafts of catharsis. As with much of his music, the ingredients are retro, but the way they're combined can be dazzling. "Transient Bodies" and "Slow Release" are bruising, steampunk constructions of squalling delay and whipcrack percussion. On the brilliant "Synchronised Bluez," ten-tonne drums offset a serene high-octave melody. "Syrup" forsakes drums altogether, sounding like a spooky John Carpenter score.

Smith's hulking productions are camp enough not to seem pompous, and stern enough not to descend into silliness. The best moments are when he sails closest to the wind, as with the drunken synth-horn melodies on "Black Narcissist." (They bring to mind the cheeky sax line on 2012's "Singularity Jump," another Smith triumph.) But he can play it straight, too, and does so to excellent effect on "Blood Feud," where a tense sub pulse is bathed with gorgeous aquamarine chords. Black Body Radiation aims for extremes of emotion, and it hits the bullseye every time.

Angus Finlayson

credits

released November 30, 2015

W+P by Julian Raymond Smith
Mixed by Mat Sampson and Julian Raymond Smith at Bink Bonk Studio

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all rights reserved

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about

October Bristol, UK

Turkish born Indian, Scottish, Dutchman based in Bristol since '96, October is a true veteran of sound and culture. As comfortable in the world of techno, Italo-disco and new-beat as he is at the mixing desk producing dense doom-metal soundscapes.

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