Back At It

January 4th, 2012

Posted by Scott Willats

  


So 2012 is here, and I would say that already we’re off to a great start. The holiday season always lacks a little in the new music department. Artists seem to know that most of the attention in late December will be focused on the best songs of the past year. Why would you want to release a track that’s just going to get forgotten in the hoopla of the holiday season?

For a new music junkie like me, it was actually refreshing to step away from the blogs and podcasts and just enjoy the tunes that we’d heard this year. But that’s done — and it’s time now to get back into the new ish. I don’t have many for you today, but the ones I do have will knock your block off. Lezzzzzzgo!

The number one concert that I’m looking forward to in January is the return of Brodinski with his Bromance teammate Gesaffelstein — a tag-team event in Toronto on Jan. 21st at Wrongbar, brought to you by Embrace Presents. If you’re a frequent visitor to this page, you’ll know how much I adore this French duo. The leaked remix of Justice‘s On’n'On EP has dropped, and it’s looking to get the year started right. Brodinski’s track is the one I was able to get my hands on, but Tiga‘s is floating around out there as well. Do me a favour and find it! It’s heavy. Justice Remixed by Brodinski … doesn’t it feel like 2012 is gonna be BIG?

Justice – On’n'On (Brodinski Remix): LISTEN TO IT HERE


This track is one of those tunez you either love or hate. For those who hate, I simply state that it needs to be heard in the dark — preferably surrounded by zombies, as you fight with the last of your desperate strength the song’s insistence that you must LOSE YOUR SOUL!  Melodramatic? Naw, just Afrojack baby!

Afrojack – Show Me Your Rage (Original Mix): LISTEN TO IT HERE 


Sometimes you look at the title and artist of a track, and before you even hit play you know it’s a bomb — especially when bomb is in the name. Fukkk Offf is back, and he comes bearing gifts of frankincense and bass. Of course, he has help in the form of the Dirty Disco Youth. Together they drop a massive payload of club megatonnage.

Dirty Disco Youth & Fukkk Offf – Bomb Disaster: LISTEN TO IT HERE 


Ayayayi! Three tunes and three anthems. And I’ve left the best for last, kiddy kats. This tune should turn up your minus-15 day a few degrees. LAZRtag is here to drop another track — and this bomb is apocalyptic. I lost my lunch at the four minute mark. Words don’t do it justice. Just pick it up, amigo!

Thomas J – Drop The Bomb (LAZRtag Remix): LISTEN TO IT HERE


This is gonna be goood…………………………..xx 

 


Follow Scott Willats (SAWStruck) on Twitter

Scott’s Selections – Episode Four

September 22nd, 2011

 

Posted by Scott Willats

It’s back! The latest instalment of Scott’s Selections. Sorry for the wait, but this fourth episode is sure to bring the fire you’ve been missing — the very best in the world of electro house, with a strong emphasis on the Synth. So much good music to fall in love with its going to be hard to ever care about anything else again.

Ladies and gentlemen I present to you Scott’s Selections: An EDM Affair.


TRACKLIST

Electrixx – Crispy Cake

James Egbert – Isle of Capri

Alex Gopher – Virages

BIG TUNE! Dillon Francis and Cory Enemy – Who the F*** Are You

Fukkk Offf – The Bottom

Airbeat One Project - Airbeat Army

Foster the People – Pumped up Kicks (Skeet Skeet Remix)


 

J’adore, mi amor … EDM


Follow Scott Willats (SAWStruck) on Twitter

Live Review: Designer Drugs

June 13th, 2011

Designer Drugs @ Mod Club, Toronto: June 10, 2011

Reviewed by Scott Willats

With the spring season in full effect, Toronto has been a hotbed for electro artists of all sorts over the past month. It feels like every other night the amazing people at Embrace are throwing a crazy event featuring some of the world’s best up-and-comers in the new music scene. Friday night was no exception, hosting three very different concerts throughout our mean streets. The one I chose featured a group that is a personal favourite of mine — and in hindsight, I believe I chose the best venue.

For the past year and half the New York duo Designer Drugs have been thumping out sick remixes every two weeks. Along with a debut album Hardcore/Softcore and their insane mixtapes, The Data Mix Collections, these two New York hoodlums have been destroying the North American scene with their pop-banger glamour glitz feel. However they have also been pigeonholed and stuck into the zone our scene struggles with, and that’s our genre ‘snobbiness.”  Many fans they have, yes — but they equal that with critics. Some believe them to be true electro and gifted performers, while others claim they’re a little overhyped. I was able to leave all prejudice behind and see how these two “Goodfellas” were going to treat Toronto.

As I stated before, the weekends are fast and furious lately, with many options of venues to attend. Designer Drugs would, on any other night, be the prime target for almost any electro fan — but the man of the hour, Julio Bashmore (another Embrace event), was only a couple of streets down at Wrongbar, and it left many fans with a tugging decision. So to be quite fair, I must say the turnout for Designer Drugs was a little upsetting. Maybe I hold these two a little higher in my regard that the majority — but I was expecting a lineup of fans sprawling to Christie Street, and instead it was very spacious at the beginning. Still, that wasn’t going to affect the mood: some of the best sets I’ve ever heard have been performed for small crowds, and usually you’ll get a much more intimate feel.

A few drinks later and we’re preparing for them to take the stage, when to my surprise only one of the tag team duo comes out.  Michael Vincent Patrick was the only DJ on the Pioneers.  I never got the story of what had happened, but Theodore Paul Nelson was nowhere to be found.  Music is music, but when you’re attending a show you’ve been looking forward to for a while, it’s natural to feel a little disappointed when only half of the act shows up.  I must admit, I was thinking, “Was Julio Bashmore the better place to be?” My answer would come shortly.

Not a chance in hell! That’s what Designer Drugs do to you when they hit their peak. They put you in a zone where the heat from the speakers is the same flame that blazes in hell. The set was fire. Michael Vincent Patrick, or MVP, never stopped moving once he took over the decks.

Some DJs let the music speak for them, and some DJs act as fans as well — or at least inspire you with their stage presence (eg. Steve Aoki). The music MVP played was some of the best trashy electro I’ve heard in 2011. The theme song being “Drop Down,” which got us in that very dramatic, Goth-like mood. The hard claps and pounding bass kept everyone’s heads bobbing at 128 beat per minute. The IAMX remix came on, and the vocals had everyone screaming out. The Klaxons remix did more of the same. And then, like Lebron James in that zone where he can’t miss, Michael Vincent Patrick just blacked out: 30 minutes of cuts and slices of songs that we (or at least I) have never heard before. He never let a song play more than 1:30, and never let us miss the best part of every track. The crowd rushed the stage, and just when there were more people up there than in the crowd … silence. Designer Drugs killed the show so bad that the music stopped, as someone raving too hard dislodged a cable. It was Epic.

It was a great moment, but it did take away from his momentum, and as candid as it was I think it would have had to upset him.  However, the show went on and the beats continued.  ”Antonio” raised the energy, “Zombies” turned us into zombies, and “Facemelter” melted our faces.  The biggest tune of the night, other than some he bumped during his “blackout,” was a song I need you to take home: “Dead Meat” is easily one of Designer Drugs’ theme songs, and a track instantly recognizable to those who know them — but the Fukkk Offf remix is something special.  The heavy bass wobble at the end, the screaming in the middle … it just sounds so BIG! LISTEN TO IT HERE.

A highlight of the night for me was running into an up-and-coming Toronto producer who goes by the name SposhRock. I’m sure some of you are familiar with the young prodigy, and it was good to get a producer’s opinion of the state of the genre right now. A huge thanks has to go out to the people at Embrace who continue to bring the best acts to the city. The definition of consistency. Sitting beside a 19-year-old who is sure to be performing these venues and listening to some of North America’s best new talents, it’s safe to say: these Designer Drugs don’t leave u sketchy, but like their namesake they keep you craving for more!

Scott Willats can be seen on bpm Spotlight, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8:30 pm ET. CHECK OUT HIS TUMBLR!