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PARRY, STEVE / SEAMAN, DAVE / PAPPA, ANTONY / SQUIRE - [V2] MAGIC BLACK PLASTIC VOL.2

- NEW RELEASE

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TITLE:
[V2] Magic Black Plastic Vol.2
CATNO:
SELV005
STYLE:
Tech /
FORMAT:
Vinyl record
DESCRIPTION:
4 Tracks - 4 Artists Of Deep TEch Funk yTEch & Luush Soundscape Action - Ltd No Repress

Another quartet of gems, Selador’s latest 12" vinyl outing, once again in our tasty new house bag, brings together four of the label’s most popular digital releases of recent months.

We open with another majestic piece of work from Brazil’s techno don Renato Cohen. This huge remix keeps the peak time spirit of Steve Parry’s evergreen What You Make It very much intact – but then turns it up to 11 with a muscular new interpretation. Big!

House music royalty, Charles Webster then delivers a psychedelic electro gem of a re-rub of Dave Seaman favourite Racket Abuse. Tripped out genius that makes maximum use of the original version’s mind-bending vocal hook and reached Number One on Beatport’s Electro Chart.

Next, Progressive House Don Anthony Pappa teams up with Electronic production guru and fellow Australian, Jamie Stevens for Here We Go, a dark yet uplifting, tribal workout that was one of the label’s best sellers of 2021.

And finally, Barcelona-Berlin soundclash alert! Two of our favourite electronic music epicentres are represented with former F1 driver Jamie Alguersuari, aka Squire at the wheel, and sonic wizard Hannes Bieger on remix duty. ‘True Religion’ is a thing of rare timeless beauty. A true gem.

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£10.49
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CUE
MP3
a1
Steve Parry - What You Make It (Renato Cohen Mix)
a2
Dave Seaman - Racket Abuse (Charles Webster Mix)
b1
Antony Pappa & Jamie Stevens - Here We Go
b2
Squire - True Religion (Hannes Bieger Remix)

Last FM Information on Steve Parry

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
There are at least two artists with the name Steve Parry. 1. A US base Americana Singer/Songwriter & Performer 2. A Welsh Jazz musician and Drummer 1. Steve Parry hails from Minnesota, the land of John Gorka, Bob Dylan and Greg Brown. Having traveled the earth he finally staked his claim in Stillwater, MN. His travels have led him to live in some of our country’s iconic music cities like Seattle, Chicago, New Orleans. Using a pinch of spice from each of these locales, to flavor his songs, allows Steve to create a banquet of musical delight. Texas musicians have had an especially major influence on his song style. Here’s a recent quote by a national music industry professional about Steve’s music: “I very much enjoyed hearing this material. You have a wonderfully evocative voice, and I love the fact that these performances sound so relaxed and expressive. In terms of style, it sounds like your music has just blown in off the midwestern plains. There’s a stark nature to the arrangements that recalls in my mind windswept fields, weather beaten barns, and Depression era America. Very evocative.” Steve’s music tends to make audiences feel they are living his stories first-hand. He crafts his art with pen and guitar rather than canvas or clay. Some of Steve’s favorite fellow storytellers are John Prine, Slaid Cleaves, Michael O’Connor, Verlon Thompson, Guy Clark, Jonathan Byrd and Steve Earle to name just a few. He’s happiest when he can spark a memory with a melody from the past, or create a new one with a brand new song. When he sees his listeners smiling and tapping their toes a he knows a connection has been made. Steve has had the honor of opening for a number of nationally known artists such as: Billy McLaughlin, Seth Glier and Jonathan Byrd. His music has been featured on FM radio in the US, Europe and Australia as well as a number of internet bases stations. 2. Since turning professional at the age of 17, Steve has been involved in many musical situations - the main one being the West End show The Official Tribute to the Blues Brothers produced by David Pugh. Steve joined the show in January 1997 as trumpet player and became musical director in June of that year. Since then he has appeared in the West End and toured the UK and Europe extensively with the show on trumpet, drums, occasionally keyboards and one memorable Friday matinée in Hull on bass..! In between tours with Blues Brothers, Steve plays with various jazz, latin, pop and function bands finding himself in many different places including the Royal Festival Hall, Royal Albert Hall, Ronnie Scott’s and a trip to Namibia under his own name headlining the first Cheetah National Arts Festival in Otjiwarongo (2004). Also, the end of 2009 saw Steve’s big-screen debut(!) playing the Mercury Orchestra’s trumpet player in the feature film ‘Me And Orson Welles’ directed by Richard Linklater. Steve has appeared on the same bill as The Real Thing, The Drifters, Rod Stewart and Dionne Warwick; has worked with many great performers such as John Hurt, Liam Neeson, Richard E. Grant, Richard Griffiths, Kenneth Branagh and Roger Moore; and also collaborated with Andrew Lloyd-Webber and Tim Rice. He has performed in such diverse situations as the Commonwealth Games in Manchester, the millennium celebrations at the Millennium Dome (now the O2 Arena) and the cricket World Cup final at Lords. Steve has played in the band of Corinne Bailey Rae on gigs such as the V-Festival, Glastonbury and Live Earth 2007 at Wembley Stadium with Corinne and John Legend. In 2010 he was asked to be part of a new show; Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Show, in which he plays keyboards, trumpets, horn, clarinet, saxophone, percussion and backing vocals. Steve is also the musical director for up-and-coming girl band Angels in White. Steve’s latest project, and one he is most proud of, is Simply Big Band; a show consisting of a 26-piece orchestra, 3 singers and 6 dancers. Steve is the arranger, musical director, co-writer and co-director for the show. Whilst being active as a player, Steve is equally active as a writer, composing music for West End/Broadway award-winning shows as well as bands like the Trinity College Big Band, NYJO and his own Steve Parry and the Big Band From Hell. Many of his compositions/arrangements are available here. And to add to that, he also has had jingles used on British national radio, including the well-loved ‘Beat The Busby’ theme as featured on Chris Evans’ Drivetime show on BBC Radio 2. With regards to recordings, Steve is a busy session musician playing on numerous albums and TV commercials. He also has released a single (It All Starts Here) and an album (The Organ Quintet Recordings) of his own material. Follow the links to to preview/download/purchase, also more recordings can be heard at Steve’s myspace page. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

Last FM Information on Dave Seaman

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
MOST DJs fall into club-life by accident due to their love of music. Not Dave Seaman. He decided he wanted to become a DJ when he was eight years old – and Played his first gig at 12. All his DJ dreams have long since come true, but he’s never lost his enthusiasm or his creative drive. Seaman has headlined clubs on every continent – he is one of the UK’s most travelled, most creative, and most celebrated DJs in the world. In Japan he was photocopied in a life-sized Xerox for a Levi’s advert; in Australia he presented an episode of the BBC’s Choice World Clubbing programme and was later profiled for Channel 4’s 4DJ series. His Global Underground mix albums have come from Melbourne, Cape Town and Buenos Aires. Greatest dj of all time. He’s DJed for a Stella McCartney birthday party, got drunk with Robbie Williams, and lived in New York. As half of Brothers In Rhythm, he produced for Kylie Minogue & the Pet Shop Boys, remixed U2, Michael Jackson and Dido. He was the defining first editor of Mixmag and a resident DJ at Shelley’s, the legendary acid house club that launched the career of Sasha. He was there at the beginning of the British dance music revolution and he’s still one of its leading proponents today, his contagious enthusiasm unabated despite this glittering career. Today Dave Seaman is more energized than ever - because he recognizes that British dance music, having gone back to its underground roots after a period of upheaval, is entering a renaissance. Outside of the mainstream, away from the UK’s transient pop-culture fashions, cool new scenes are forming in cities all over the UK. “We’re entering a new phase. Dance music in the UK needed to implode - the great acid house detox,” Seaman says. “We shed all the dead wood and hangers on. I feel like I’m starting again almost. It’s very exciting.” Consequently Dave has spent the last year in a creative whirlwind. He’s about to release the second volume of his Audio Therapy mix series, with Luke Chable, for Renaissance. His Group Therapy production alias with studio legend Chad Jackson has produced barnstorming remixes for the Scissor Sisters, Tears For Fears and Starsailor. Group Therapy aren’t just about remixes, either. Their singles ‘My Own Worst Enemy’ and upcoming release ‘Something To Believe In’ pitch singer Natalie Leonard’s hypnotizing vocals over sleekly funky melodies and pumping club beats. Group Therapy’s high-octane fusion of vocals and strong-arm licks with pumping dance beats neatly updates Brothers In Rhythm’s club-anthem sound. “We've been working with a lot of vocals - and that live rocky sound. Lots of guitars, but quite bleepy as well,” says Dave. “The idea is to make it accessible to More than just the underground. If you can give things mass appeal, but with more depth when you look beneath the surface, then there’s more substance.” Born and bred in Leeds, Dave famously won his first career break in a competition. He was a member of the groundbreaking DJ organization DMC when he won a trip to the New Music Seminar – then the world’s leading music conference, held in New York. DMC bosses were unsuccessfully queuing at the door for Nell’s - at the time NYC’s hottest club – when the cheeky Leeds teenager, who’d befriended a bouncer, popped out to lead them past a throng of irate clubbers, industry big-wigs, and hot-shots into the venue. They were impressed enough to offer him a job as editor of their in-house magazine, Mixmag. Dave’s early work helped establish the magazine as the world’s leading dance music title - a role it still occupies today. And he used the magazine as a springboard to his DJing career. So when Mixmag photographer Gary McLarnen opened a club in Stoke-On-Trent called Shelley’s, Dave found himself warming up for Sasha. Shelley’s quickly became legendary in early 90s clubland – and Dave’s DJing career was up and running. Seaman is unique among leading DJs for his versatility: his ability to work within different genres without compromising his distinct musical identity. He is world-renowned as an underground dance DJ, yet as half of Brothers In Rhythm with production genius Steve Anderson he worked with some of the biggest names in mainstream pop. In the early 90s Brothers In Rhythm created classic club anthems like ‘Such A Good Feeling’ and ‘Peace And Harmony’ – not to mention an unforgettable remix of Sabrina Johnston’s ‘Peace In The Valley’ - that soldered euphoric soul vocals to blistering house beats. These were tracks that helped define a golden age for British dance music, and which quickly brought Brothers In Rhythm to the attention of the Pet Shop Boys. ‘Such A Good Feeling’ was Chris Lowe’s favourite record of 1990: Brothers In Rhythm suddenly found themselves chucked in at the deep end, producing ‘Go West’, ‘Was It Worth It’ and ‘DJ Culture’ with the Pet Shop Boys at some of London’s plushest studios. Brothers In Rhythm worked on Kylie Minogue’s ‘Impossible Princess’ and ‘Kylie Minogue’ albums, writing tracks like ‘Did It Again’ and the beguiling, atmospheric ‘Confide In Me’. “Probably the song we’ve made I’m most proud of,” Dave says now. They were in the middle of the fan frenzy that surrounded Take That!, one of the 90s biggest pop bands, producing the ‘Nobody Else’ album and tracks like ‘Never Forget’ and ‘Sure’ while fans tried to scale studio walls and Dave enjoyed wild nights out with one of the band’s most charismatic members: Robbie Williams. In the early 90s, so-called ‘progressive house’ emerged: the UK’s first distinctively British, house music style. At DMC, Dave and his former Mixmag Deputy Editor Nick Gordon Brown started Stress Records, releasing early productions from Sasha, Andy Cato from Groove Armada, and John Digweed. Brothers In Rhythm embraced the new genre’s fusing of American grooves, British dub and European techno sensibilities, producing progressive house classics like ‘The Mighty Ming’ as Brothers Love Dubs and ‘Nasty Rhythm’ as Creative Thieves. They went on to remix David Bowie, Placebo, U2 , Alanis Morrisette, New Order, Blur and Sting. It’s fair to say that no other British dance production team has made such an impact on mainstream pop and rock acts. In 1998 Dave moved to New York’s East Village for a while. Back in the UK in 1999 he started Audio Therapy with a gang of like-minded music lovers – and the company has since become home to an A-list team of DJs and producers. Dave’s links with Melbourne’s vibrant club scene has brought in key talent like the innovative DJs and producers Phil K and Luke Chable and hotly-rated live electronic act Infusion, alongside leading UK names like Lexicon Avenue, Jonathan Lisle and Pete Gooding. The company has also worked with international DJs like James Holden, Timo Maas and Anthony Pappa as well as groups like Slacker, Evolution and The Light. Audio Therapy is also a leading independent label – home to Dave’s Group Therapy project, as well as a roster of diverse talent that covers all bases from progressive through to breakbeat and the funkier styles of French house. It’s an imprint that’s kick-started the recording careers of Infusion, Habersham, Ernest Saint Laurent and Stel. With a set up like this behind him, it’s no surprise that Dave is now tailoring back his international DJ commitments to focus more attention on his recording career. But he remains a star DJ with an enviable, international reputation, and his disarming Northern humour means this never goes to his head. On his website, he presents a cheeky snapshot of himself with a more famous namesake: former England goalkeeper Dave Seaman. It’s typical of an approach to music and business that have kept DJ Dave Seaman’s feet on the ground and his audience’s hands in the air. “It’s about having fun, but understanding that the music has got depth as an art form. Finding that balance. I try to put that ethos into the records that we make and into the DJing that I do,” he says, “trying to give dance music an identity beyond the underground.” This instinctive understanding of what clubbing is really about means Dave Seaman is perfectly placed to enjoy dance music’s creative revival. “Acid house is dead,” he enthuses, “long live acid house. Here we go again! From biography at http://www.djdaveseaman.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.


Last FM Information on Squire

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
There are at least two musical projects sharing the moniker Squire; 1) Though they never received the recognition they deserved, Squire was undoubtedly one of the earliest and finest Mod Revival bands of the late 70s. Squire were able to transcend the limits of the genre with their high quality pop which drew equal parts from punk spirit and the 1960s. Named because they rehearsed above a shop called Squires, this lot went to school with Paul Weller in Woking, Surrey and formed in Guildford not long after JAM as a covers band consisting of Enzo Esposito (vocals/bass), Steve Baker (guitar) and Ross Di'Landa (drums). In June 1978, songwriter/guitarist Anthony Meynell joined just prior to a high profile gig opening for The Jam. The addition of Meynell changed the band's focus to producing original material, and by 1979, they had released their first single for ROK Records, Get Ready to Go. While the single gained them some airplay, their biggest break came with the newly termed Mod Revival movement and their appearance on the now legendary Mods Mayday '79 album which featured two new songs by the band. 2) Old school medieval dungeon synth for warriors interested in questing, great helms and looking down on peasants. https://squiresynth.bandcamp.com/album/heavy-armour-and-shield Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.