Tuesday 17 November 2009

Teutonic Tones mix by Mustapha Dance



Teutonic Tones comprises a few mots doux to an earlier time, Bowie had arrived and left Kreuzberg, the Wall was still standing (just) and analogue synthesizers and New Wave were fusing to create the Neue Deutsche Welle.

Düsseldorf's favourite sons, Kraftwerk, are not present on this mix - but not through a lack of love. Although the shadow of their oeuvre looms large, the idea of the mix was to segue some less well known exponents of NDW and their European contemporaries with modern acts who have been influenced by this era.

Here are the Liebesgeflüstern

Teutonic Tones by adamsrob

If you like this you can find more at www.soundcloud.com/adamsrob.

Track-listing available on request.

Rob Adams

Saturday 14 November 2009

Atta-Girl! mix by John Napier



Bringing a bit of well-needed variety to Birmingham's night life is Island Bar's Atta Girl! club night. Held roughly once a month the Atta-Girl DJs spin a mixture of Indie, Post Punk and the occassional slice of Disco with a heavy bias towards female vocalists.

Women in music are always grossly under-represented and under-rated and since I'll be DJing there in the new year the opportunity to do my own mix of some of my favourite female-led groups seemed too good an opportunity to miss. So here it is, my Atta Girl mix, featuring the likes of Patti Smith, The B-52's, Tom Tom Club and a few surprises thrown in there too:

Atta Girl Mix (Part 1) by John Napier by Jugend Klub

Track-listing available on request.

John Napier

Saturday 7 November 2009

Paost Punk 78-86



FACT Magazine continue their excellent features with Built On Sand, an essay and mix on Birmingham's nascent post punk scene between '78 and '86 by Karl O'Connor AKA Regis.

It features some of the region's finest, such as Solihull's Swell Maps, Bearwood's Au Pairs and Handsworth's Steel Pulse as well as some criminally under-rated acts.

In additon to the fine mix - Anthony Burnham's sleevenotes profile each band and considers the Brum Problem, how a foggy cultural identity created 'a bermuda triangle' of music culture that John Peel was keen to shed a light on.

Read the article at FACT Magazine

Rob Adams

Sunday 1 November 2009

"The Seduction Of Ingmar Bergman" - A new musical from Sparks.



If you're into your new wave and left-field 80s pop you will no doubt have heard of the unique and brilliant duo, Sparks. Famous for camp and often operatic hits such as their debut "This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us", it was perhaps not a total surprise to hear that their newest project is a Musical with a typically eccentric concept: An imaginary event in the life of Swedish director par excellence Ingmar Bergman.

The subject matter is perhaps not to everyone's tastes (it hardly screams chart success!) but it was really encouraging to see some pop veterans try something new, and even more encouraging that it should be supported by national radio, which is something that Sparks were very keen to remark upon in the question and answer session that immediately followed the playing of the piece. When asked why they had not plumped for the traditional pop album format, frontman Russel Mael (the younger of the two Sparks brothers) explained that he believed the whole approach to pop music was "broken" and that there no longer seemed to be any way of surprising people with the verse-chorus-verse-chorus, ten-songs-on-an-album format that people have become so used to.

So were Sparks themselves able to surprise an audience? In many ways the music was what we have come to expect from this enigmatic duo, but this is hardly something to bemoan. There was plenty of melodrama to it - staying just the right side of camp - and a vast musical palette, veering from the lushly orchestral to the electronic with some occasional hard rock thrown in for good measure.

"The Seduction Of Ingmar Bergman" shows Sparks on top form. Still taking risks and showing new ways forward in pop music. Like Bergman in their own musical, Sparks, it seems, are no sell-outs.

The opening track from the musical can be heard on their myspace.

John Napier