Sunday, September 4, 2011

SHREM'S 50 WOMEN OF HIS LIFE: 7 - Kayah

7 - KayahCOUNTRY: Poland

FAVOURITE ALBUM: "Kamień"FAVOURITE REMIX: "Cien Anioła Stróża (Remix)"


FAVOURITE ARTWORK: "Kayah & Royal Quartet"FAVOURITE VIDEO: "Jak skała"



TOP 30 FAVOURITE SONGS:

30- "Wiosna przyjdzie i tak"
29- "Śpij Kochanie, Śpij" - with Goran Bregović
28- "Testosteron"
27- "Na językach"
26- "Hit" - with Michał Urbaniak & Rejs
25- "Wszystko skonczyło się"
24- "Topielice (Ganges Mix)"
23- "Nigdy się nie dowiem czy"
22- "Za późno"
21-
"Kiedy Mówisz (Unplugged)" - with Anna Maria Jopek
**********
20- "Jestem kamieniem"
19- "Jutro rano" - with Smolik
18- "Twoja dłon"
17- "C
óreczko"
16- "Cicho tu"
15- "Na wieki"
14- "Diamenty"
13- "Embarcacao" - with Cesária Évora
12- "Nie wiedziałam (O Synku)"
11- "Santana"
**********
10- "
Za blisko"
09- "Smutna kobieta"
08- "Cien Anioła Stróża (Remix)"
07- "Mądrala Mont Rala"
06- "Ja chcę Ciebie"
05- "Nie patrzysz"
04- "Nawet deszcz"
03- "Jaka Ja Kayah"
02- "Cogito Ergo Non Sum"
01- "Jak liść"





Kayah - "Cogito Ergo Non Sum" by SHREM

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Saturday, September 3, 2011

SHREM'S CLUB BIZARRE INTRODUCING "WARM IN THE WINTER" + "BEAUTIFUL OBJECT" by Glass Candy



I/D/A///N/O///A/N/D///J/O/H/N/N/Y///J/E/W/E/L///A/R/E///B/A/C/K///E/V/E/R/Y/B/O/D/Y///!/!/! ///T/H/E///S/I/N/G/L/E///I/S///O/U/T///N/O/W///V/I/A///I/T/A/L/I/A/N/S///D/O////I/T///B/E/T/T/E/R///!///O/R/G/A/S/M/I/C/A/L/L/Y///G/O/O/D///!






CHOONS OF THE DAY: "What The Eyes Can't See EP" - Midnight Magic



Midnight Magic - 9-piece disco funk ensemble stole our hearts once before with their anthemic "Beam Me Up" last year. Along side Escort they dominate in reviving disco for the modern ears. Midnight Magic's superb leading vocalist Tiffany Roth stands out among the most talented female singers of the new generation. Check out their exciting 5-track new EP "What The Eyes Can't See" given away for free by the ever generous Scion A/V. "Calling Out" is my personal favourite.



Friday, September 2, 2011

SHREM'S FUTURE ANTHEMS: "CAIRO (Moullinex Remix)" - Kamp!



You could easily call them Polish answer to Cut Copy. They've been producing some of the coolest sound in my homeland, Poland for quite some time now remaining underground, under-appreciated and unsigned. Now they go international with the release of their Balearic tune "Cairo" via Discotexas, the single includes this pure joy of a put-your-hands-up-in-the-air remix by Moullinex. The summer is so not over yet.

Kamp! - Cairo (Moullinex Remix) by Moullinex



Thursday, September 1, 2011

PAN DI-DZIEJ VS GUS GUS

"Arabian Horse" - Gus Gus


If Björk is the queen and Sigur Rós are kings, then Gus Gus are definitely the dark princes of Icelandic experimental pop scene. This Reykjavík based art-collective-turned-band with an ever-changing line-up, has been pleasuring more demanding ears with mysterious, withdrawn and eerie club music for way over a decade now. After 15 years of perfecting their mixture of electronica and dark, haunting melodies Gus Gus still remain overlooked and criminally underrated, only known to an elite of listeners. Whether it's their take on post-trip-hop chill (look up “Superhuman”) or dancefloor anthem (the mighty “David”) it's always a hit, never a miss. Gus Gus deserves more recognition like no other Scandinavian group and as much I'd like to stay in this elitist club, I hope this album will bring them the commercial breakthrough they deserve. The faithful fans get a real treat here, despite the fact of more regular format of it. No lengthy, bass heavy tracks here, like on their previous effort, the enigmatic and hypnotic “24/7”, which carried some of concept album qualities. “Arabian Horse” sees further abandonment of their gritty, trippy house style for the pulsing, minimal techno beats full of smoke, volcanic dust and glacial snowstorms.



The album unleashes its force with the digital thunderstorm of “Selfoss”, one of the best instrumental tracks I have heard since Röyksopp's “The Drug”. It's severe and gloomy. The tension builds up for the first half of the track until the point when the sonic waves pass like an apocalyptic, yet cathartic, force of nature and leave us nearly deaf as the dust, the smoke and the snow settle. The following “Be with me” unveils album's reality of the haunting melodies against the economic techno beats that make sound “Arabian Horse” so matte and gray. I might be writing these under the influence by the striking image of the infuriated stallion on the album's cover. The hypnotic “Deep inside” throws in more trance synths that lower the gloomy clouds of ash gathering and constantly hovering over this long player. The club ready “Over” is Gus Gus' murky take on disco. The effect? A stripped down soul of the 21st century clubland. Moody, smoky vocals poured over a steel progressive beats turn the track sound like something you wouldn't be able to confine within the walls of a club. “Over” takes it outside, onto the great Icelandic plains where the nature, the folk mysticism and the industrial infrastructure coexist. The images from Sigur Rós' stunningly shot and edited documentary, “Heima”, spring into mind while listening to the most parts of album. The deserted industrial buildings and steel constructions slowly digested by the rust and growing into the volcanic landscapes somehow would make a perfect dancefloor for this album. The sweaty title track brings us back inside, to another extreme of a claustrophobic space haunted by Daníel Ágúst's ghostly voice. The recurring accordion solos (in “Selfloss” and “Deep Inside”) seem to be a clear nod to Iceland's folk, mysticism and troublemaking nature. After this harshness of an album, we're being shipped off the island with “Benched”, a sentimental twin to the opening track. A soothing send-off.


Last year Gus Gus closed a long artistic period with the “15 Ára” compilation and now they've opened the next chapter with this near perfect production. “Arabian Horse” is a fantastic album and one of the best of all this year so far. The only sin of this release is its lack of diversity, which makes it hard to listen from the beginning to the end, without loosing the interest. Some tricks get repeated, coming back in the second part as a distant echo of the ideas from the side A. “Changes come” is forgettable, unnecessary even. That doesn't mean the quality drops drastically near the finishing line, but some songs differ from each other so little, circulating around the same formula and amid the homogenous sound. But given that nowadays it is very hard to find an album that is both diverse and perfect from the start to finish, “Arabian Horse” is above anything that came out lately. A monolith album that creates its own universe and another electronic ode to Iceland. The gray colour never sounded so good.


[9.5/10]

Piotrek Czarnecki
(nosnobsallowed.tv)





SHREM'S DOUBLE TROUBLE: "IN THIS SHIRT (Röyksopp Remix)" - The Irrepressibles /// "PLEASE STAY (Röyksopp Remix)" - Mekon


The Bergen wizards of electronica aka Röyksopp just have such a distinctive signature sound they always manage to gloriously apply to any song they have a chance to remix. The list of the artists that got this very fine Norwegian treatment is long and impressive (Peter Gabriel, Spiller, Annie, Beck, Eri Nobuchika, Felix da Housecat, Lady Gaga) but I chose two slightly less known examples. The first one is for the monumental "In this shirt" by The Irrepressibles (I couldn't resist and post that phenomenal video yet again!), Svein Berge and Torbjørn Brundtland are giving it away for free here. The second one is their epic take on Mekon's "Please Stay" that the boys eventually released as their own track called "Don't Go" (check out the live version below). Enjoy!