OUT NOW on Daly City Splatinum

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ARTIST: Splatinum
TITLE: We are Splatinum

CAT-NO: DCR149
FORMAT: Digital
RELEASE DATE: 04/20/2010

WE ARE SPLATINUM is fueled with the alien technology known as “Der Schplatzl.” Cohorts Andrew Luck and Dosadi crush retro rave, dubstep and synth pop into Voltronic Daft Crunk in their premiere collaborative release. These 9 tracks pulse with iridescent harmonic leads and face punching monster truck bass lines. Leave your goatee and track shoes at home: there is no chin scratching or shoe gazing as Splatinum breaks down the door, lasers blazing and bass bins raging.

ARTIST: Monk Fly
TITLE: The Far Side of Zen
LABEL: Daly City Records
CAT-NO: DCR146
FORMAT: Digital
RELEASE DATE: 02/02/2010

Deceptikon featured in The Seattle Stranger!

Dave Segal wrote a very favorable feature about Mythology of the Metropolis in this week’s issue of The Stranger!

Former Seattle denizen Deceptikon (aka Zack Wright) now dwells in San Francisco, but he remains a well-liked figure in the Emerald City and often returns here to ply his finely crafted cuts. His new album, Mythology of the Metropolis (Daly City Records; www.dalycityrecords.com), is now available on the major digital retail sites and is selling like proverbial hot bytes.

Mythology of the Metropolis consists of 14 examples of crisp, vibrant, post-Dilla instrumental hiphop, with flashes of pretty IDM melodies and late-’00s bass wobble. Deceptikon keeps the head-nod factor high while wrenching out some interesting, exotic melodies. “Echolocation” genuflects to the Far East with its fluttering, quasi-Zen garden motif (à la Philip Glass in his Mishima soundtrack) set amid splatting, stalwart funk beats. “Indo Loops” also is riveting, with its distorted (presumably Indian) chant warbling over a sinuous synth drone, staunch Madlib-elous clapper beats, and furious, pitch-shifted tabla slaps. “The Fall of Humanity” majestically glides like 1977 Kraftwerk, while “Dissolving in Acid” lives up to its title, running crinkly Roland 303 squiggles through a dense thicket of kick-drum thump and toxic squalls of low-end pressure. “Broken Synthesizers” growls and bristles like a peak-time Cannibal Ox/El-P joint.

Along with similar works like Flying Lotus’s Los Angeles, Mux Mool’s Skulltaste, Nosaj Thing’s Drift, and Free the Robots’ Ctrl Alt Delete, Mythology of the Metropolis is mapping out a fertile field where IDM and dubstep’s textural playfulness and extremity tampers with hiphop’s rhythmic parameters, but without causing fissures in its essential funkiness. Exciting times, indeed.

Thanks Dave!