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Artist
Karen Gwyer
ReleaseProduct
Rembo
Label
Don't Be Afraid
Catalogue Number
DBALP003
Release Date
21 juillet 2017

Instant MP3 download with all Vinyl purchases.

Genres

Having racked up one of our Albums Of The Year back in 2013 with Needs Continuum, Karen Gwyer's latest full-length offering lands via her recently acquainted new home of Semtek's Don't Be Afraid imprint. Not content with just building on her previous LP and split single with Beatrice Dillon, Rembo cements Gwyer's reputation as one of the most invigoratingly strong voices operating within techno today.

Built upon the foundations of the classic science fiction cycle of UR, the Berlin scene-outsider sound favourited by Workshop luminaries Willow, Kassem Mosse and more recently Ozel AB, Karen Gwyer's spin on the well-trodden path of 4x4 funk has a strikingly singular feel to it, educated by time and a vast understanding of what makes a beat tick over and over and over, Rembo carries a flare that can only come from a well-traversed mind that's been submerged deep within the scene for a long time.

While it certainly is a 'techno' album per se, it's a techno album that functions in the dimensions of functioning as an actual 'album'. Each track, when played in the right context will be a sure shot addition to any DJ's set, yet also has the knack of providing a platform for long evenings sitting in the flat, annoying the neighbours while impressing your mates with the no-nonsense sounds firing out of your stereo.

Tracks like The Workers Are on Strike are pure Detroit dreaming, the pads giving a street gazing view as seen out of a car trawling through the nighttime world occupied by Terrence Dixon, while Why Does Your Father Look so Nervous? tracks down the straight edged crack of the very best Marcel Dettmann bangers and throws down some serious hardcore mission. He's Been Teaching Me to Drive mixes up industrial techno with a strong electro pulse to find the drums literally hammering the speakers with a powerful intensity and skittering breakbeat rhythm that sounds like DJ Stingray mixing jungle.

Much like LNS, Umfang and Nkisi, Karen Gwyer is teaching us a serious lesson of what constitutes good techno in 2017, make no mistake Rembo really is the business.

Liste de titres pour édition numérique

  1. 1 Why Is There a Long Line in Front of the Factory? 3:44 Acheter

    Why Is There a Long Line in Front of the Factory?

  2. 2 The Workers Are on Strike 7:11 Acheter
  3. 3 Why Don't You Make Your Bed? 5:52 Acheter
  4. 4 It's Not Worth the Bother 1:59 Acheter
  5. 5 Why Does Your Father Look so Nervous? 5:44 Acheter

    Why Does Your Father Look so Nervous?

  6. 6 He's Been Teaching Me to Drive 7:55 Acheter

    He's Been Teaching Me to Drive

  7. 7 Did You Hear the Owls Last Night? 3:59 Acheter

    Did You Hear the Owls Last Night?

  8. 8 Yes, but I Didn't Know They Were Owls 2:48 Acheter

    Yes, but I Didn't Know They Were Owls

Karen Gwyer

Don't Be Afraid

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Experimental House and Techno

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Dancefloor and Techno

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Album of the Week

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