Catalogue#: CRMLP046
April 30, 2021
Read more
Surface Tension is a rebellion against short attention spans and a metaphor for escaping addiction to technology and the grip of societal oppression. It’s an immersive experience best enjoyed with a good pair of headphones, your eyes closed and your imagination open.
It was very exciting to create this fictional world brick by brick (metaphorically), spending hours searching for the sounds of traffic, chatter, doors opening and the sounds of machines. We went out making field recordings around the world while we were on tour, in the streets, on subways, on the back of motorcycles, in the forest or at the beach. Musically it was a breath of fresh air to step away from the dance floor focused four four music that had dominated our creative output over the last decade.
The internet makes things like this pretty straight forward, it took a little time getting used to but ultimately, we’re in a good state of flow with it now.
It’s been 12 years since your last album. You’ve been incredibly prolific in this time, but how come you’ve waited so long to put together another LP?
At the time of our first album, the move from CDs and vinyl to digital music meant that people stopped buying dance music albums and just cherry picked the tunes they liked to download, which made electronic LP’s a waste of time for the artist. We stuck to making EPs instead which worked out better for us for a long time but the urge to make something more deep and meaningful was always there. When streaming took over as the main way the public were consuming music, electronic albums became relevant again so we decided it was time.
Absolutely, we’re writing songs as a small part of a bigger piece of work so that always drives the creative process. It’s like building a DJ set, the music needs to work one track after another and then all amount to a cohesive piece of work that makes sense as a whole. Putting it all together into one long form story was stepping into different territory from the typical modality of writing singles for DJs and ravers as well. Hopefully people will share our vision, take the time to shut out the outside world and immerse themselves in this experience for an hour.
2 x 12" Vinyl + Download
Audiojack
Crosstown Rebels
Catalogue#: CRMLP046
Release Date : April 30, 2021
2 x 12" Vinyl + Download
Read more
Surface Tension is a rebellion against short attention spans and a metaphor for escaping addiction to technology and the grip of societal oppression. It’s an immersive experience best enjoyed with a good pair of headphones, your eyes closed and your imagination open.
It was very exciting to create this fictional world brick by brick (metaphorically), spending hours searching for the sounds of traffic, chatter, doors opening and the sounds of machines. We went out making field recordings around the world while we were on tour, in the streets, on subways, on the back of motorcycles, in the forest or at the beach. Musically it was a breath of fresh air to step away from the dance floor focused four four music that had dominated our creative output over the last decade.
The internet makes things like this pretty straight forward, it took a little time getting used to but ultimately, we’re in a good state of flow with it now.
It’s been 12 years since your last album. You’ve been incredibly prolific in this time, but how come you’ve waited so long to put together another LP?
At the time of our first album, the move from CDs and vinyl to digital music meant that people stopped buying dance music albums and just cherry picked the tunes they liked to download, which made electronic LP’s a waste of time for the artist. We stuck to making EPs instead which worked out better for us for a long time but the urge to make something more deep and meaningful was always there. When streaming took over as the main way the public were consuming music, electronic albums became relevant again so we decided it was time.
Absolutely, we’re writing songs as a small part of a bigger piece of work so that always drives the creative process. It’s like building a DJ set, the music needs to work one track after another and then all amount to a cohesive piece of work that makes sense as a whole. Putting it all together into one long form story was stepping into different territory from the typical modality of writing singles for DJs and ravers as well. Hopefully people will share our vision, take the time to shut out the outside world and immerse themselves in this experience for an hour.