DJ-Kicks

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 22   Total Length: 74:38

eMusic Review 0

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Peter Shapiro

eMusic Contributor

07.06.11
Rivaling for best dance music mix of the year
2011 | Label: !K7 Records

Danilo Plessow, the 26-year-old Stuttgart resident behind Motor City Drum Ensemble, is one of the rare fusion-influenced dance music producers whose records don’t disappear into noodly cosmic nonsense. Plessow has an affinity for the deeper, jazzier sounds of Chicago and Detroit techno and house and their influences, anchoring his MCDE with powerful disco- and hip-hop-influenced rhythms. MCDE’s contribution to the venerable DJ-Kicks series is no different: The astral-plane jazz vibe of artists like Peven Everett, Recloose and Finnish sax player Timo Lassy is simply texture at the service of the immaculately crafted groove that runs down the spine of this often breathtaking mix.

The groove is not simply a banging 4/4, though; it begins as a spectral haze (a stunning opening passage that encompasses a Sun Ra chant, Rhythm & Sound’s ghostly reggae and Tony Allen’s Afrobeat classic “Ariya”) that slowly builds in momentum through vintage house and disco (Mr. Fingers and the instrumental dub of Stone’s “Girl I Like The Way That You Move”) to a pulsating peak comprised of a brilliant blend Robert Hood’s jacking “The Pace”, Arthur Russell’s superlatively weird “Pop Your Funk” and disco pioneer Walter Gibbons’s juju mix of Arts & Crafts’ “I’ve Been Searching.” Inventive,… read more »

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Best DJ edits ever

Swoppy

Holy cow this is good. I thought Trus' Me was pretty dope when I first heard his stuff, but this takes the idea of druggy disco to another plane of reality altogether. Don't worry about the 'album only download' restriction - you're better off with the whole shebang than worrying about your nickles and dimes. I mean Sun Ra and Aphex Twin on the same tip and sounding like they were made for each other? Who even thinks such things let alone gets away with it? Awesome!

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Deep and Powerful

sixtwentysix

Wow, what a great collection. Lots of power. Really took me back.

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Great mix

Vinster

A very soulful, uplifting mix spanning, inter alia, jazz, beats, funk and techno. I feel the middle part slightly loses its upbeat soulful feel, but nevertheless, still a killer mix as there are great moments throughout.

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Solid Mix

GraveyardGhost

OK, it's more than solid, it's pretty damn great . . I didn't want to get effusive in the title of the review. This is a very eclectic collection, but it flows like a skillfully crafted DJ Mix, rather than coming off as a mere "selection" - a fate that often befalls the overly diverse mixed CD. It is devastatingly soulful, with surprisingly satisfying juxtapositions. One of the best DJ Kicks.

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Great album

dkar

one of the best DJ Kicks Albums in a while. I'm only half way through listening to it, and already I can see this on my frequent play list.

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They Say All Music Guide

For the 36th edition of their venerable DJ Kicks series, K7 Records tapped producer/DJ Danilo Plessow, alias Motor City Drum Ensemble, an individual who hails not from Detroit but from the German automotive center of Stuttgart (home to Mercedes and Porsche). Though his fondness for the manifold classic grooves of America’s Motown is amply evident in his own productions and remixes — including, notably, the jazzy, funky Moodymann-indebted house workouts of his Raw Cuts series — that’s hardly the extent of his inspirations, as this mix makes clear. Indeed, Plessow’s brought together a dizzying array of tracks in nearly as many different styles: after an opening invocation from Sun Ra, he leads us on a freewheeling trip through soul (New Zealand’s Electric Wire Hustle, via an irresistibly slinky Scratch 22 remix), dub (Rhythm & Sound), Afro-beat (Tony Allen, Geraldo Pino), classic Chicago acid trax (Mr. Fingers), and Detroit techno (Robert Hood), deep house (Fred P.), funky disco (a Walter Gibbons mix of Arts & Crafts’ “I’ve Been Searching”), jazz (Timo Lassy), film music (Philippe Sarde’s chugging “Le Cortège et Course”), and even an unexpectedly funky, early Aphex Twin “ambient” work. Of course, genre names are just so many words, and these cuts all basically have more in common than they do differentiating them: shared roots in African-American musical vernacular, of course, for one thing, but above all, in a word: groove. As you might imagine, Plessow simply finds that shared groove (at least, he makes it sound simple) and runs with it, keeping his transitions fluid, clean, and remarkably smooth. Actually, if there’s a complaint to be lodged here it’s that the mix is a little too seamless: too few tracks really manage to stick out above the generally high-quality, head-nodding flow, especially after about 20 minutes when things really start to simmer. In fact, perhaps the most startling, ear-catching moment here — the acid-squelch synth that unexpectedly burbles up in Isolée’s monstrously funky mix of Recloose’s “Cardiology” — turns out to belong to the original track. In keeping with DJ Kicks tradition, MCDE also contribute a bespoke new production, “L.O.V.E.,” a no-nonsense funky strutter that effectively distills the essence of the entire affair, minimal and a bit murky, but still grittily satisfying. Perhaps most readily comparable to Henrik Schwarz’s 2006 installment in the series (though it doesn’t quite reach that mix’s level of soulful spirituality, focusing more exclusively on groove and moody ambience), Plessow clinches yet another feather in K7′s towering cap: one that’s smartly assembled, artfully sequenced, impeccably tasteful, and indelibly tasty. – K. Ross Hoffman

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