It is a truth universally acknowledged that in the lifetime of any
record label of note there will come a moment when the temptation to
pause and take a breather, to peek over one's shoulder and look back
at the massive pile of wee bangers, rollers, growlers, steppers, panel
beaters, hurters, heaters, and obnoxious little weapons will become
too great to resist. Time to announce, in other words, an extended
EP's worth of inHabit tunes. These remixes include fresh takes on firm favourites from our back catalogue being remixed by some illustrious producers of the scene who bust an absolute gut to put
confident, creative spins on the label's genesis. We hope you
enjoy these as much as we enjoyed putting this project together. We believe in this music and we're proud to have amassed the catalogue and the support we have over these past few years, and we're even prouder to have worked very closely with some incredibly cool humans along the way.
Objectiv puts his own twist on Echo Brown's “Stutter”, the
title track off his debut EP, and he really went the extra mile here,
teasing out pads, coarsening up basslines under layers of texture and
glitchy digital grit. Subdue & Georgia Rose's “Changes” gets a
facelift from Invadhertz, who turn in a quality dancefloor take on the original, balancing the breathy vocals with a bassline deeper than the Mariana Trench. Brain tackles fellow South American Dunk's “Vibration” and delivers something suitably gruesome that turns
relaxed yet relentless, and is sure to have knees knocking from
Bristol to Brazil. Ill Truth's take on Azrah's “Sines” and turns it into
an assault course in audio form, and rounding off what we think is a
ridiculously good collection of tunes, GEST takes Rizzle's “Sense”,
stuffs it full of firecrackers, lights them all off a spliff, and
stands well back.
As is traditionally the case, Height Sonics has mastered every one of these and they all sound absolutely state of the art on any
soundsystem you care to play them on. Enjoy!
supported by 7 fans who also own “inVA02: inHabit Remixed”
Oki fucking doki. Zero T and DLR can hardly put a music production foot wrong. Some lovely bass wobblers along with a lovelyJazz tinged number as you'd expect from Zero T, with Steo on the vocals on that one. underflux