Hailing from Amsterdam and keen to make a vivacious debut on the North American scene, the producer duo not yes has cooked up a distinct serving of broken-beat bass music.
Forgoing the more abrasive, breakneck energy and heavily-textured mixing fundamentals of their often hyper-precise American counterparts, not yes has found an intriguing balance through lithe, groove-driven production palettes and headnod rhythms on their aptly titled nod heads EP.
Each of the four tracks that populate the EP stand out through their own distinct flavors, and create a concise plate of not yes' particular blend of precision percussion and needle-threaded sound design. They're not too brackish, avoiding the often muddy waters of high-velocity bass music, but they're by no means featherweights; if you're looking to cut your teeth on something with whipcord tension and deliberate composition, then nod heads is undoubtedly up your alley.
Rasp-5 x parkbreezy - Transmitting to Space
Fusing New York streetwise sentiments with the rhythm and soul of the Mile High City, Rasp-5 and parkbreezy blend their vocal and instrumental skill sets into the turnkey record Transmitting To Space. With a centerpiece focus on their partnered songwriting and narrative structures, the EP is a clear maturation from both artists in terms of draw and scope, and furthers the burgeoning roadmap of contemporary hip-hop.
As soon as the needle drops, it's apparent that the production and lyrical standards across both individual acts have been thoroughly upgraded. They manage to hit the Nexus between sultry arrangement and walk-along spoken bars, eschewing the mean muggin' archetype in favor of a suede-laden impact. Between parkbreezy's modern meld of trip-hop and jazz modalities, and Rasp-5's inescapable command over poignant prose and mental imagery, it's a true duet of passion and flavor. For fans of hip-hop's contemporary experience and yesteryear's instrumental rap power groups, Transmitting To Space is undoubtedly the next stop on your musical journey.
Primate - Tortuous
With a sound and style that begets immediate recognition, Primate originally emerged with a design palette that felt honed in beyond its years, presenting a catalog of exceptionally avant-garde electronic music right out of the gate. As such, we’ve proudly hosted his work on numerous occasions, and are just as excited to debut his latest experiments on the Tortuous EP.
The absolute first hallmark of any Primate production is his bombastic percussive arrangement; be it rising swells, crashing climaxes, or veritable rhythmic bridges, his drum shaping and programming across the entire EP is both on par with his sonic aesthetic and a step above previous releases. The liquid-soul underbelly of each track acts as an anchor for daring runs of low end synthesis, mingling the playbook of improvisational jazz with his own brand of space-aged synthesis. It’s a masterclass in phrasing, pacing, and evolution across compositions, bringing breaks, glitch, and instrumental dialogue to the same table. For music minds of all shapes and sizes, Primate’s Tortuous should be next on your list of must-have records.
Universe of Sounds - Resfeber
Taking a departure from the grounded earth-tones and atmospheres featured in Astrophilia, Universe of Sounds has set his sights on the high heavens of space. Regaling the story of an intelligence on a search for meaning and affection in existence, Resfeber is an astronautic landscape of composition.
With a clear immersive bent and the obvious hallmarks of a songwriter in the midst of a powerful metamorphosis, all three tracks present clear and divisible chapters in the Resfeber experience, taking the rule of 8’s and repetition theory in a resoundingly broken-beat and fantastical direction.
Rounding off the EP’s audio experience is the inclusion of a multi-part video series, produced by Sieg Mattel and retinaghost, and will create the integral balancing act between each composition’s aural and narrative impacts. For fans and appreciators of delicate textures and emotive elasticity, the Universe of Sounds’ Resfeber EP should be an absolute must-have on your list.
Absalon - The Mind
Reaching across the globe with ambitious appeal and obvious creative command, the Israeli producer Absalon has quickly found himself in the nexus of interest in novel electronic music, brandishing extraordinarily viscous compositions and stylized sound design. With a keen eye on appreciators of textured arrangements, The Rust is incredibly excited to present his latest release, The Mind EP.
Absalon’s music is defined by predominantly lush phrases and profiles, with a clear ear for modality and tonal relationships. The Mind begins and ends with the same emotive, melodious egress, with pulsing chords shifting into and out of the frequency spectrum. There’s a buoyancy to his songwriting that is demonstrably refreshing in a scene defined so often by sharp, razor-edged textures and attitudes, and the result is a vivacious and positively charged collection of tracks that fuse precise engineering and emotional resonance with outstanding clarity. For anyone looking to balance out their listening catalog and find respite from the harsher sounds of contemporary offerings, look no further than Absalon’s The Mind EP.
Duffrey - Return to Source
Amidst the landscape of American-bred bass music, Duffrey has carved out a space near the tip of the spear, brandishing a reputation as a dancefloor fiasco in his own right and an integral arm of the Ultrasloth producer group. Just in time for a return to sound systems across the continent, The Rust is incredibly excited to host his latest minted release, Return to Source.
In true Duffrey fashion, the EP is replete with a pure head-nod focus, channeling smooth synthesis and pocketed bass lines into inviting, staccato rhythms. The flash and fanfare of contemporary sound design can sometimes feel like an oversaturated veneer, but Duffrey’s straightforward texture palette eases the listener into an experience that does as much justice through easy listening as it does on the club floor. Eschewing both brooding and manic atmosphere’s, his preferences and style instead lend themselves to jovial, petrol-laden anthems that roar with confidence as opposed to sheer ferocity. For the heads looking for a package that oozes with swagger and specificity, Duffrey’s Return to Source should be more than enough to satiate your needs.
Phydra - Exposure
Wielding laser-focused synthesis and a two-step sentimentality, Phydra delivers a potent DnB serving through their “Exposure” single, courtesy of The Rust. Interlocking bass lines shred across stereo space, filling in the choice gaps between shimmering percussive breakdowns. The forward half’s rhythmic aggression receives a thorough half-time slice, showcasing the headstrong polar ends of contemporary bass music’s progenitor genre, and putting the production chops of Phydra on full display.
Coout - Time to Believe
In a musical landscape dominated by American and commonwealth producers, bass music's Eastern European vanguards are an often-undersung breed of impressive composers and engineers. The Rust's most recent addition to our release catalog is a stalwart Siberian producer by the name of Coout, brandishing his first full length release, Time to Believe.
Coout's style takes a heavy influence from a range of garage and breakbeat styles, fusing transient percussion and low-slung bass lines that rattle along harmonic peaks. Time to Believe coalesces these influences into a seven track album that focuses on emotive arrangements, delivering powerful phrases with a particular degree of harmony and ample vocal sampling. Blending rhythmic staccato with pulsing sub frequencies is the wheelhouse that Coout draws his primary strengths from, and he successfully pulls off his interpretation of full-spectrum music through clever breaks, tight turnarounds, and a generous serving of spatial swelling. For those who are looking for a relaxed infusion of rhythm, soul, and synthesis, Time to Believe should be the next must-have on your record wishlist.
Zonra - Hypotheticals
For The Rust Music's 50th release, we're incredibly honored to present Zonra's latest work, the Hypotheticals EP. Hailing from Santa Rosa, CA and wielding international appeal, Zonra's musical exploits are defined by lush textures and meticulous songwriting.
With a new record comes a new conceptual direction, and Hypotheticals strays far from the quantized pack, materializing as a blend of off-kilter melodies and staccato rhythms that churn out potent, asynchronous riffs. Pulling influence from the aggressive neuro staples of today's cutting-edge bass music in-between reverberant melodies and slapstick phrases, Zonra stands apart from his contemporaries in his ability to give delicate sound design choices a weighty impact.
Iszlai - All Into Now
The intersection of jazz and production-heavy music is a transient and highly-viscous landscape of emerging artists and novel compositions, and Iszlai is near the absolute center of that paradigm; after establishing his signature blend of percussive shuffles, broken melodies, and lacerated audio artifacts, he's further refined the impact of those choice assets, culminating in the All Into Now LP.
It's hard to understate Iszlai's control of rhythm, and his ability to diffuse steady and broken beat arrangements into one another is a pleasant shock to the senses. Those glitched-out percussive underbellies form a bedrock for the lush jazz chords and resampled cuts of conventional instruments and palatable synthesis featured across the album, creating a compositional groundswell song to song. Each passing phrase is the next step in the fragmented narrative of his songwriting, fleshing out the story in the manner of a bursting cocoon. By the time the needle reaches the end of the record, it's akin to the end of a trance, and the lingering effects of Iszlai's All Into Now will keep you returning time and time again to his personal touch of strange flavors in sound.
Felix Ando - New Morning
With a lifetime of instrumental instruction and a storied progressive trance career through the Airi moniker under his belt, Tokyo-based producer Felix Ando has succeeded in carving out his own personal slice of the auditory hemisphere. Having grown increasingly interested in downtempo rhythms and an expanded sound design palette, he's pivoted to releasing a new spate of tracks under his real name, and exploring a new chapter and territory in his ongoing musical development.
His adoptive style is accentuated by his precision compositions in combination with novel production choices, culminating in his latest release; New Morning exemplifies matter over might, with a strong focus on the space between texture and tone. Applying the clear-coated aesthetic of soundsystem music to the animated nuance of glitch effects, Felix Ando achieves a balance between impact and intent. Touching on tempos from hip-hop, to breakbeat, to more ephemeral speeds, the record blends a heterogeneous mixture of electronic music into a homogeneous narrative of tracks. As such, New Morning is a choice addition to any discerning audiophile's collection, demonstrating Felix Ando's affinity for design and composition in previously uncharted territory.