The success of “Love Hangover 2020” continues to illustrate the unprecedented star-power of Ms. Ross as a trailblazer and legend in the music industry. The balance of the nine tracks on Supertonic include remixes of two more cuts from the album The Boss, whose original LP tracks were collectively No. 1 dance hits: a dramatic, up-tempo rendering of “No One Gets The Prize” and a Latin-ized “It’s My House.” The top 20 hit “Remember Me,” gets a smart R&B feel, while “Surrender,” and the 1973 No. 1 hit “Touch Me in the Morning” are two additional thrilling Kupper remixes.
4600 (=1) year(s) ago in the future, the Daoui emerged from the inner surface of the plasmic hōmstarh Fane Won, sister to Criola (265d). They were drawn out by distress calls from the Afrikan diaspora. Their dimension exists inside ours and outside their own. There, the "laws" of physics as we know them are nothing more than suggestions. Their cosmologies are discrete. For example, hōmstarhs such as Fane Won square-orbit a planet which is not populated. The proximity to the planet determines not how warm the planet is, but how cool the starhs are, as the planet, xux, absorbs ambient heat from blackshine. Each planet has only one (Won) starh. Galaxies are arranged like vertices in a tesseract. The bonds between each vertex in the octahedroid are song.
The Brooklyn-based artist explores various techniques of sound healing, drawing on ancestral knowledge from Japan.
The long-awaited digital release of Ryuichi Sakamoto and Taylor Deupree's concert at St. John's Cathedral in London in 2014. Originally released as a double LP in 2016 by Thirty Three Thirty Three, in two editions, "Live In London" had yet to see a wider, digitally-distributed release as the LP editions did not come with a download option. Trailblazing Japanese composer Ryuichi Sakamoto is joined by revered electronic musician Taylor Deupree on this live recording, documenting their collaboration at St John-at-Hackney Church in 2014 – part of Thirty Three Thirty Three’s flagship concert series ‘St John Sessions’.