September 2nd, 2010

I couldn’t tell you why but this song really gets me everytime.

Peace and Love

Luke

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHDbCC0Ongs

August 27th, 2010


The Rapture – La route du rock 2010

Here is a video of a few songs we played in France at the Route du Rock Festival. It was around 3 am.

August 24th, 2010

NEW POSTER

Check it out.

August 5th, 2010

Harkin & Raney EP by Throne Of Blood

Here is our newest release on Throne of Blood. Really excited about this one. NYC party-starters Eamon Harkin and OneAuff finally give the world their debut 12″ following several notable solo releases and two white-hot remixes for Populette and Neurotic Drum Band.

The single drops in both physical and digital formats on Monday July 19 via the always-awesome Kompakt Distribution and features remixes by Throne of Blood labelmates Populette and Master Khan (aka Great Weekend aka Twilite Tone).

The single is getting love from the likes of Matt Walsh (Clouded Vision), Kiki (BPitch Control), Nick Warren, Brennan Green, 40 Thieves and more!

August 3rd, 2010

The Rapture – Echoes (Computer Blue Remix) by ComputerBlue

Just got back from Asia and found a link for this remix on our Facebook page. It came from a blog called Jackplug. It’s by a group called Computer Blue, hopefully named after the awesomely deranged Prince song. They hail from Oklahoma City which has a surprisingly great (well at least for us ignorant fools) dance music scene. We played a really awesome show there a few years back and then djed a really amazing after party. Anyhow it’s a great remix, makes me smile. Really impressive, especially considering they didn’t have any stems. Check these dudes out! Thanks guys!

July 16th, 2010


come on baby doll

Sidney Beas | MySpace Video

Some years back a buddy of mine gave me a copy of a song called Come on Baby Doll. I was really psyched on it and used to DJ it a lot and wanted to find more tracks by the artist but I could never find the name. I just started calling him Count Awesome or Captain Awesome when people asked me whose track I was playing. Fast forward to yesterday and I was talking with my buddy Kevin and that track came up and he remembered the artists name, Sidney Beas. Then we did a google search on him and found a video to the aforementioned track. Amazing!

June 24th, 2010

Making Time

Tomorrow we’re playing one of our favorite parties in the world. I love this flyer!

June 24th, 2010

dr-teeth-and-the-electric-mayhem

So we played our first show in quite some time last night at Union Pool under the name of the mighty Electric Mayhem Band. It was a blast! Here’s a write up from the NY Press about the show:

A secret show of sorts at Union Pool last night saw TV Baby and The Rapture rip through two short but killer sets.
Openers TV Baby (said to me more like TV, Baby, with a swagger-packed paused) tore up songs of jagged guitar riffs, howling vocals and fast synth beats. It was kinda like giving Little Richard a guitar he wasn’t sure how to play and making him front New Order while everybody was on amphetamines—a rock ‘n’ roll dance flashbang. TV Baby is Brain McPeck and Matt McAuley from A.R.E. Weapons, a band that has purportedly been friends with The Rapture’s keyboardist/saxophonist/aux percussionist Luke Jenner for years, hence the billing.
As a friend reminded me before the main draw took the stage, we heard last from The Rapture on the 2006 album Pieces of the People We Love— that is, beyond the plethora of TV, movie and video game appearances keeping the band in the black as it records a new album in Paris. Singer and guitarist Gabriel Andruzzi told me the show had a last-minute announcement via the band’s Facebook page around 3 p.m. because the post-punk dance trio just wanted friends there. Well, if that’s the case, they sure have a lot of pals—the place was packed to the gills.
With LCD Soundsystem selling out Terminal 5 for three nights in a row, it would have been a shame if these dance-centered DFA veterans couldn’t have filled the much, much smaller Union Pool, even on such short notice. But The Rapture certainly did, drawing in as many mouthy, excited fans from the garden as from its clandestine web announcement. Drummer Vito Roccoforte told me it was a warm-up show (they have two, more-publicized shows this week). But they seemed totally on point, joined on bass by Harris Klahr, late of the excellent Q And Not U, and playing a shitload of crowd favorites and only one new track, “Sail Away,” a down-tempo joint that still managed to break into the band’s signature 2–4 dance vibe. It appears the band is winding up to make some moves this year—is that an album release we smell on the horizon?
Besides someone in the audience with an airhorn, who was remarkably on rhythm, the set went down like a dance pill, and The Rapture had the crowd eating out of its volatile hands. So much so Andruzzi led the crowd in a collective, post-set Telemundo howl of “GOOOAL” in celebration of Landon Donovan’s World Cup stunner.

June 23rd, 2010

June 15th, 2010

MUGWUMP EP by Throne Of Blood

Some recent reviews and a couple free download links for Mugwump’s “The Congregation of Discalced Clerks”/”Concrete Skankin”, which is available in finer record shops and digital download outlets now:

Juno:
“When a DJ of Ivan Smagghe’s stature leaves a 150 word reaction waxing
lyrical about a record, you know it’s gonna be something a little bit
special. Mugwump’s The Congregation Of Discalced Clerks is that record
and it’s a thumping release for NYC imprint Throne Of Blood, rapidly
becoming contenders for label of the year.”

Piccadilly:
“I hate to make the comparison but if you liked “Odyssey” by Caribou
then your going to love “The Congregation Of Discalced Clerks” (what a
mouthful!). With a simple three-note bassline / melody and a live,
organic drum beat complete with cowbells and Hot Chip style swing
(that Caribou also do very well) its a brilliantly modern sounding
track that still retains that ever important human element and
juxtaposes digital and organic production.”

Resident Advisor:
Mugwump hasn’t found a reliable label home, but that’s to be expected. Geoffroy Dewandeler and Olivier Gregoire’s music is so varied that it’s hard to pin them down to any one sound. Case in point: The duo’s new EP, The Congregation of Discalced Clerks, for New York label Throne of Blood. The two tracks seemingly come from two completely different groups. The title track is bright Kompakt-esque pop, riding a percolating synth line to victorious ends. Reminiscent of prime-era Rex The Dog, it keeps the rhythm basic in order to make sure that the melody sticks in your head. Mission accomplished.

“Concrete Skankin” is the more interesting of the pair, a throwback to the duo’s Belgian New Beat past. Rough around the edges and clocking in at a healthy 130 BPM, there’s a lot to digest: Reversed vocal samples, a synth line that recalls the classic sound of “Los Ninos del Parque,” buzzing horns in the back. The duo have stuffed the tune to the brim, but break it down early and often for maximum impact. Mugwump may not be easy to figure out on a release-to-release basis, but they clearly have no problem adhering to the law of the dance floor each time out.

XLR8R:
“From The Rapture-run record label Throne of Blood comes this funky,
Italo-tinged dance tune. Belgian producer Mugwump crafted the song as
the lead number for his forthcoming two-song EP, and it’s easy to tell
why; the song kicks off right away, immediately setting a slyly
serious tone with arppeggiated synths, rubbery bass riffs, and a
backbeat tailor-made for folks looking to flex some fancy footwork.
But that’s all prior to a tense string section taking over the whole
track, and transporting it into spatial oblivion before taking it back
to the initialgroove.

Slutty Fringe:
In which Throne of Blood continue to excel with their release schedule, this time turning to Belgian duo Mugwump who deliver a superlative two track EP that includes a acid soaked EBM remake of Nitzer Ebb in ‘Concrete Skankin’ and ‘The Congregation of Discalced Clerks’ which sounds like a homage to a balearic classic.

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