Just favorited Pash - Playa Passoa pt1 by minimal_background on Mixcloud
hello vonnie
RMH
Sade Olutola
Show & Tell

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
NASA

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
ojovivo
🪼
occasionally subtle

Discoholic 🪩

oozey mess
todays bird
One Nice Bug Per Day
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Not today Justin
DEAR READER
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noise dept.
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@diggersdelight
Just favorited Pash - Playa Passoa pt1 by minimal_background on Mixcloud
Just favorited Manrusionica Festival, Manresa 2013 by PabloBolivar on Mixcloud
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents Meagan & The Marksman + Liz Cirell to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Stunning!
Written and produced by Bjorn Rohde
Mastered by Nikos Fragomanolakis
Out now on Dewtone Recordings
Listen/purchase: Forgotten Hearts [DTR024] by Bjorn Rohde
#music
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents Mand'stock Festival Special from The Harrison on Hoxton FM - 22/06/13 to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents Losers on Hoxton FM - 12/06/13 to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Just favorited Nikosf. - The Blue Hour by Dewtone.fm on Mixcloud
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents Corina Piatti on Hoxton FM - 05/06/13 to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents "Secret Music" on Hoxton FM - 29/05/13 to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents "Music from the Manor" - with Cardboard Cabaret - Hoxton FM - 22/05/13 to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Just uploaded Digger's Delight presents "Music from the Manor" - Festival Special w/ Dila V - Hoxton FM - 15/05/13 to Mixcloud. Listen now!
Akasha Jewels now selling in Camden Lock Market!
Beautiful hand-made jewels that resonate with your energy and vibrations!
Amethyst Bespoke Design for DJ/Producer Liz Cerelli
www.akashajewels.com
Often moronically ridiculed by magazines for his antics, and certainly out of vogue with the beard-stroking end of the techno community, yet in my all-knowledgable opinion, Richie Hawtin’s understanding of production stretches way beyond the comprehension of most of the current poster...
Just follow your nose!
Searching for the perfect croissant.
Now that we approach the end of January my belly, though not yet entirely retreated back to its pre-holiday self, is at least approaching a level where I can again consume some fatty, satisfyingly warming treats, it’s high time to find out who makes the best pastries in London.
Enough with the Excel spreadsheets and dull meetings with accountants, tomorrow I will start a new endeavour to consume the greatest incarnation of flour, butter, eggs, and that magical living thing called yeast. Okay, London isn’t Paris, but with 8 million people as neighbours, surely there are at least some very satisfying options.
A few facts (or as near to facts as anyone in the age of Google really demands):
- January 30 is National Croissant Day
- An Austrian artillery officer by the name of August Zang is widely credited to have invented the croissant, originally called a “kipfer.” Zang set up a Viennese bakery in Paris in 1839 and his offering was quickly copied by local boulangeries.
Falomir! - Superlondon (Slavaki remix)
Oh, and if you happen to already know where to find the best croissant in London, please let us know!
Going with the flow
It was not yet twenty minutes to four on a dull Thursday afternoon last week and I was thinking of perhaps forgoing the café, the coffee, and the bit of consultancy work I had planned and instead heading directly to the pub.
I was on the way to Chatsworth Road for a look around. Having not been there in a couple of months and, at the rate it was gentrifying last time I was there in the summer, I wondered if I’d even recognise it now.
This is London and a good pint is never more than an outstretched arm’s reach away. It so happens that The Clapton Hart was conveniently located between me and the café and I heard they have Hackney Brewery on tap. Maybe I’ll just flip a coin. Nah – even more diplomatic – I’ll continue on to Chatsworth Road as long as the last bit of sun hasn’t gone beneath the horizon before I get to Lea Bridge Roundabout.
After an hour, yes, and hour on the 253 bus, travelling from Finsbury Park towards Hackney Central, I finally stepped off and started walking. Of course the sun was well down on its way and I figured, if anything deserved a pint, and hour on the fucking 253 did.
image credit: hackneybrewery.co.uk
So into the pub I went, asked if they had any Hackney Brewery on today. They didn’t, but the jovial, bearded barman (who looked as if he would be a mighty opponent in a pub quiz) offered several good suggestions, eventually, we settled on Curious, a pale ale from none other than Magic Rock Brewing.
Playing clearly through the tiny JBL speakers as I ordered in the starkly empty pub was Locked by Four Tet. I commended them on their musical selections and knew I’d made the right decision. Halfway through my first half pint, a short barmaid with curly auburn hair, wearing jeans and a grey jumper came by to put a vase on my large, otherwise vacant table. In it contained three freshly cut red roses. I might just stay here all night, provided the internet connection holds out.
An hour and another half pint later, and after considering staying here all evening, I decided it was time to venture home and get finally get started on that work. I elected to walk the entire way this time.
Some wonder ‘where is the baby?’ I wonder ‘where is the underground?’
I guessed the sound system to be in the 10,000 W range and was comprised of two enormous stacks, containing a total of twelve bassbins and eight tops (all Funktion-One), along with four Martin Audio loudspeakers on stands for monitors. In front of this, stood about 50 stoic nightclub goers, bobbing away to some fairly hard techno, making one forget that it was in fact a quarter past ten on a Sunday night, and not half past three on a Sunday morning.
As I watched Uruguayan-born badman Nicolas Lutz lay down one obscure vinyl after another on the 1210s, resting on requisite concrete paving stones set on top of the hire tables, I wondered what the now resident of Berlin was thinking of his audience. Was he expecting more people? More dancing? More drugs? No one seemed to be rolling particularly hard and were generally content, as was I, to simply absorb the piercingly-loud music into my body, watching Lutz’ fluid movements: time, queue, fade, then he’d duck behind the decks every few minutes to dig for another record.
I couldn’t work out whether he was conscious of the fact that most every time the beat dropped, he was nowhere to be found or whether it was by design? Perhaps it was his way of exuding genuine humbleness to the crowd, or maybe he simply lacked a proper table upon which to sort his crate? Some instinct told me this is exactly the sort of thing this veteran was expecting.
Anyway, who cares? His sound was growing on me. The moderately hard techno, which was at first was an assault to the senses, soon became a welcome change from the just-a-little-too groovy tech house that’s been littering my ears of late. It was actually very satisfying to crave a glimpse of a melody somewhere amongst the frothy sea of acid 303 stabs, if only for a brief moment.
Who were these people around me? I’ve met some of them, but never bother with asking what their day job is. I didn’t really want to know, perhaps because that might distract me from the music. The small group of us gathered inside this fairly well known, multi-purpose warehouse space in Hackney Wick to experience something transcendental, however fleeting it may be. Some, myself included, have come here alone, drawn only by the promise of a robust sound system and, just maybe, something a little more unique than can be found in Shoreditch on a Saturday night.
Here's some just-a-little-bit-too-groovy tech house for you. Call me a hypocrite because I just don't care. Besides, it's a Thursday and I'm at home, not a Sunday at a warehouse party...
Phonique - Vincent Price (Original Mix)