XLR8R 280 - Ulrich Schnauss
Running time: 1 hr 18 mins
Date: 29/01/2013

01 Photek - T-Raenon - Op-ART
02 David Holmes - Gone (PFM Remix) - Go! Discs
03 Mental Power - Unknown Intelligence - Formation
04 Saint Etienne - The Sea (PFM Mix) - Heavenly
05 Lee & Gwange - 2 Deep - Legend
06 Motive One - Life - Certificate 18
07 Neil Trix & Danny Mills - Pearls - Bang-In Tunes
08 MI5 - Experience - Lucky Spin
09 Odyssey - Expressions - 720 Degrees
10 Source Direct - Secret Liaison - Good Looking
11 Seba - Planetary Funk Alert - Looking Good
12 Ethereal 77 - Somnambulism - Dubplate
13 DJ Crystl - Sweet Dreamz - Dee Jay
Notes
Although XLR8R covers many different corners of the electronic spectrum, it's fair to say that we haven't been paying a whole lot of attention to drum & bass as of late. That being said, we still have a soft spot for the genre's heyday, and it appears we're not alone. Ulrich Schnauss may be best known for the serene, shoegaze-flavored electronic soundscapes he's been turning out for more than a decade, but when we asked the German veteran to participate in our podcast series, he elected to eschew his signature style and instead delve into his past. The result? A 78-minute offering he's calling Drift to the Centre: Deep Atmospheric DnB from the Golden Age, a mix which also happens to represent the largest spotlight XLR8R has shone on drum & bass in quite some time. In fairness, before Schnauss began releasing music under his own name in the early '00s and cooking up melody-rich pieces of pastoral electronic pop, he was crafting ambient drum & bass as Ethereal 77 and View to the Future, making this podcast a sort of return to his roots. It's a bit of an unexpected left turn, but given that his new album, A Long Way to Fall, is arguably Schnauss' most varied effort to date, it seems that the producer has perhaps reached a point where he's looking to surprise people. The new LP—his fourth overall and first in six years—won't see the light of day here in the US until February 12, but this mix should help to tide everyone over until that day arrives. As its ornate title suggests, the podcast is full of mid-'90s classics; it's a celebration of the pre-techstep era, a time when drum & bass world—or at least a sizable portion of it—celebrated deep, soulful grooves and rolling jazz rhythms. It may not sound like Schnauss' modern-day output, but its chilled vibes and relaxing effect are certainly similar.

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Link: http://www.xlr8r.com/podcast/2013/01/ulrich-schnauss
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