LA TORRE IBIZA - VOLUMEN QUATRO

(2LP)
(180 gr. 2LP gatefold) Mark Barrott and Pete Gooding present the fourth volume in their series of stellar collections, showcasing the sunset sounds spun at Ibiza`s Hostal La Torre. Sets, sequences, of music designed to celebrate the passing of another day and welcome the pleasures of night, as the Sun makes way for Sister Moon.
Genre House
StyleBalearic
FormatVINYL
Cat. noHLTR004LP
Label HOSTEL LA TORRE RECORDINGS
Artist VARIOUS ARTISTS
Release Date01/07/2022
Carrier2LP
Barcode5414165133803


TRACKLISTING


A1. Golden Girls - Kinetic (David Morley Remix)
A2. NO ZU - Ui Yia UIa
A3. Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni ba feat. Zouman a Tereta - Bala
B1. Rare Silk - Storm
B2. Synergetic Voice Orchestra - Zeb ra
B3. Special Request - Family Doggo
B4. Margaret Wakeley - Hard To Leave The Island

C1. Pauline Anna Strom - Equatorial Sunrise
C2. The Vendet ta Suite - Warehouse Rock (Timmy Stewart's Six Minutes to Sunrise Mix)
C3. Ma rk Barrott - Travelling Music (La Torre Reprise)
D1. Lola Perrin - Cloud Sky Fade
D2. Suzanne Ciani - The Eighth Wave
D3. JIM - Phoenix
D4. Geoffrey O'Connor - Her Name on Every Tongue
D5. John Foxx & Robin Guthrie - Estrelli ta





INFO


Mark Barrott and Pete Gooding p resent the fourth volume in their series of stellar collections, showcasing the sunset sounds spun at Ibiza`s Hostal La Torre. Sets, sequences, of music designe d to celebrate the passing of another day and welcome the pleasures of night, as the Sun makes way for Sister Moon.

On this occasion, the ceremony st arts with a gift from the Golden Girls - a side project of Phil Hartnoll, of Orb ital fame. In its original form Kinetic was a prime piece of pumping early `90s trance, here, however, it`s been remixed by David Morley into something far more in line with Belgian rave label R&S` ambient off-shoot, Apollo. Practically bea tless, but boasting a big, undulating, bottom-end, it now resembles something fr om Tangerine Dream`s back catalogue. A slightly kosmische, serene wall of sonica lly shining sound. The room-shaking riffs are reduced to echoes, while pitter-pa ttering percussion races. When the familiar hook finally surfaces, it`s accompan ied by spirit-stirring, symphonic strings - inducing fierce flashbacks to qualit y highs, and newly expanded minds and horizons. Man, I can remember the wonder, before it all went pear-shaped.

Next up are NO ZU, a sadly seemingly defunct 8-membered musical monster from Melbourne, Australia, who were absolute ly amazing live. Banging out a percussive concoction that they called Heat Beat, their funk was / is most definitely post-punk - channelling `80s no wave New Yo rk, the Mudd Club, and in particular the band, Liquid Liquid. Slapping basses, c ar horns, electronic keys, buttons, cowbells, and anything else that came to han d and seemed to fit, while lifting beats and piano parts from Chicago house. The party-starting call and response repartee of Ui Yia UIa finds them shouting out their star signs of criss-crossing compatibility over a muscular slo-mo stomp. Daphne Camf Rest In Peace.

Bassekou Kouyate is a Malian maestro on th e 6-stringed ngoni. A goat-skin covered "hunters harp", that via slave traders e volved into the North American banjo. With his group, named after this tradition al griot instrument, and Zoumana Tereta on lead vocals, he delivers a dizzying d isplay of dexterity on Bala. Generating a super mellow, spiritual groove, his pl aying countered by equal virtuosity on balafon and bolon. The voices switching b etween the sweet and the raw, and the song showering you in savannah sunshine, n o matter where you happen to be hanging.

American trio, Rare Silk, sh are their jazz vocal take on Stanley Turrentine`s Storm, where wildlife whistles and chirrups surround soft Synclavier sighs. Slick, smooth, imagine Manhattan T ransfer meets Wally Badarou. A marimba doing the mambo, the reeds winding like w afts of smoke carried on warm Caribbean winds. The rhythm that of a gently lappi ng tide.

The Synergetic Voice Orchestra was a one-off, one-time only outfit led by keyboardist / composer, Yumiko Morioka. A follow-up to her highly respected solo piano work, Resonance, the album, MIOS, was a far more ambitious affair, that brought together a collective of 6 musicians and 3 vocalists. The r esults moving away from new age and modern classical toward pop. The track, Zebr a, is a Jon Hassell-esque fusion heat haze / fog. Riding a slowly rumbling thund er-thumbed bass-line. A snake-charming woodwind cutting through the synthetic sh immer, weaving its seductive spell.

Family Doggo first appeared as th e b-side of Paul Woolford aka Special Request`s balls-out 2020 drum and bass sin gle, Spectral Frequency. "Doggo" in comparison is an oasis of calm, albeit packi ng some serious sub-woofer worrying boom. Stripped back, speaker-rattling, elect ro-edged introspection, emotive and euphoric without recourse to arms-in-the-air tropes, it`s bleep`s more sensitive, more thoughtful sibling. The awakening of the morning after the night before`s rush.

Margaret Wakeley`s magical Hard To Leave The Island was initially rediscovered and dusted down by the peop le that power the respected DJ / artist agency, Warm - who took it from Margaret `s 1976 LP, Better Days, and pressed it on a limited 45. A slice of superior sof t / yacht rock, it`s a cool cocktail-hour summer holiday serenade. A sophisticat ed arrangement of brass, jazzy keys, and acoustic strum, topped off by a smart s ax solo.

Equatorial Sunrise was / is one of the standouts contained o n Pauline Anna Strom`s sadly posthumous album, Angel Tears In Sunlight. Describi ng herself as a Trans Millennium Consort, the San Francisco-based synth pioneer attempted to blur, blend, past, present, and future, with her novel new age musi c. The song in question sees wind-chimes, marimba, and talking drum conversing i n counterpoint - conjuring the Cafe del Mar classic, Richard Wahnfried`s Grandma s Clockwork. Its calming, time-melting timbres creating a comforting analog bubb lebath. Aching with synthesized ethereal emissions, while pinpoints of sound ech o into infinity, like signals from distant stars.

The Vendetta Suite is the pseudonym of Gary Irwin, the former in-house engineer at David Holmes` Be lfast-based Exploding Inevitable Studio - a hive of musical activity where Timmy Stewart was also a frequent visitor. The 3 amigos mentioned were all stalwarts of the city`s early `90s house and techno scene. Some 30 years later Timmy remix ed Gary`s track, Warehouse Rock, into a highly strung - think Malcolm McLaren`s Deep In Vogue - soundclash of reggae and rave. A four-to-the-floor mediation sub jected to devastating washes of delay, where bionic bass, Mikey Dread samples an d dub sound-effects are softened by bucolic birdsong.

Mark Barrott's Travelling Music (La Torre Reprise) - an exclusive version of the titular track from his recent E.P. - is all tumbling tones - playful sequences and programmed patterns "blowing" busily, like colourful streamers caught on a tropical breeze. Like the compilation`s opening number, its another ambient, beatless, trance-da ncer - suffused with sustained swells and chords that feel like sunrise itself.< br />
Composer / pianist Lola Perrin`s Cloud Sky Fade is an unadorned, unad ulterated - save a little reverb - rippling river of cascading classical keys. H er piano rolling, reaching crescendos like crashing surf. Licensed from Lola's 2 006 CD, Fragile Light, its worthy of comparison with Keith Jarrett`s ECM output, and Wim Mertens` beloved The Belly Of An Architect score.

If you loo k on Wikipedia, you'll see that Suzanne Ciani has the affectionate moniker of "D iva of the Diode" - reflecting her huge importance in the history of electronic music. While studying at Berkley University in the `70s Suzanne became firm frie nds with Don Buchla, and subsequently spearheaded the use of his then ground-bre aking modular synthesizer. Moving to New York, where she camped out on Philip Gl ass` studio floor, Suzanne set up her own company employing Don`s marvelous mach ine to produce advertising jingles. The success of this business eventually led to Suzanne becoming Hollywood's first female soundtrack composer. In the `80s, S uzanne then started releasing new age records, one of which, 1986`s The Velocity Of Love, was a favourite of DJ Phil Mison, who made it a Cafe del Mar sunset st aple. The beautiful Eighth Wave surely should have been the blissed-out musical backdrop to some `80s art house love scene - summoning as it does silhouettes of cinematic protagonists passionately disrobing though a Vaseline-smeared lens. T heir hot clinches politely cutting to close-ups of isolated, moonlit beaches, an d untamable, tempestuous tides.

JIM is Jim Baron, Crazy P`s Ron Basej am, but in folky, singer / songwriter mode. Coming on like Crosby, Stills & Nash , he covers the Ian Astbury / Billy Duffy penned Phoenix in an ultra-laidback fa shion. Turning the gothic rock into a Laurel Canyon-esque lullaby. Singing of lo ve in terms of fire, and flames of desire, backed by acrobatic acoustic picking and sweeping orchestral strings.

You could be forgiven for thinking t hat Antipodean audio auteur, Geoffrey O`Connor, is some forgotten `80s idol - so authentic is his soothing, swooning, romantic synth pop. Her Name On Every Tong ue, however, dates from 2014, and can be located on Geoff`s sophomore solo long- player, Fan Fiction. The track`s vocoder harmonies proving perfect for a sing al ong on a top-down, Californian coastal drive.

These righteous solar-w orshiping rituals draw to a close with John Foxx & Robin Guthrie`s exceptional E strellita - a highlight from the pairs 2009 album, Mirrorball - where the former Ultravox! and Cocteau Twins founders collaborate on a sublime shot of shoegaze. Generating a glacial glide of layer upon layer of treated guitar. Grounded by w omb-like bass vibrations, while Foxx`s choirboy croon soars. Lending the song a prayer / hymn-like air. It`s as close as rock comes to something sacred.
Dr. Rob (Ban Ban Ton Ton)