“Music in vinyl record is more valuable than money” Words to live by, I think. Previously I has assumed the ELP Laser Turntable was a bit of an audiophile scam, but upon listening to the founder/owner/designer, I am quite convinced of it’s authenticity and intentions. Would love to try one of these. Maybe I’ll send away for that free CD they offer.
Archives
All posts by Tony
Weasel faced, woman beater Chris Brown has released two pretend ‘freestyles’ based of the latest Kanye West releases.
They’re shit, empty, money hungry verses that wouldn’t have cut the mustard a decade ago. No, I’m not allowing this. Nope.
Go listen to Immortal Technique.
Vladislav just posted a live set on SoundCloud of unreleased, “new album” shit. It’s fucking amazing, go listen right now.
Think “Demo(n) Tracks”, only more controlled, more stylized and even more enthralling. Then go preorder his next album and EP, both on Raster-Noton, I think…
This is why we love Vladislav Delay – pay attention world.
Funkstar De Luxe, Vladislav Delay, Hopsin, R.A. the Rugged Man.
Sorry guys 🙁
Now I know you don’t recognise the name ‘Hittman’ but you’ve definitely heard him, and if you grew up in the 90’s, you’ve bought his music. You see, Hittman was heavily featured on Dr. Dre’s ‘2001’, and if you ask me he was most likely the driving force behind the success of the project.
So why doesn’t anyone know Hittman? Long story short, Dre fucked him bad. After the success of ‘2001’ Dre fucked off to make ridiculous money selling his integrity, forgetting about Hittman and leaving his début album in pieces. Hittman was relegated to some demo quality releases with no promotion or fan fare, forced to exist of a MySpace page.
Now in 2012, Hittman has released “R.N.A.D.W”. a new track after a silence lasting more than 4 years is something to celebrate.
This isn’t a review (although the track is cracking), it’s a service announcement to tell you ‘BUY IT’. For 0.69p you can get a track straight from the man who likely shaped your childhood more than the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
I’ve been listening to music on vinyl for decades, and I’ve gone through a huge amount of turntables, cartridges and phonostages to try and find a good compromise between price and quality. I should preface this by saying I am no audiophile, nor millionaire, so my setup will seem modest by some standards but I think the reproduction from it is excellent.
Right now, and probably until I find myself with either a lottery win or a job, my setup is the following:
Audio Technica AT440MLa -> Technics 1210M3D -> Cambridge Audio 640P
Everything besides the cartridge was second hand, and saved me a small fortune.
However, the one thing people miss about the 1210 is it’s adjustability. This is what separates a good turntable from a bad one. Cartridge height, position, azimuth, tonearm height, anti-skate, weight can all me adjusted without special tools or techniques. You can, with a little time and patience, make it sound and track wonderfully.
I paid £150 for mine, used and abused. Cables cut, missing mat, loose tone arm etc., it had not had a good life. It literally took me about ten minutes to fix all of these problems with nothing more than a screw driver. Everything is so well documented and easy to work with. This is what consumer level devices should be.
So, important factors to consider when setting up a turntable, in order.
1) Make sure the device is level. Sit the table where you want it, grab a spirit level and start adjusting the feet to ensure that the x and y axis of the chasis is perfectly level. This has a huge effect on tracking, record wear and sound quality.
2) Headshell position. It’s important to use the original Techniques headshell and ensure your cartridge is sitting square. Don’t bother with awkward alignment tools, just buy the original Techniques head shell and overhang gauge, they are life savers and make frustrating adjustments a breeze. Azimuth is more difficult to measure, but personally I do this by keeping the arm on the rest, and using the small amount of play where the headshell connects to the tone arm to twist it into position. Again, measure with a good spirit level.
3) Weight. Use whatever the catridge manual tells you. If you need more down force than 2g (roughly speaking), then something is wrong. Either the cartridge is fitted poorly or the record is damaged.
4) Anti-skate. I find that this wears out on Technics turntables really quickly, so needs to be set high – usually 2.5. This isn’t easy to set audibly, unless you have access to a blank disk or a Hi-Fi News setup record.
5) Tone arm height. This needs to be changed until your tone arm is perfectly parallel to the surface of the record. For me, it’s 1.
Just in case anyone has a similar set up to me, I’ll list the settings I currently run. The cart is setup with Technics Overhang Gauge, 52mm. Tracking force is 1.5g and anti-skate is 3. Arm height is 1, but this will change dramatically if not using the original rubber mat.
Audio Technica AT440MLa: This is an excellent little cart for the money. It tracks beautifully, sounds so vibrant and lively. One thing to look out for is that the needle is almost the same price as the entire assembly, DO NOT risk damaging it. Always use the cue arm to lift and drop the needle.
Cambridge Audio 640P: Another second hand buy, but a good little investment. It’s a strong and thick sounding little thing, and can change between moving magnet carts and moving coil. It also features a subsonic filter which gently rolls off any frequency below 20Hz. Word of warning though, the power supply is a 12V AC. It was a nightmare to replace – do not buy one without the power supply. There’s no need to throw huge amounts of money at a phono stage, they are a necessity, but the range in quality is not dramatic. If you have a built-in phono fucntion, it’s probably good enough for most things.
Keeping Things Clean: I use a “Super Exstatic” carbon fibre & velvet disc cleaning pad. No fancy solutions or water baths. Just put the disc on, start the turntable and gently wipe the disc with the edges of the brush. If you’ve got the money for a vinyl cleaning machine, like a Nitty Gritty Mini Pro definitely invest. They can make an impressive difference to old and abused records. Sadly, I don’t have a spare £1000 knocking around, so if I have anything that is extremely filthy, I’ll give it a wipe with a micro-fibre cloth. Not exactly rocket science.
Things to avoid: Anything with the words Pro-Ject written on it. They make some of the worst, record ruining, mistracking, nonadjustable turntables known to man. How they got such a fan club I’ll never know. I went through three of them assuming each one was defective. Also, cartridges that mount directly to the tone arm – I think they are referred to as concord style. You lose a lot of adjustment when fitting one of these, and they are mainly meant for the DJ market, when quick swaps are important, not sound quality.
I’m not a fan of anyof the digital utilities that are available to remove rumble or pops and clicks. They all damage transients of the recording and leave you with, at best, weird sounding results. Hand editing is really the only way to remove clicks, but on some discs that can prove to be a bit too labour intensive, even for me.
So there you have it, after years of messing about with these things I finally have a setup that satisfy me. It didn’t cost the earth, and I can take a little pride in knowing that I saved an old 1210 from certain scrappage.
I’m not really sure who Trouble Andrew is, or why he settled upon such an awkward moniker. There’s some talk of him being a professional Canadian snowboarder, but he also happens to make some pretty decent hipster pop.
“Run Hide” is just that; a loud, poppy snare drum driven, modern love song. “Love song” is perhaps a leap of faith on my part, as the hook “Stay to the mornin’, Darlin” isn’t really in the same vein as some of the classics. I’m not sure Marvin Gay would have gotten away with deceleration of a 12 hour commitment but then again, Marvin was never very hipster.
Mr. Trouble Andrew can’t really sing either to be honest, certainly not confidently, but when has that ever mattered? There’s something nice about hearing a performance less than perfect that’s not been auto tuned or multi-tracked to hell. Everything flows really well, and it’s nice to hear something modern done without the need for massive ego, or annoying as hell vocals.
This is what pop trash music should be; something honest, quick and fun – not the bullshit millions endure from 3OH!3, LMFAO or Ke$ha.
Most people know this record as the track from which that Daft Punk stole that sample. That’s a bit of a shame, because in my opinion it’s a solid little French disco record.
I bought it purely to add to the collection of “uninteresting records with interesting stories” that I seem to be subconsciously accumulating. However it’s such a lovely sounding record that it’s a little more deserving than that.
There’s a solid cover of “My Girl”, and “Fire And Soul” is a four to the floor stomper. The title track “More Spell On You” is by far the best, and is well on par with anything Chic done of a similar vintage. It’s quite a rare record just now, but well worth picking up.
It did, however get me wondering if “Studio De La Grande Armée” where this thing was recorded, was owned by Thomas Bangalter’s father, hence them being able to rip off the sample with no acknowledgement or royalties. Hmm…

Underworld Beaucoup Fish
Minimalist, abstract, bold and fresh. Made by the design company run by Underworld, Tomato.
I love this one, probably my favourite cover of all time. Really captures the mood of the music.
Vladislav Delay’s Anima. This blew me away when I first seen it. Beautifully stylized cuts turn a woman’s dress into a the head of a flower. Who wouldn’t buy this?
Old school as fuck. No apologies.

Miles Davis Miles
I don’t know why I like this, faux art deco feel, but I do. So much style, and to think this was done in 1958…
Controversy may be too strong of a word for what I’m about to tell you – I think I may have been the only member of the public to take note, but it’s certainly a contrived occurrence, so I’m sticking with it.
Back in 1999-2000 I was knee-deep in the disco/funky house scene. It was all happening in Glasgow then, lots of producers, lots of clubs, lots of shops all full to the brim with cheerful, bouncy house music. Chief among them, in my eyes, was the almost-but-not-quite sub genre of the Bob Marley remix. They were all at it, Phats & Small, Olav Basoski, ATB, MC Lyte… The most famous of which, and probably only one I can reasonably defend, was the original Bob Marley vs. Funkstar De Luxe Sun Is Shining Remix. It was deep, full of flavour, and played everywhere from the radio to the clubs.
The next year Funkstar De Luxe released another one, but it never quite captured the feel of the first.
Anyway, at the height of its success, the Funkstar De Luxe remixes were selling like hotcakes, and were getting a lot of attention from everyone. I was quite friendly with the folks at Edel at the time (the record label that was handling distribution). We exchanged emails and shot the breeze, and I was quite lucky to be given with a box of goodies, all for zilch! But that was back when record labels had physical products.
So by this time I was well invested in this Funkstar De Luxe thing. I was rocking the single daily, talking with Martin Ottesen on MSN… It was a good scene.
One day I’m chillin’ in da crib (sitting in my Mum’s house), listening to internet radio, when what I thought was Bob Marley vs. Funkstar De Luxe comes on. Something immediately sounds wrong. It’s weird, it’s the same track, but it sounds
Empty. I listened closer, everything was there, the long intro, the filtered chord progression, wa-wa guitar. It was a bit like an episode of the Twilight Zone, where some subtle change shift reality into another dimension.
Being the inquisitive man I am (or due to having a great deal of time on my hands because I lacked a job), I decided to delve a little deeper into this. Bear in mind this was long before Shazam could tell you the name of a track within two bars. I stated my hunt to find what this weird track was. Was it an early demo, or a test piece?
After a few weeks of searching I eventually found something called Sun Is Shining (The Island Mix – Extended Version) on SoulSeek. It took me 36 hours to download it completely. That’s 36 hours for 9 minutes of 128kbps MP3, but I digress. After, what now seems like an unreasonable amount of time, I had the file and it was indeed what I had heard that day. The dead drums, out of key vocal were all present.
I emailed my friends a Edel to see just what the heck was going on with this “Island Mix” stuff. Was it something I’d been sleeping on? I got a very interesting reply.
As it turns out, the people at Edel were not responsible for this record at all. In fact, they were none too pleased about it’s existence at all – they were now in a legal fight with Tuff Gong records over it.
What happened was the Marley family had seen the huge success of the Funkstar De Luxe remix and had issued their own version of it. Problem was, it was the musical equivalent of plagiarism.
Same idea, same execution, different motivation. After a few talks, everything was settled out of court, with Edel distributing their version in Europe and grudgingly, allowing Tuff Gong the American market.
As a consequence of this the Funkstar De Luxe vs. Bob Marley album (which I waited two years for) never really came to fruition, with the Marley family again deciding to do their own venture. I did later manage to source a version of this, I’ll write about it one day. Actually, maybe someone at Edel sent me it… I’m a little foggy there.
It was a weird state of affairs, I’ve never heard of anything like this happen before or since. It really is a bit of an oddity. I’ve included two snippets of each mix, just so you can compare them yourselves.
I find it really interesting to hear the difference a bit of soul makes. Neither of them are exactly works of art, but I think you can instantly hear what one was rushed out just for monetary gains, and what was a work of passion and pleasure.
Bob Marley vs. Funkstar De Luxe – Sun Is Shining (Rainbow Mix) [snippet]
Bob Marley – Sun Is Shining (The Island Mix – Extended Version) [snippet]
This was quite self-indulgent.