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Dave Seaman brings in Luke Chable for the much awaited second volume of the Therapy Sessions series.
Therapy Sessions Volume 2 – Dave Seaman and Luke Chable
Dave Seaman’s own Therapy Music label has been flourishing for the last year and half and now they have released the followup to the ever popular Therapy Sessions 1, which featured Phil K and Dave Seaman. Ever since Dave Seaman did his Global Underground 022 mix album from Melbourne, he’s had a special connection with the place. Dave Seaman went back to the Melbourne and asked Phil K who he should pick for the second disc and he replied Luke Chable. So Luke Chable it was, who at 25 has achieved a lot of things in his short time, his productions are well received the world over and he is continuing to push his unique progressive breakbeat sound to the masses.
Dave Seaman really needs no introduction, from his famous bald head, former Mixmag Editor to his famous global underground sessions to his Renaissance mix albums to his new own Therapy label, he has really done it all and this is his latest mix album for 2005.
Disc 1 – Mixed By Dave Seaman
1.Stel & Good News – Little Soul 2.Da Glass – You Won’t Bother Me (20:20 Mix) 3.Silicone Soul – Les Nocturnes 4.Mellow – Drifting out of Sight (FC Kahuna Mix) 5.Holden and Thompson – Come To Me 6.DJ 19 vs. Austin Leeds – Diamond Dust (Rabbit In The Moon’s Harry Cane Mix) 7.Tilt – New Day (Killahurtz Mix) 8.Tonedepth feat. Matt Shapiro – To The Moon 9.Tears For Fears – Closest Thing to Heaven (BiR’s Group Therapy Dub) 10.Stel feat. Jon Elliott – Finding Time (Killahurtz Remix) 11.Ethan – In My Heart (Original Instrumental) 12.Stel and Good News – Little Soul (Group Therapy Reprise)
Disc 2 – Mixed By Luke Chable
1.Andy Page – Skin Up 2.Rene Amesz – Fragile 3.Dan Mangan – Little Snitch 4.Uberzone – 2kool4skool 5.Uberzone – Moondusted 6.Danny Bonicci – Return To Saturn 7.Kling and Charles – Parallel Realities (Habersham’s Get Er Dun Mix) 8.Thunderpants – Pickadollen 9.Nikola Gala – Discobreak 10.Mannel – Cruel Summer (Break Your Ass Mix) 11.Chable and Dirty Fours – Tokyo (Nubreed Mix) 12.Luke Fair’s Blocrock c/w Terry Grant feat. Jennifer Horne – I’ll Kill You (Acapella) 13.Chable – Skyline Road
Disc 1 - Dave Seaman
Dave Seaman takes you on a house ride from beginning to end, his use of Stel is well thought out because that Greek makes excellent house music. He makes great use of the excellent “Nocturnes” from the Scottish duo of Silicone Soul and then gently mixes in, one of my favorite tracks of late, Mellow’s Drifting Out of Sight. The highlight of the mix is certainly James Holden and Julie Thompson’s Come To Me and I wish I knew what mix was exactly used, such a beautiful haunting melody.
Seaman continues with the nasty Rabbit In The Moon Mix of Diamond Dust, which shows Austin Leeds hopefully sheding his cookie cutter progressive image of late. Seaman then brings in the solid mix of Tilt’s New day, which was never that great of a tune because Tilt has never been the same since Quivver left. The always solid tonedepth brings In to the moon, which continues the fierce groove that Seaman is building. The only sore point is the remix of Tears for Fears, I don’t know why but I just don’t dig it.
Seaman then brings in another Stel song, which drives it to the end and then probably one of my favorite 2005 tracks in Ethan’s In My Heart and then gently ends it with a reprise of the first track. Seaman’s mix won’t be liked by everyone, anyone who thinks this will be as fierce as his Cape Town mix, will be sadly mistaken but this shows how he is expanding his sound in his old age.
Disc 2 - Luke Chable
Luke Chable has been often slammed on messageboards for being a horrible mixer and horrible deejay but what you can’t deny is that the fact that this man creates some nasty productions and his remixes are equally devastating. He starts this mix with the often underated Andy Page and his Skin Up track is just plain dirty, he follows this up with probably the next face of progressive breaks, in Rene Amenz with the heavy bassbin dusting “Fragile”. He then jumps to “Little Snitch”, which gives this a nasty tone, if you did’nt already think that.
Chable then uses two older Uberzone tracks but they both fit right in, in giving this breakbeat mix, an infusion of nu-skool breaks. He jumps to Danny Bonnici’s Rings of Saturn, its not as outstanding as Chable and Bonicci’s Ride but it gets the job done. He then goes into progressive breaks with the American duo of Kling and Charles and the mix comes from Habersham. The next two tracks “Pickadollen” and “Discobreak” certainly show that this world is producing great works from all sides.
Chable heads into the homestretch here with Mannel’s Cruel Summer, which continues the plain nastiness of this disc and then the Nubreed mix of Tokyo adds even more dirt. We then head to the best part of the mix, where Chable layers the amazing “I’ll Kill You”, out on Bedrock Records with the Canadian Wonderkid called Luke Fair and his equally harsh Bloc Rock, out as well on Bedrock Records. Chable then ends it with his own production called “Skyline Road”
Conclusion:
Seaman’s disc is not as fierce as one might expect but it shows that he is expanding his sound but it is still solid. Chable’s disc is solid but its hit and miss at times but there is no denying the harsh tracks there. All n All, a solid compilation and if you enjoy this one, try checking out the first volume featuring Seaman and Phil K.
Out Now on Renaissance in Europe and Thrive in North America.
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