
Carrier - Neither Curve Nor Edge / In Spectra (LP)
Mutant steppers techno maverick Carrier caps 2024 with a doublepack of the sought-after first two 12âs issued on his own label - both now trading for twice the price 2nd hand - comprising some of the deadliest, most stripped down twists on club music fundamentals of the decade so far - big one if yr into T++, Photek, Chain Reaction, Burial.
As Carrier, Guy Brewer has rigorously consolidated his fascinations with technoid dance music physics to proper, cult acclaim. Distilling the rolling pressure of his D&B work as half of Commix with the granite hewn heft of his techno streak as Shifted, and the finely spaced pressure of his sound design that defined his Alexander Lewis and Covered In Sand bits, the project has come to represent the bleeding edge of club music in a way mistakenly thought lost to a previous era.Â
The bloody-minded focus on his thing has resulted in a frankly jaw-dropping new sound that still conveys the increasingly rarer rush of the new that we once felt hearing Photek and Source Direct in the late â90s, or in the refined rolige of Autechre and T++/Monolake 12âs in the â00s, thru the mutations of 2562 and A Made Up Sound, or Raimeâs writhing shapeshifting into the 2010s. Fair to say those lineages were fractured by Covid-enforced dancefloor downtime, but Carrier still holds their principles of obsessively tight, syncopated percussion and subbass rhythm programming and proprioceptive sound design close to heart with diehard, visionary effect.
From the squashed woodblock drums and dry concrĂšte tone of âInto the Habitâ and rugged techno dub  of âShadingâ, thru the tendon-tweak lean of âStill Soâ on the âNeither Curve Nor Edgeâ 12â, and over to the pressure of his subaquatic shimmy in âCoastalâ, or lip-bitingly taut 2-step swivel of âWood Over Plasticâ on the âIn Spectraâ 12â; his skeletal rhythm trax dare to dance in lesser heard but wholly vital niches of club music in a way that plays to club needs, not wants.Â
No hyperbole, itâs just 100% deadly if you ask we, and makes the other 99% of dance music producers right now sound like line-dancing copycats in relief of his sound: a painstakingly chiselled pursuit of the dragon that drove UK dance music - particular the âhardcore ânuum - to thrilling, inspirational degrees from the late â80s thru the â90s and into the present. After wriggling our socks off to his new live set on The White Hotelâs faithful rig a few weeks ago, we can only confirm heâs the best to do it right now, and this doublepack is fucking unmissable if you follow.
For the dancers, DJs!
Carrier - Neither Curve Nor Edge / In Spectra (LP)
Mutant steppers techno maverick Carrier caps 2024 with a doublepack of the sought-after first two 12âs issued on his own label - both now trading for twice the price 2nd hand - comprising some of the deadliest, most stripped down twists on club music fundamentals of the decade so far - big one if yr into T++, Photek, Chain Reaction, Burial.
As Carrier, Guy Brewer has rigorously consolidated his fascinations with technoid dance music physics to proper, cult acclaim. Distilling the rolling pressure of his D&B work as half of Commix with the granite hewn heft of his techno streak as Shifted, and the finely spaced pressure of his sound design that defined his Alexander Lewis and Covered In Sand bits, the project has come to represent the bleeding edge of club music in a way mistakenly thought lost to a previous era.Â
The bloody-minded focus on his thing has resulted in a frankly jaw-dropping new sound that still conveys the increasingly rarer rush of the new that we once felt hearing Photek and Source Direct in the late â90s, or in the refined rolige of Autechre and T++/Monolake 12âs in the â00s, thru the mutations of 2562 and A Made Up Sound, or Raimeâs writhing shapeshifting into the 2010s. Fair to say those lineages were fractured by Covid-enforced dancefloor downtime, but Carrier still holds their principles of obsessively tight, syncopated percussion and subbass rhythm programming and proprioceptive sound design close to heart with diehard, visionary effect.
From the squashed woodblock drums and dry concrĂšte tone of âInto the Habitâ and rugged techno dub  of âShadingâ, thru the tendon-tweak lean of âStill Soâ on the âNeither Curve Nor Edgeâ 12â, and over to the pressure of his subaquatic shimmy in âCoastalâ, or lip-bitingly taut 2-step swivel of âWood Over Plasticâ on the âIn Spectraâ 12â; his skeletal rhythm trax dare to dance in lesser heard but wholly vital niches of club music in a way that plays to club needs, not wants.Â
No hyperbole, itâs just 100% deadly if you ask we, and makes the other 99% of dance music producers right now sound like line-dancing copycats in relief of his sound: a painstakingly chiselled pursuit of the dragon that drove UK dance music - particular the âhardcore ânuum - to thrilling, inspirational degrees from the late â80s thru the â90s and into the present. After wriggling our socks off to his new live set on The White Hotelâs faithful rig a few weeks ago, we can only confirm heâs the best to do it right now, and this doublepack is fucking unmissable if you follow.
For the dancers, DJs!
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Description
Mutant steppers techno maverick Carrier caps 2024 with a doublepack of the sought-after first two 12âs issued on his own label - both now trading for twice the price 2nd hand - comprising some of the deadliest, most stripped down twists on club music fundamentals of the decade so far - big one if yr into T++, Photek, Chain Reaction, Burial.
As Carrier, Guy Brewer has rigorously consolidated his fascinations with technoid dance music physics to proper, cult acclaim. Distilling the rolling pressure of his D&B work as half of Commix with the granite hewn heft of his techno streak as Shifted, and the finely spaced pressure of his sound design that defined his Alexander Lewis and Covered In Sand bits, the project has come to represent the bleeding edge of club music in a way mistakenly thought lost to a previous era.Â
The bloody-minded focus on his thing has resulted in a frankly jaw-dropping new sound that still conveys the increasingly rarer rush of the new that we once felt hearing Photek and Source Direct in the late â90s, or in the refined rolige of Autechre and T++/Monolake 12âs in the â00s, thru the mutations of 2562 and A Made Up Sound, or Raimeâs writhing shapeshifting into the 2010s. Fair to say those lineages were fractured by Covid-enforced dancefloor downtime, but Carrier still holds their principles of obsessively tight, syncopated percussion and subbass rhythm programming and proprioceptive sound design close to heart with diehard, visionary effect.
From the squashed woodblock drums and dry concrĂšte tone of âInto the Habitâ and rugged techno dub  of âShadingâ, thru the tendon-tweak lean of âStill Soâ on the âNeither Curve Nor Edgeâ 12â, and over to the pressure of his subaquatic shimmy in âCoastalâ, or lip-bitingly taut 2-step swivel of âWood Over Plasticâ on the âIn Spectraâ 12â; his skeletal rhythm trax dare to dance in lesser heard but wholly vital niches of club music in a way that plays to club needs, not wants.Â
No hyperbole, itâs just 100% deadly if you ask we, and makes the other 99% of dance music producers right now sound like line-dancing copycats in relief of his sound: a painstakingly chiselled pursuit of the dragon that drove UK dance music - particular the âhardcore ânuum - to thrilling, inspirational degrees from the late â80s thru the â90s and into the present. After wriggling our socks off to his new live set on The White Hotelâs faithful rig a few weeks ago, we can only confirm heâs the best to do it right now, and this doublepack is fucking unmissable if you follow.
For the dancers, DJs!





