Global Underground 33: Layo & Bushwacka!

until
the club
anthem “Love Story,”
off Layo
& Bushwacka!’s commercially
successful second album Night
Works (2002) that international punters began noticing the sparkle of these British gems.It wasn’t until the club anthem “Love Story,” off Layo & Bushwacka!’s commercially successful second album Night Works (2002) that international punters began noticing the sparkle of these British gems. While creating their next two albums, All Night Long (2003) and Feels Closer (2006), Layo & Bushwacka! relentlessly toured the global party circuit, performing to sold out audiences in venues such as the Panorama Bar in Berlin, Womb in Tokyo, Space in Ibiza, and of course, The End in London; thus, solidifying their status as the world’s most prominent DJ duo. Keeping the tradition of Global Underground albums, GU 33: Rio de Janeiro, is a two disc sonic journey indicative of the evening’s mercurial atmosphere. On Disc 1, Layo & Bushwacka! take us through a tour of house music history by starting things off with Ellis-D’s (Junior Vasquez’s late 80′s alias) pumping “Took My Love Away,” which is then swallowed whole by a remix of the New York classic “Surrender Yourself.” Disco Diva Kym Mazelle brings us back t 1987 as her sensual vocal harmonies on “Taste My Love” slowly mutate into N.Y. House’n'Authority’s ” Apt. 1A” before Blunted Dummies’ 1993 underground hit “House For All” funks up the mix. Layo & Bushwacka! dig even deeper into their bottomless crate of acid house classics with the jazz-fusion hit “I Called U (Why’d U Fall)” by Chicago extraordinaire Lil’ Louis. Lil’ Louis’ plush electro layering acts as a cascade of hypnotic beeps and noises until Liaisons-D’s “Future F.J.P” pops the comatose bubble with a barrage of synth-heavy breakbeats. Disc one pays homage to all the misunderstood pioneers of acid house who paved the way for DJs like Layo & Bushwacka! to become international superstars, but the meat of GU 33 is on disc two. If you were to compare GU 33 to a nightclub disc one would be thunderous roar of the main room; while, disc two would be the smaller, bean bag filled room illuminated by black lights and candles. Disc two’s collection of songs draws attention to the more cerebral side of deep house that merges
soulful vocals with carefully crafted emotional atmospherics.Disc two’s collection of songs draws attention to the more cerebral side of deep house that merges soulful vocals with carefully crafted emotional atmospherics. Layo & Bushwacka! start disc two off on a Brian Eno-ish minimal grove that gains momentum throughout the CD’s first twenty minutes. The slow build up takes shape when Guy Gerber’s menacing “Belly Dancing” injects darkness into the mix like a sharp needle penetrating one’s skin. We remain swept up in the shadow’s twilight until Bushwacka!’s “Long Distance” effortlessly shines a ray of light in the mix by swirling organic audio solace in juxtaposition with a grimy house beat that chemically bonds with the duo’s combination remix of Jesus Loves You’s (a.k.a. Boy George) “After The Love/Ashes Remain.” The most compelling nugget of spaced out ear candy comes two minutes into Patrick Chardronnet’s “Ledge;” a spooky mix of psychedelic minimalism that brings the same warmth and security a child feels when he or she watches the sun’s white flickering lights glisten off a pool’s surface just before it sets. Martin Buttrich’s “What’s Your Name?” continues the soul-driven introspection while Riley Reinhold’s celestial “Lights In My Eyes” insures a smooth re-entry from the emotion abyss. Layo & Bushwacka! close the show with a murky track called “Saudade;” a Portuguese word that describes a feeling of longing for something that one is fond of, which is gone, but might return in the distant future. Layo & Bushwacka!, along with Global Underground, have once again proven that electronic music is a potent form of social expression felt by people in all corners of the earth. GU 33: Rio de Janeiro can either be viewed as a collection of obscure, trend setting acid house classics or a transcendental experience through the nooks and crannies of one’s spirit. No matter how you choose to categorize this double disc set it’s a must have anyone willing to look outside the box.







