
We'd like to send a big, warm thank you to Complex for giving the 33i such a nice shout-out on their site. Grab a pair if you haven't already and see why they're digging the cans so much!

We'd like to send a big, warm thank you to Complex for giving the 33i such a nice shout-out on their site. Grab a pair if you haven't already and see why they're digging the cans so much!



Last week, the good people at Dossier Journal threw a release party for their ninth issue at NYC's recently-opened Le Baron in Chinatown. Music for the night was provided by Caroline Polachek, better known as the vocalist in Chairlift―one of our favorite pop bands around right now―and, of course, she wore a pair of the silver eskuché 45s while DJ'ing!
Last week, we asked Morgan Geist to choose a track for our Classic Cuts series. It only seemed appropriate to check in with his Metro Area partner, Darshan Jesrani, for this week's installment!
This is from the album Travelogue, which I got on cassette from the local Caldor when I was a freshman in high school. My musical life has always been this back-and-forth between rock 'm' roll/new wave influences and R&B/dance music, and around this time the musical pendulum was swinging back toward the former. This tape got serious play on my sister's Walkman, which I used to borrow, and on my boombox. Like every other song which has been a touchstone for me, this one conjured in my mind a complete aesthetic universe that I wanted to live in and contribute to. I was also into hacking computers and phones around this time and I found music like this to be the perfect counterpart to my illicit activities. It seemed beautiful and escapist, suggesting other themes within it that were really attractive to my teenage mind, like technology, intrigue, isolation. This song, to me, contains the essence of not only a John Carpenter theme itself, but also the visual scene it would be set to. Although it was tough to decide between this one and "Toyota City" (from the same album), if you can avoid thinking of "Don't You Want Me" when you hear Phil Oakey's vocal, this song is a bit more rewarding.―Darshan Jesrani
One of New York City's preeminent DJ/producers, Morgan Geist, has long been an artist we adore. Whether working on his own, as part of Metro Area, or as head of Environ Records, the label he started while still a student at Oberlin College, we hungrily sink our teeth into whatever he unleashes.
"Dead Eyes Opened" is hardly the only (or best) Severed Heads track, even though hipsters and DJs would have you believe otherwise. This track, for example, is completely amazing. I bought this record at Crazy Rhythms in Montclair, NJ. Listening to a taped version on my Walkman on the school bus, the melody would to move me close to tears and the weirdness of the timbres made me feel there was no one else in the world who understood its beauty the way I did (this was very important to me in high school). Tom Ellard's "group" (and opinions) were a massive influence on my music-making and my views of the music business, journalists and fans. I imagine Tom would have some choice words for me contributing to an image-conscious headphone company's "cred" by posting a YouTube clip of his music, but maybe there will be some wonderful byproduct, like some kid hearing this track and abandoning her pursuit of "cool" in favor of buying the entire Severed Heads discography on cassette.―Morgan Geist
The sharp-edged, sexy, dance-leaning duo, the Hundred In the Hands, is soon to release LP2, and boy are we thrilled about it. We hit up the male half of the duo, Jason Friedman, who plays guitar, to give us a Classic Cuts selection and, not surprisingly, he chose an excellent jam.
I was just listening to the Carter-Tutti-Void record that came out on Mute this year and that got me thinking about Throbbing Gristle again so I’ve gone back to 20 Funk Greats recently. I love the way the mad industrial chaos gets absorbed and dubbed out into the stripped mechanical minimalism of a track like “Hot On The Heels Of Love,” which ends up like fractured Moroder disco. It’s so light and still aggressive.―Jason Friedman, the Hundred In the Hands
About a month ago, Cosmo Vitelli came to the U.S. for a few gigs, including one in Brooklyn, New York for Let's Play House. Shortly thereafter, we asked the Parisian DJ, producer, and label head for a Classic Cuts selection and he certainly delivered one!
I've had this EP forever (I actually bought it on CD in the early 90s in a cheap secondhand store). I completely forgot it and found it by chance, checking again my CDs a few years ago. It's typical of Andrew Weatherall, with a Balearic touch, the expected piano house riff, and the unmissable early 90s breakbeat. What makes it special is Weatherall's dubby treatment, and its rock flavor. It's really what I'd expect to hear on a late night set.―Cosmo Vitelli

The wonderful folks over at Stuff UK included our top-of-the-line headphones―the 45―in their most recent issue (May, 2012). "Part-way between WWII radio operator and Metropolis" sounds about right to us! A very warm thank you to the editorial team over at the publication!