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Label of the month: Deep Explorer Music

Not everyone understands house music; it's a spiritual thing, a body thing, a soul thing, a...Spanish thing? This month, Todd L. Burns celebrates Madrid's Deep Explorer Music.

Spain is a land of explorers. Magellan, Columbus, Ponce de León: It's a nation typified by its lust for adventure, and those eager to look beyond their own borders. As such, it's no surprise that when faced with a scene that favored the tougher strains of house and techno that Madrid's José Manuel Alvarez, AKA Dubbyman, would look elsewhere for inspiration. He didn't have to venture very far. In fact, he found it just about everywhere: Acid house, funk, drum & bass, dub and hip-hop were early inspirations when he began DJing in the early '90s. And music from Detroit and Chicago were also instrumental in his musical education. But unlike most electronic music fans, Alvarez's American fixation wasn't limited to house and techno emanating from the Midwest. Instead, as his taste has become more and more focused, he found himself listening most to black music from the beginning of the '80s when smoothness was key, and cleanliness was next to godliness.

Dubbyman
Dubbyman
It's a very particular sound, and it's one that has guided his hand as the label head of Deep Explorer Music, an imprint he runs with his brother—Javier Alvarez, AKA Above Smoke. It's deep house, surely, but it has little to do with the current revival taking place in Germany or even the mutations that are driving New York's house music Renaissance. As José told the founders of the Disco 3000 festival in an interview earlier this year, "I really think that I am touched by the music that influenced the deep house producers from Detroit…Indeed, my record collection consists more of those records than actual deep house productions!" Deep Explorer Music is, for lack of a cooler way to put it, house you can bring home to your mother.

Don't underestimate easy listening house and its charms, though. Since 2002, Deep Explorer Music has excelled at releasing records that operate in the middle ground between dance floor utility and home listening enjoyment. Or, as José puts it, tracks that aren't "simply loops, but not constantly changing rhythms either..." In a scene dominated by music that only seems to work in one context or the other, this is no mean feat. But it's one that has clear roots. As a kid, José grew up listening to the radio on weekend nights, listening to DJs mixing pop hits together.

"I remember one of the first mixes that I heard. It was a greatest hits from Madonna. I really was charmed when I listened to all the songs linked without stop...My favorite, though, was 'Mix Favoritos' from Radio Callao in Madrid. Those guys mixed everything. Sometimes it was difficult to find the dial frequency, though, because I think they were pirates. I must still have about 40 tapes somewhere in my basement recorded on prehistoric tape from that time," says José. And it's this wide-ranging attitude that stuck with him as he began to get behind the decks himself.

He's been extraordinary lucky, though: He's found a number of clubs throughout the years that have allowed him to pursue his more underground vision. Madrid's Sybaris is his favorite at the moment. He calls it a "small but precious lounge club," a place that feels like home. It's there that he gets to play "funk, jazz, reggae, underground '80s and, of course, deep house at the end..." And when he wants to play deep house all night long, there's also The Gift, a venue run by two brothers that José claims "know well the meaning of the underground"—something that is rare in a country that, as mentioned earlier, specializes in the commercial sound of Ibiza. José admits the scene there isn't very strong. But he says that it's logical, as Spain was never "a cradle of the sound." Sounding a bit like someone arriving at the fifth stage of grief, he concludes thusly: "Deep house remains an underground movement in Spain. And I'm OK with that."

José has come to terms with deep house's underdog status in the country largely, it seems, because of support both local and global. His brother, Javier, helps out with the label, mastering new releases for the imprint, acting as sound engineer and sounding board for new compositions and remixes. They've collaborated plenty too, with Javier acting as producer on José's tunes, and José remixing Javier's work in return. It's a symbiotic relationship: Javier is the studio genius, José is the DJing talent with a head for the mundane tasks that keep a label afloat—public relations, finances, A&R.

Above Smoke
Above Smoke
It's through this latter function that José has reached out to an enormous cast of up-and-coming producers to contribute to the label: Before he became one of this year's most talked-about talents, André Lodemann remixed Javier in 2007. Russia's deep house prodigy Anton Zap, meanwhile, had his first track hit vinyl on a sampler that same year, a compilation that also included a tune from The Lady Blacktronika—a beatdown-influenced producer from San Jose, California of all places. José counts the latter as one of his most treasured finds: When pressed to highlight a favorite EP earlier this year, he admitted that he had "a special weakness for the compilation with The Lady Blacktronika track, because nobody knew about her," adding that "it was a total honour to edit it."

But while José claims that 2010 will be more focused on these and other emerging talents—"we want to edit and support all those new cats that are making good music, but nobody knows"—Deep Explorer has plenty of time for veterans of the scene. Mike Huckaby, Scott Ferguson, Kai Alce and Marvin Belton have all released work on the imprint, with Reggie Dokes also set to get special attention via an upcoming release.

It's been working. Lawrence, Redshape, Prosumer and Agnès all count themselves as fans, and Trus'me tapped both José and Javier to represent the country at the Disco 3000 festival this year in Croatia, suggesting that their small scene in Madrid was among the only interesting house music being currently produced in the country. Judging by 2009's output alone, he may be right: The Lady Blacktronika returned to the imprint with an EP whose true hypnotic power is shown in the mix provided by Dubbyman below when it's mixed into Kai Alce's anthemic "Power Thru Pt. 3." Speaking of Alce, "KZR Gruv" from his Alpha Revisited EP "conjure[d] twilight reverie beneath pads as luxurious as 1000-thread count linens" for RA writer Chris Burkhalter. And the label's latest, Above Smoke's Time features none other than Alton Miller on vocals and Stereociti on guitar on a set of songs that reflect Javier's love of jazz as much as his passion for deep house.

But while the accolades have rolled in for the quality of work that José and Javier have been putting together lately, José isn't too fussed about the increasing amount of international gigs that have come with it. While he agrees that he now gets more than ever before, he also says that to leave "my country to play is something that I don't care a lot [about] because I like to play next to my people here in Spain. [It's] good to know other places, but I don't like to live in airports like other DJs."

It's a curious revelation for someone that helms an imprint called Deep Explorer Music. Magellan, Columbus, Ponce de León; it's in the Spanish blood, right? But, then again, maybe it makes sense. Most producers will tell you—when you ask them why they use outdated software—that there's an innate urge to master something before moving on. Only seven years in, José and Javier feel like they still have plenty of ground to cover musically with the label, and plenty of local heads to convert. And like any good explorer, they both know that you sometimes find the most interesting things close to home. Indeed, in an era in which the internet has changed the face of globalism, that may just be the most adventurous statement of all.


Deep Explorer Music

Exclusive Deep Explorer Music mixes
This month, we get a double helping from our label of the month: Above Smoke provides a recent live set from an appearance in Lisbon, and Dubbyman offers up a mix that features plenty of classics from the Deep Explorer catalog.

Download: Above Smoke, Live in Lisbon, June 2009 (right click + save target as)
Filesize: 207.8MB Length: 86:37


Tracklist
01. Ernie - Sandstorm (Dubbyman & Above Smoke remix)
02. Above Smoke - Right On
03. Above Smoke - The Damned
04. Above Smoke - Desperately in Love
05. Above Smoke - Jazzt Me
06. Above Smoke - Save Us
07. Above Smoke - Get Down
08. Dubbyman - Loveless (Above Smoke remix)
09. Above Smoke feat. Marvin Belton - Sweet Love
10. C. Gonzalez feat. Dubbyman -Revolution is Done (Above Smoke remix)
11. Pulshar - Mr money man (deep explorer mix)
12. Above Smoke - Awfully
13. Above Smoke - Radiate
14. Above Smoke - Another Chance

Download: Dubbyman: With a little help from my friends mix (right click + save target as)
Filesize: 206.4MB Length: 85:59


Tracklist
01. Crab - The Quote from the R
02. Above Smoke - Elevation
03. Iken - Close range
04. Above Smoke - Downtown
05. Ernie - Guerreros
06. Specter - Body Function
07. The Lady Blacktronika - If Some Rain
08. Kai Alce feat. Azulu Phantom - Power Thru Pt. 3
09. Ernie - Soul of the Night (Ordell remix)
10. Above Smoke - Burning
11. Eric Johnson - In 2 Deep
12. Ernie - Hotroad
13. Above Smoke - The Fix (Dubbyman remix)
14. Reggie Dokes - Transformation
15. Bjark - U Make Me Feel
16. Ordell feat.Amado - Hardaze
17. Tunes Collector - Espirito Club
18. Juju Christian feat. Affi Darrah - Mombra Mienji Yeni (Tolido soul rework)
19. Above Smoke - The Fix

Published / Wed, 30 Sep 2009

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