Tiefschwarz - Watergate 09

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  • Whether you treasure the ninth entry in the Watergate mix series will mostly depend on which Tiefschwarz you prefer: the NY garage-tinged deep house duo of 2001's first studio album Ral9055, the sub-scene defining electro house of 2005's Eat Books or the current silken tech house of the 2010 Chocolate long player. Needless to say, brothers Ali and Basti Schwarz's path has been a sinuous one, and the selection they propose on this new mix is an attempt at telescoping their current house interests and the records that helped shape them in the first place; in other words, Watergate 09 tries to reconcile their young selves and their current personas, but unlike their well-balanced and more homogeneous Fabric mix in 2006, this one is all too clumsy. The album's very first note is what could pretty well be a harpsichord, which is a firm declaration of intention if there was ever one: this ride, Ali and Basti seem to be saying, will try to defy any expectations you might have about them. On "Fail Forever," Nicolas Jaar takes the mundane electro-poppish original from When Saints Go Machine and twists it into an oblique slab of otherworldly house you'd imagine folks at the Magic Kingdom chill out to in their Mickey Mouse and Cinderella costumes. The frisky tech house of Deadbeat's "House of Vampires" and "Father Father" from rising producer Julio Bashmore quickly lighten the vibe while imposing a more upfront tech-y sound. From there, Matias Aguayo's playful "So In Love," a 2005 release from Kompakt, comes and puts an end to the mix's first—and most satisfying—section. Then the mix takes a rather surprising turn (a surprise further amplified by the sloppy technique of the transition) with "Baby Wants to Ride," a tremendously seminal cut. The track is one of house music's most memorable monuments, and its inclusion here is curious: The transition is awkward, the track is obvious and the brothers have already dug through their vinyl boxes on Strictly Tiefschwarz in 2007. It's the same with nearly the entire sequence of "oldies," from Ron & Chez D's frenetic "Untitled" to Kevin Saunderson's lesser known (yet very Inner City-like) "The Groove That Won't Stop" and Gemini's cooler-than-thou hip-house of "Where Do I Go." Even though it's coherent thematically speaking, it makes for a time-warp-like black hole in the very middle of the mix that comes across as dry and didactic. A highlight does come through via MK's anthemic "Burning," but it's too short to leave its mark. Tiefschwarz don't let it on for more than two minutes, while that track's very efficacy came from its groovy repetitiveness. The mix reemerges from its time-traveling sequence with Isolée's current rework of Manuel Tur's "Most of this Moment": on there, Holly Backler's vocals are highly reverential and offer an effectual nod to the fallible, humane diva signing style of house music's pioneers, and the CD's last third synthesizes all that has come before, as the contemporary (G Strings' propulsive "Images," Hot Creations/Hot Waves-sponsored "Freaky Naughty" by Marc Ashken) blends with the retro (Afro Celt Soundsystem, Romanthony) while the mixing duo takes time to slip one of their own productions in, the smooth "Corporate Butcher." In the end, what's most unexpected about Watergate 09 is how classically trained and inclined it is overall compared to the series' previous installments: so far entries from the likes of Onur Özer, Konrad Black and Lee Curtis all promoted forward-thinking EDM that comfortably reconciled the wide techno and house contemporary divide while mirroring the famous Berlin club's ethos and stylistic principles. For their participation, Tiefschwarz felt the need to summon house's music major heroes and link the dots between their various influences and interests while teaching a history lesson to the kids. Ali and Basti obviously had carte blanche from the Watergate peeps, and when you are DJs of their stature, it'd be fair to say you can do whatever you feel like. But in the way it deviates from the series' very purpose—at least if you follow the lead given by all of its eight previous entries—the end result is infuriatingly antithetic.
  • Tracklist
      01. When Saints Go Machine - Fall Forever (Nicolas Jaar Remix) 02. John Roberts - Lesser 03. Deadbeat - House of Vampires 04. Julio Bashmore feat. Javeon McCarthy - Father Father 05. Matias Aguayo - So In Love 06. Frankie Knuckles - Baby Wants To Ride 07. MK - Burning (Jay Haze Edit) 08. Alton M - I Like Havin' You 09. Ron & Chez D - Untitled 10. DJ Assassin - A Face Amongst the Crowd (Chris Simmonds Intellidred) 11. Kevin Saunderson - The Groove That Won't Stop 12. Latin House Crew - Should Have Never Been 13. Gemini - Where Do I Go (1997 Mix) 14. Manuel Tur feat. Holly Backler - Most of This Moment (Isolée Remix) 15. Afro Celt Soundsystem - Release (Masters At Work Remix) 16. Major Mal'fun'ctions - Mysterious Moments (4-W.D. Motherland Mix) 17. G Strings - Images 18. Tiefschwarz feat. Mama - Corporate Butcher 19. Marc Ashken - Freaky Naughty 20. Romanthony - Rumpshaker
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