Various - Sixteen F**king Years Of G-Stone Recordings

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  • Back when the fluffy mongrel known as "downtempo" was popularly referred to as "trip-hop," many of its practitioners made music with dusty jazz horn loops, heavy drums and an air of very stoned, very serious contemplation. G-Stone, the label run by Peter Kruder and Richard Dorfmeister, was a little different; they knew being stoned was silly, and that was often what was good about it—not unlike Ninja Tune, only sleeker and fleeter, less silly, and more freewheeling. And, decisively, more Euro and far less b-boy, even after a fashion. And while that meant fewer po-faced tributes to "realness" (hear, hear), it could also mean an airiness that often equates to the music just evaporating away. That's somewhat the case with the Thirteen F**king New Tracks half of Sixteen F**king Years of G-Stone Recordings. (Not sure why they're celebrating that number rather than something divisible by f**king five.) There are moments that grab and hold for sure: Rodney Hunter's propulsive, bringing-'88-back "Tell Me," the frisky dubstep wobble of D Kay's "Red Heat," Marsmobil piling on the bass for "Patience," the unhurried soundtrack-ready second half of "Sional" by Peace Orchestra. But they're moments above all; they don't cohere into the kind of overview that's ready to convince an audience that G-Stone is still doing exciting new things as a label. The best parts of the Twelve F**king Classics disc are an easier sell—they had better be, right? The sequencing isn't much; there's no particular point being made, no sense that history needed redrawing just this minute and that these are just the tracks to do it. Cuts like Tosca's 1996 "Fuck Dub Pt. 1 & 2," which recalibrated the Mo' Wax sound into something a little more gliding, and Urbs' "So Weit," with its half-campy, half-delicate, music-box-like high piano roll, and DJ DSL's sparkly and strange "Happy Bear" make their own context. There's more R&B here than I'd expected, as well: Rodney Hunter's "No Stoppin'" demonstrates a surprising amount of fealty to fusion-laced late-'70s R&B, and Stereotyp's "Keepin' Me" is a ghostly, bewitching take on vocal-harmony group slow jams. But the lax presentation takes everything into the ether with it.
  • Tracklist
      CD 1 - 13 F**king New Tracks 01. Kruder & Dorfmeister - Aikon 02. Marsmobil - Patience 03. Makossa & Megablast featuring Hubert Tubbs - Coming Home 04. Tosca - Rosa (Rodney Hunter Rmx) 05. Peace Orchestra - Who Am I (Broken Reform Rmx) 06. Sugar B - Love You Anyway 07. Rodney Hunter - Tell Me 08. d.kay - Red Heat 09. Urbs feat. Bagi & Sarah Ann - Happy Days 10. DJ DSL featuring Urbs - Oaschloch 11. Christian Prommers Drumlesson - High Noon 12. Tosca - John Lee 13. Peace Orchestra - Sional CD 2 - 12 F**king Classics 01. Kruder & Dorfmeister - The G-Stone Anthem (Urbs Mashup) 02. Tosca - Fuck Dub Pt. 1 & 2 03. Urbs - So Weit 04. Marsmobil - Magnetizing 05. Kruder & Dorfmeister - Young Man 06. Makossa & Megablast feat. Ras T-Weed - Rip It Up 07. Voom:Voom - Best Friend 08. Richard Dorfmeister Vs. MDLA - Valldemossa 09. Rodney Hunter - No Stoppin 10. DJ DSL - Happy Bear 11. Stereotyp - Keepin' Me 12. Peace Orchestra - Shining
RA