From URB Magazine
From the clean and pristine digital massage of "Make Up Your Mind," the cool lament of electro-love gone awry that opens
Dirty Dancing, it's readily evident that Swayzak have come to play. Having already had a subtle but instrumental hand in the development of the sound currently being touted as "tech-house," James Taylor and David Brown have quietly (but ambitiously) developed into producers with real vision.
Dirty Dancing finds the duo flying back to the future, evidenced by songs like the monotone New Wave of "In the Car Crash" (hey Gary Numan called and he wants his track back!). But it's that very punk rock-gone-underground-dance spirit that separates Swayzak's latest from the more rudimentary electro-art pack. "I Dance Alone" goes even deeper into the lonely trench-coat crowd of the late '80s, with Detroit godhead Adult.'s Nicola Kuperus laying down the law on the mic. Old-school goths will be crying beneath their capes for this baby. "The Punk Era" remembers the early days of Factory records and writing poetry to New Order's Power, Corruption and Lies. "Take My Hand" re-runs nostalgic reels of Depeche Mode when Vince Clarke was still in the band. But amid all of this looking back to move forward, new ideas are rapidly gestating.
Mining the classic tech-house (as derived from the Kraftwerk theorem) blueprint for the last track, "Ping Pong," Swayzak's undeniable might has the potential of being a vital bridge in the gap between the more cerebral dance floors, electro-clash hype and the seeds of a pop-culture paradigm shift. Imagine that.
Permanent Ink
Product Description
Swayzak Release their Album on Studio K7, featuring the Vocal Talents of Clair Dietrich, Klaus Kotai and Adult.