When triangles become circles, that's when you know you're observing the right angles in life. That's exactly what this majestic trio did on SUSAN007. From down under to way up above, Jensen Interceptor meets JEANS and in between it seems they let the dogs out with Axefield. Pretty SAFE to say this is straight fire. From dance floors to ballrooms: Susan ain't naked just yet, so let's get her t-shirt wet before the sun comes up again.
The sun has set and above us track pant clouds are draining our imagination. The beach pebbles blossom in the glory of our denim world. Can you see where this is going? Indeed. JEANS don't fuck with the Levi's, because garage house is back and the summer is tickling our toes. Susan's getting it going with her sixth instalment and always remember friends: who's Susan?
The water surely is greener on the other side. Susan's 5th release marks perhaps the biggest step towards the so-called life of Susan. Speed and depth transform into ritualistic whistles, strange questions may be asked, but the summery seasons will blossom whilst binge eating kebabs with that wild seasoning. Susan won't create her own energy drink, but the likes of DJ Swagger, Axefield, DJ Windows XP and Joakim Hellgren sure have spiced up the spectrum of reason on this one.
DJ Windows XP's highway route from the strange deserts to the over-the-top underground clubs somewhere deep in your imaginative 18 karat gold vinyl players. Straight debut fire on Who's Susan. Wait, who is Susan?
Who's Susan? Following our starlet from Djibouti to Leiden she keeps bringing certified legitness to you and your crew. The first 12" release named "you are the prototype" is a V.A. with tracks by Raar, Axefield and William Caycedo, spanning three different vibe's, all within Susan's comfort zone. On the A side the killer lo-fi house vibes of 'Santori' meet hypnotic acid bumps in this late-nite party gem, keeping your ears ringing all the way back home. Axefield creates ample room on the B side for his deconstructed synth filled 'SNY' in which Japanese and Jamaican voice samples culminate in just under 9 minutes of bliss. William Caycedo's 'SNY' remix snaps you straight back to the dancefloor, with percussion as crisp as it gets and a baseline as low as it goes, this one has that instant deep gut reaction.