
Two originals from David Ponziano plus two remixes by Neville Watson and Man Power. Ponziano takes the lead with ‘4c1d R4v3'. Looks like a fancy personalised number plate in print, sounds like a fat acid house jam, there's a raw roughness and super-charged weight behind this one, especially with Aqeel's Tyree Cooper-style spoken word delivery. Remix-wise Watson ups the drive factor, beefs up the kicks and focuses in on the psychedelic aspects of the original for added hypnotic effect.
‘New Life' takes a much trippier turn, amplifying the label's broadsword agenda even more. Stripped back, tunnelling and twisted, it's a techno beast that comprises a number of layers, all weaving in and out menacingly. Heads down all the way for this one… Right up to those gorgeous chords that breakthrough on the breakdown when all eyes rise to the heavens.
Last but definitely not least, Man Power maintains his consistent Midas touch on the remix. Flipping the original's dark tones with strong shades of cosmic light, a denser blend of instruments, spiky arpeggios and full focus on the dreamy chords on the intro, it's another sign that Penrose Records is here to throw shapes for a long time to come.
‘New Life' takes a much trippier turn, amplifying the label's broadsword agenda even more. Stripped back, tunnelling and twisted, it's a techno beast that comprises a number of layers, all weaving in and out menacingly. Heads down all the way for this one… Right up to those gorgeous chords that breakthrough on the breakdown when all eyes rise to the heavens.
Last but definitely not least, Man Power maintains his consistent Midas touch on the remix. Flipping the original's dark tones with strong shades of cosmic light, a denser blend of instruments, spiky arpeggios and full focus on the dreamy chords on the intro, it's another sign that Penrose Records is here to throw shapes for a long time to come.
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