My NTS
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1
London
13:00 - 15:00

London-based DJ and producer Nabihah Iqbal (formerly known as Throwing Shade) brings you an ethnomusicological perspective on weird and wonderful music from around the world. Expect regular themed special episode; a good dose of history, and above all, good music to broaden your horizons. Every other Tuesday, midday-1pm. You can listen back to previous Throwing Shade episodes here

2
London
14:00 - 15:00

British four piece Seefeel emerged at a time when rock music had begun to stagnate, with grunge’s intense energy starting to fade. Fusing textured, heavily treated guitar tones with electronic sequencers & drum machines, the group forged an inventive new path that casts a quiet influence on artists to this day. 

Australian DJ Moopie explores the band’s lush, inventive discography with this two hour In Focus.

Mark E

On 5 November 2016, Mark E was a guest on LDLDN. Mark E has been played over 50 times on NTS, first on 17 February 2013. Mark E's music has been featured on 52 episodes.

The music of Mark E is overwhelmingly deliberate, and in that sense it’s quintessential house — unswerving, mechanistic, intoxicatingly simple. And life imitates art: the Wolverhampton-reared, Birmingham-based DJ/producer has had a slow, steady ascension to his status as one of the genre’s most natural talents.

Mark E’s love affair with electronic dance music began early, as an adolescent, when Manchester was Madchester and the irreverent attitude of rave culture swept through England. His first record? Bizarre Inc.’s exuberant, piano-loaded “Playing With Knives”, a fortuitous introduction to the hypnotizing powers of house. As Mark got older, he dove headfirst into the surprisingly fertile Wolverhampton scene, tasting house at the hands of legends like John Kelly and Frankie Knuckles before a move to Birmingham for University also installed him in a larger club scene.

Mark’s first forays into production were, naturally, edits — warm, understated, and interestingly mellow, with tempos hovering somewhere between 105 and 115 BPM (or thereabouts). Once “Scared,” a ten-minute rework of Womack & Womack’s “Baby, I’m Scared of You,” found the ears of influential selector (and, more importantly, BBC radio DJ) Gilles Peterson, it was on, and a solid string of memorable, vinyl-only releases introduced the world at large to this humble, devoted househead. Slowly (again), Mark went beyond edits and into original production, starting his own label, MERC, and honing a sound that was uniquely blue collar and utilitarian — classic, almost industrial house, with a tinge of disco warmth.

A stellar remix for Matthew Dear’s “Little People (Black City)” introduced him to the Ghostly/Spectral fold, who are now releasing his first artist album, "Stone Breaker". It’s as defining as anything he’s done, a symbol of his unique spot in the global club music landscape, sounding simultaneously familiar and unique like few others can.

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Mark E

On 5 November 2016, Mark E was a guest on LDLDN. Mark E has been played over 50 times on NTS, first on 17 February 2013. Mark E's music has been featured on 52 episodes.

The music of Mark E is overwhelmingly deliberate, and in that sense it’s quintessential house — unswerving, mechanistic, intoxicatingly simple. And life imitates art: the Wolverhampton-reared, Birmingham-based DJ/producer has had a slow, steady ascension to his status as one of the genre’s most natural talents.

Mark E’s love affair with electronic dance music began early, as an adolescent, when Manchester was Madchester and the irreverent attitude of rave culture swept through England. His first record? Bizarre Inc.’s exuberant, piano-loaded “Playing With Knives”, a fortuitous introduction to the hypnotizing powers of house. As Mark got older, he dove headfirst into the surprisingly fertile Wolverhampton scene, tasting house at the hands of legends like John Kelly and Frankie Knuckles before a move to Birmingham for University also installed him in a larger club scene.

Mark’s first forays into production were, naturally, edits — warm, understated, and interestingly mellow, with tempos hovering somewhere between 105 and 115 BPM (or thereabouts). Once “Scared,” a ten-minute rework of Womack & Womack’s “Baby, I’m Scared of You,” found the ears of influential selector (and, more importantly, BBC radio DJ) Gilles Peterson, it was on, and a solid string of memorable, vinyl-only releases introduced the world at large to this humble, devoted househead. Slowly (again), Mark went beyond edits and into original production, starting his own label, MERC, and honing a sound that was uniquely blue collar and utilitarian — classic, almost industrial house, with a tinge of disco warmth.

A stellar remix for Matthew Dear’s “Little People (Black City)” introduced him to the Ghostly/Spectral fold, who are now releasing his first artist album, "Stone Breaker". It’s as defining as anything he’s done, a symbol of his unique spot in the global club music landscape, sounding simultaneously familiar and unique like few others can.

Original source Last.fm

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