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Since his appearance on Soccer96 's Jupiter Masterdrive Edits EP (alongside Danny Krivit and Glenn Astro flips, also on WotNot ) in 2015, and subsequent EPs on WotNot, Monologues and SGOL , Danvers has swiftly become a name to pay attention to.
As a regular appearance on Co-op's Selectors Assemble , both live and on their recent comp Vol. 2, he's established himself as a new and original voice on the broken beat scene. His recent The Future Is Broken mix series highlights his ear for unconventional dance music, something that makes him extremely at home on the 'wildly creative' WotNot (thanks DJ Mag).
The opening two tracks are strongly in the broken beat vein. Mason opens with dreamy,
Rhodes jazz over a bruk beat with rolling snare fills, lulling us into a false sense of security before switching to an offbeat but irresistible squelchy synth groove.
Similarly, in Aye Ata the pulsing chord that slowly grows out of the beat suddenly turns the track around with a rhythmic twist, showing the playful broken beat in a whole new light.
There's a house touch throughout the EP, none more so than in 1997 , where a bouncing kick, soulful claps and a booming sub provide a steadier basis for laid back Rhodes chords and dreamy spoken word samples.
As a big influence on Danvers' music, Frits Wentink is welcomed onto remix duty with open arms.
The Wolf Music regular brings an otherworldly vibe to his take on 1997 , with enchanting but almost disorienting chord swells and spiralling vocal fx punctuated with crisp snare rolls. The ever-busy Danvers recently launched 38 East , a studio space and music community, with Warren Xclnce Remix.
Warren's remix of 1997 was a surprise gift to his business partner and collaborator, and is a deeper house cut, Joe Armon Jones ' (Brownswood) Rhodes jam over the track bringing a distinct Peckham flavour.
Tracklist
Track 1
Track 2
Track 3
Track 4
Track 5