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wasn't wearing lovely jumpers or impressing people's mothers, he was toying with his synthetic pianos and computer chips to create ambient heartbreakers that could reduce your most unresponsive uncle to a snivelling mess. Imagine everyone's surprise then, when sometime after the release of his 2007 debut 'Always From This Point', without warning or reason, the famed Samoyed eye-glint started to cloud over. As much as everyone tried to fool themselves otherwise, something had gone horribly wrong in the young Geordie's mind-brain. His jaw was now so permanently clenched in brooding that his face began to change shape, turning angular and unfriendly. His friends swear that sometimes you could actually literally see the anger bubbling in his belly. The change was also clearly mirrored in Samoyed's musical output. There was a new hatred in the young mans drones, a violence in his clicks. Most notably though, there was the addition of an element not heard in his music before : The Drum. It was at this point that Glum decided to sign him. ‘Her Honey Dripping Behind EP’, Samoyed’s first release on the label, follows in the raw and dusty techno footprints of Glum’s previous two vinyl outings from Lukid, and represents a great leap forward from his already-quite-marvellous ‘Spit’ 10” released – complete with Lukid remix – on Astro Dynamics late last year. It also harbours a deadly secret weapon on it’s B side, namely ‘Klondike Rush’, a rave banger so potent that it has proved to make Glaswegians spontaneously slap walls and scream. The record has so far received support from such luminaries as Floating Points, Lone, Numbers, Nathan Fake and 2562.
A1. Her Honey Dripping Behind A2. Cherry Ripe B1. Klondike Rush B2. A Small Good Thing