Mind-melting modern electronic soul, like Flylo strapped to a rocket and slow-blasted to Jupiter.
peerless slice of beat magic infused with skewed soul from Detroit's finest.
Heart-warming astral-jazz phonics from two of the LA scene's most pivotal operators.
Martian melodies meet mutant jazz drums at a cosmic crossroads.
Undefinable freeform melodic abstraction from one of the Beautiful Swimmers.
Supremely woozy instrumental hiphop dynamics from Lazer Sword's Bryant Rutledge.
The amorphous analog maestro attempts a fusion of Ethiopian Jazz and space disco with addictive results.

Sa-Ra's Om'Mas Keith guests on a double-cream P-Funk anthem.
Theo travels to the Ra dimension and returns with ancient groove knowledge.
Fluid R'n'B electronics imbued with a shimmering jazz spirit.
A choice cut from Illum's debut 12", all dusty organs, psyched FX and killer drums.
Another Sa-Ra member trips out on his own Afro-centric project.
Crafty jazz harmonics and cutting edge beat constructions...
Like the soundtrack to a love scene from an early 80's sci-fi flick.
14 tracks: Wave Patrol
14 tracks: Kosmic Package Holiday
14 tracks: Afro Beats
14 tracks: box of tricks
14 tracks: Chamber drift
14 tracks: techno techno techno
14 Tracks: Underworld Missive
14 tracks: Holo Core
14 tracks: Trouble At Mill
14 Tracks: Cyan Psych Syzygy

On 27 Jan 04:20 mike endrusick said:
http://14tracks.com
“nice”
love the Maxmilillion Dunbar track, hadn't heard his stuff before!
On 27 Jan 11:03 The Republic of Desire Recordings said:
a record that should have been a part of this selection:
Interplanetary Music-Mickey Moonlight
On 28 Jan 18:23 Gene Onegin said:
“Yessssssss....”
Another winning set. Love the late night/inner world vibe...
GO
On 12 Feb 03:07 The Art of Ethical Sampling Dept said:
“You are what you sample?”
the Maximillion Dunbar track is practically 70% made from samples of Kevin Harrison's "Wooden Heartthrob Of Peking" from the Cherry Red album "Inscrutably Obvious" back in 1981. A seriously excellent and under appreciated album - and available on CDR directly from Mr Harrison. Go investigate!
Max Dunbar has basically just added some more contemporary beats to it. nice but hardly innovative.