Label:LETs play house
Cat-No:lph064
Release-Date:21.03.2019
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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Last in:07.05.2019
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Label:LETs play house
Cat-No:lph064
Release-Date:21.03.2019
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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laroze - No Title
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laroze - No Title
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laroze - No Title
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laroze - No Title
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laroze - No Title
A return to France for L'amour Existe Encore, a young producer named Laroze's debut on LPH. A giddy jaunt through sun-kissed house with smatterings of filter fiddling, punchy horns, bright strings, chopped-up vocals. Twenty-five minutes of many DJ sets to come right here.
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More records from laroze
Label:Slow Bistro Records
Cat-No:SLOWB04
Release-Date:31.05.2021
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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Last in:18.06.2021
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Last in:18.06.2021
Label:Slow Bistro Records
Cat-No:SLOWB04
Release-Date:31.05.2021
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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Laroze - Don't Make Me Over
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Laroze - Love Games
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Laroze - Salted Gaspacho
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Laroze - I Knew It
Fourth release for the young label Slow Bistro Records, created by Slow-L in 2019.
Great EP from the established house producer Laroze (D.KO records / Let's Play House /
RTCT). Between classic 90’s house, Balearic and more raw Detroit-influenced tracks More
Great EP from the established house producer Laroze (D.KO records / Let's Play House /
RTCT). Between classic 90’s house, Balearic and more raw Detroit-influenced tracks More
More records from LETs play house
Label:LETs play house
Cat-No:lph065
Release-Date:23.04.2019
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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Label:LETs play house
Cat-No:lph065
Release-Date:23.04.2019
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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Ray Kandinski - CDR
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Ray Kandinski - Multiverse Connection
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Ray Kandinski - Ophelia
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Ray Kandinski - Disk Driver
Ray Kandinski's debut for LPH, Multiverse Connection, presents itself as the soundtrack to an airborne chase scene in an imagined cyberpunk epic. Excited synth lines wiggle through dense fields of metallic drum sequences and showers of jagged, jutting robo effects. The A-side is a launch into outer space orbit, the B, a juiced-up zigzag across the stars in hyperdrive. Futuristic house built with angular electro components and scalpel-sharp acid.
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Label:lets play house
Cat-No:lph031
Release-Date:17.09.2014
Configuration:12"
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Last in:04.11.2014
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Last in:04.11.2014
Label:lets play house
Cat-No:lph031
Release-Date:17.09.2014
Configuration:12"
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luke solomon - Let The Rhythim
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luke solomon - Wot U Du
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luke solomon - R U Ready? (Benjamin Damage Remix)
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luke solomon - R U Ready?
Over the course of his twenty-plus-year-long career, Luke Solomon has made one hell of a name for himself: he's released dozens of singles and EPs on labels like Crosstown Rebels, Rekids, Cajual, and Playhouse, to name a few; founded his own imprint, Classic, with longtime friend and co-conspirator, Derrick Carter; dropped four albums; and had a hand in well over 100 remixes. As one might expect, it's a tremendous honor to now welcome the veteran DJ and producer to LPH, where we think he fits in perfectly, despite being the artist in our ranks with the most impressive tenure. Things Wot I Done, Vol. I kicks off rambunctiously, with "Let the Rhythim," a sharp, powerful house tune wrapped in a barbed wire knot of chunky synth hooks, loose drums, and looped vocals you'll find yourself immediately singing along with. "Wot U Du" is the acid-y complement to "Rhythim," a more malevolent tune that sounds crisper and more focused, rendering it, arguably, more destructive. The flip is commenced with a remix of "R U Ready?" by 50Weapon's Benjamin Damage, a buddy whom we've been courting to work with us for a year. His cut-which is the first effort yielded from his new hardware-centric setup-is a twisted, acid-laced techno one that'll immediately ignite any dancefloor. The EP is finished with the Solomon original, which is no less punchy than Damage's version, but a little more bizarre and wonky; it's loaded with effects, unexpected twists and turns, and screeches that're plopped in, seemingly, at random. The 12" ends as it begins: with a bang. As the title implies, this is presumably part of a series and we already can't wait to see what Luke does next.
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Label:lets play house
Cat-No:lph029
Release-Date:16.07.2014
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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Last in:05.08.2014
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Last in:05.08.2014
Label:lets play house
Cat-No:lph029
Release-Date:16.07.2014
Genre:House
Configuration:12"
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curses - A1. Bark In The Dark
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curses - A2. Bark In The Dark (Naum Gabo Remix)
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curses - B1. Eyes On You
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curses - B2. Need You
If you've been even the most casual participant in or observer of the NYC dance music and club scene over the past decade, you've most definitely encountered Luca Venezia, a.k.a. Curses, who once was better known as Drop the Lime, a central figure in the Trouble & Bass crew. Where DTL was all stripped and chewed dubstep and grime, Curses is clearly of a house bent, albeit one that's been cut with plenty of heavy bass, breakbeat-leaning drums, and a frantic energy that one wouldn't find on classic Chicago 12”s. As a longtime friend and fellow New Yorker, it was only a matter of time until we came together for a record. The resultant EP—which is called Bark in the Dark and serves as a sort of unofficial companion to Curses' recent release on our sister label, Throne of Blood—is equal parts unabashed cheese, hands-in-the-air euphoria, and bone-chilling witchcraft. The title track is a tongue-in-cheek, sax-laden stomper that chugs along for nearly eight minutes, the first three of which tantalizingly build to what can only be described as a nasty drop. A remix by Glasgow's Naum Gabo (J.G. Wilkes of Optimo fame and James Savage, who released an EP on LPH in 2011) fills out the A-side. It's an explosive reimagination that seems to have been constructed from stems spiked with Rohypnol, acid, and a touch of ketamine. If Curses' O.G. rendering is Krusty the Clown, N.G.'s tweak is Sideshow Bob; an antagonistic, malicious, schizophrenic bundle bound by paranoid rage. The flip finds Curses shifting gears and exploring the dark corners of the smokey, strobe-sprinkled basement megaclub you might see him playing “Bark” in. “Eyes on You” is a creepy crawler, a house cut that's built around a slinky yet haunting keyboard line and drums that have so much swagger and punch to them that they seem drunk off their own confidence and assurance. “Need You” is a bit peppier and squarer, but not by much. In lieu of the Twilight Zone-lifted melodies in “Eyes,” there's a plethora of pads you'd be likely to find in choice Balearic tunes and beats that also feel straight out of the late 90s, but the whole thing is constructed and arranged with such cheer and given a bass-rooted modern spin that it's impossible to not shuffle along to it, start to finish.
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