Fuselab co-found WOLS has released his second album, Observer Kid. The album does a great job of mixes styles and influences, and can be streamed in full over at Bandcamp.
Tag Archives: house
Cash + David – Bones
Cash + David have a new single out, “Bones.” Stream it below. Also check out “Funn,” which certainly lives up to its name.
Matthew Herbert Resurrects Herbert Project
Matthew Herbert has announced a new EP, titled Part 6, on his own Accidental Records, out later this month. This is his first work as Herbert since 2006’s Scale. Which is not to say he hasn’t been busy with other ventures; yet, I do remember him having more hair…
Koett – Tri
Fuselab is proud to release Koett’s third EP, Tri. Those in love with pastoral techno and bucolic electronic should give it a spin.
Matrixmann, is that like Megaman stuck in the Matrix?
Spectral Sounds, a sublabel of Ghostly, has signed SF DJ Matrixmann and will release his upcoming Amulet EP this June. Check out a sample below.
SOHN – The Wheel (Denite Remix)
Suren Unka – 130
Suren Unka is an electronic producer from New Zealand. El Chupacabra is due out in a few weeks, but 130 should get the blood pumping right now.

Artist of the Week: Glitch Mob – Love Death Immortality
Piggybacking off the charm of lead single “Can’t Kill Us,” The Glitch Mob’s new album is sure to be a crowd-pleaser.
The trio of Ed Ma, Justin Boreta, and Josh Mayer formed The Glitch Mob in 2006 while each was busy DJing in California. 2010 saw the release of the spectacular debut Drink the Sea, and another four years has gifted us Love Death Immortality. Those who loved the crisp hip hop beats and dance floor vibes of Drink the Sea will undoubtedly feel back at home with Love Death Immortality, which replaces much of the introspection of the debut with the breakneck energy and euphoria of electronica’s current dubstep craze. Vocals are more prominent here as well, but they tend to be either be heavily augmented, buried in the mix, or scarce on the whole — all which play well with the group’s strong instrumental presence. Tracks like “Can’t Kill Us,” “Carry the Sun,” and “Skytoucher” are standout singles (some of which would fit comfortable inside the Tron soundtrack), but the album as a whole is also surprisingly coherent given the amount of genres the trio pulls from and styles they rotate through.
Although not for everyone, Love Death Immortality should be essential listening to fans of electronica, and given dubstep’s current influence of pop music today, The Glitch Mob is just a dedicated vocalist away from crossing into the mainstream.