Magazine Sixty

Music reviews and artist interviews


Magazine Sixty brings you reviews and interviews with some of the worlds leading independent artists. Discover excitng new electronic music, revisit seminal classics and hear from the people behind the sounds.

  • I can’t tell you how exciting this is. It kind of reminds me about nights in the early nineties which were too far gone to forget. Although, defiantly plays like a breath of freshly charged air in context of today’s repeatedly boring repetition. It’s an actual song, albeit delivered with a blaze of Punk attitude

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  • It feels appropriate to listen to Tom Demac’s newly founded creation as blue skies drift by outside in the morning light of cool. Serenade pulses with a breezy energy that lifts the senses skyward as pointed piano smoulders, producing hints of yearning in amongst the probing drums and questioning voiceover. Is the word ethereal correct

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  • Introducing itself via a beautifully dangerous, richly addictive intensity this record hits all the right notes joining soaring techno notation together with a relentless arrangement of ideas and energy. The original version feels that touch deeper, though no less impactful, as space is given to the drums and smouldering vocals to weave their magic on

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  • Never underestimate the power of music to transport and elevate your mind into places and spaces as only it can. Soulfuric has provided the accompaniment to many DJ’s soundtracks over the years and this release touches upon many of those moments with grace and favour. Typically featuring warm, soulful and of course jazzy sounds this

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  • Recognising the resilient essence of the perfect bassline: hard-hitting and resolutely funky, Field Of Dreams aka Chris Kentish and Alan Mackenzie celebrate Dance Music’s, specifically Chicago’s on the opener, heady days with these three hot and newly primed cuts. The excellent Losing My Soul sequences addictive kick drums together with shuffling snares, plus the aforementioned

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  • Sidestepping both his work with the Submotion Orchestra and Matthew Halsall’s Gondwana Orchestra the pianist breaks out on his own to release this immersive collection of thought-provoking pieces, which may well radically engage your mind. Accompanied by Cello and occasional drums alongside violin and viola this is music seeking to find itself in amongst a

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  • If you have already been eagerly consuming with fervour the series including: Close To The Noise Floor, Noise Reduction System and the Third Noise Principle then this collection celebrating each of those individually brilliant compilations, which challenged the mainstreams of boredom and musical conformity, will feel like a conformation of everything you have already thought.

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  • Per Hammar Q&A

    Welcome to Magazine Sixty, Per Hammar. Let’s begin with your new single due out on INFUSE: Conscious EP which you have co-produced alongside Rossko. Tell us about how you got introduced to each other and how have you found the experience of co-producing, as opposed working as a solo artist? Hey! It actually all started

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  • You add the words minimal and pianist together and you may think you have an answer. But that would be a disservice as to what you are about to experience when listening to the Dutch artist, Joep Beving who returns with this third album in the series. In the world of electronic music you can

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