Brooklyn-based Sunsplash took the hardest drum section of Pocz‘s ravey Kuduro-styled “Mortal Kombat II” and edited it into the base for their remix, adding new melodies and synths that take it into deeper, more atmospheric territories. In reference to Venezuelan Changa Tuki, a local dance style rooted in the barrios there, they’ve labeled it “Tuki Bass”. Changa is Venezuelan slang for 4×4 house and techno, and Tuki basically means ghetto. The style is entirely separate from the U.S. ghetto house genre that led to juke. It’s fast and hard, but displays a distinct Latin flavor. (Check this DJ Yirvin mix for a taste.)

Changa got popular in the 80s and 90s, pushed by Minitecas (mobile sound systems), and the Tuki thing (also spelled Tuky or Tukky) blew up around 2006 with La Maquina Latina, a soundsystem that hosted dance battles to Tuki music. The style is often referred to as raptor house or hard fusion. At times, it sounds very much like Angolan Kuduro, although that happened independently. “Thats whats amazing,” says Pacheko, who lives in Caracas and works closely with Pocz. “These people have never heard of Kuduro, or barely heard of Baile Funk or anything like that, yet they came up with something that is very similar at moments.” This area of Venn overlapping is what led Pocz & Pacheko to call their recent Enchufada record “Tuki Love“. It appeared on Hard Ass 5, a series of “foreigner visions of Kuduro“.

Pacheko is currently working on a mixtape to showcase artists in the Tuki scene, and they could certainly use the shine, according to Alberto Stangarone, who is one half of Sunsplash and is also from Venezuela originally: “The term Tuki was coined in popular Venezuelan culture, the style and music are easily identified, but most of the original producers remain anonymous and largely ignored by Venezuelan media. Sure, their slum raves are big, and their songs are danced to by legions of ghetto ravers nationwide, yet the names of the music producers rarely pop up. Also, unfortunately, the word tuki has been misused by social elites as a synonym for thug.” But that’s why they’re using the word, Pacheko explains, “To be like, ‘Fuck it, the Tuki thing is awesome.'”

Pocz – “Mortal Kombat II (Sunsplash RMX)” [320]

[audio: http://culturesystem.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/PoczMortalKombatIISunsplashRemix.mp3]
April 21st, 2011

Serocee – Oh Na Na

Jambrum MC Serocee drops his first solo tune in too long, produced by Jamaican legend Tony Kelly, with a smashing 6 people on the remix package. There’s everything you need: the bubbling dancehall of the original, the bassline of Witty Boy, Famous Eno (of Warrior One fame) with the moombah, Joe Grime with the reggae tip, Dubchild bringing dubstep, Sam Interface teams up with Laza Beam for the sparse D&B and Zed Bias with the broken beat. Looks like ‘Oh Na Na’ is this year’s catchphrase!

Download the Joe Grime remix here and watch for the record, dropping on Jambrum records on the 30th May.

[audio: http://www.mixpakrecords.com/mp3/Serocee – Oh Na Na.mp3]

Preview: Serocee: Oh Na Na (Original Mix)

[audio: http://www.mixpakrecords.com/mp3/Serocee – Oh Na Na – Rice & Peas Mix (Produced By Joe Grime).mp3]

Download: Serocee – Oh Na Na – Rice & Peas Mix (Produced By Joe Grime)

Here’s the cover art for ‘Go Go Wine’ the first single from the long-awaited Dre Skull produced Vybz Kartel album that’s coming soon on Mixpak. Tune in to Toddla T’s show tomorrow (Thursday April 21st) on BBC Radio 1 to hear the ‘Go Go Wine’ world premiere!

April 19th, 2011

Mosca Dubs Spooky

Mosca gets his dubby hands on one of last year’s biggest grime tunes, Spooky’s ‘Spartan’. Some serious cross-genre niceness, with Mosca really dipping confidently into the dub tradition – A LOT of reverb, plenty of samples and a sufficiently deep bassline, reminding us that the two genres definitely do have a whole bunch in common.

April 19th, 2011

LOL Boys – Blockz

Blockz is the lead track off the new EP from Discobelle’s mystic LOL Boys, and I really can’t describe it better than they did:

The ‘Blockz’ video is a trippy rendition of what would happen if your friend’s inspirational wolf shirt lost its way to the cleaners and wound up inside Bryce 3D…It sends you into a THC induced journey through underwater caverns while you’re riding on the back of a bottle nosed dolphin. Rumored to be originally released as a homemade Sega Saturn disc back in 1994, the shimmering analog casiotone evokes the ambient bliss of lovesick teenagers laying in a field drinking a slushie laced with ecstasy. struggling to stand up.

Go grab the free remix from Gown Folk, or buy the whole EP over at Beatport.