All that stuff you’re doing is rude and inconsiderate.
Tracklist
Act I
* Das EFX – Set It Off
* Kraftwerk – RADIOAKTIVITÄT
* Ryan Paris feat. Vale – Sensation of Love
* Claude VonStroke & Marc Houle – Fly Guy (Original Mix)
* Green Velvet – La La Land (Walker & Royce Remix)
* Cheri – Murphy’s Law
* Shaded – Holla Atcha Boy (Original Mix)
* Claude VonStroke & Justin Jay – Oh (Original Mix)
* DJ Godfather – The Next 100 (Original Mix)
* Disco Digitale – Videogirl (Octolab Remix)
* Electro Potato – Video Game (Italian Mix)
Act II
* Cyndi Lauper – Girls Just Want to Have Fun (Studio Acapella)
* Satl & Trail – Amonite (Original Mix)
* Cyndi Lauper – Girls Just Want to Have Fun (Studio Acapella)
* SMG – Suku (Original Mix)
* Verdikt – The Future (Original Mix)
* Kumarion – Want It (Gyrofield Remix)
* Invadhertz & Primitive Instinct – That’s You (Original Mix)
* Ed Rush & Optical – Bacteria (Pendulum Remix)
* dgoHn – Sporks (Original Mix)
* Buunshin – Forget About Me (Original Mix)
* Waeys – Take 2007 (Original Mix)
* Chase & Status, Trigga, Irah, Flowdan, Takura & Bou – Baddadan (Extended Mix)
Act III
* Johnny Osbourne & The Prophets – Keep That Light
* Alton Ellis – A Fool
* Freddie McGregor – Rastaman Camp
* Israel Vibration – Highway Robbery
* Gregory Isaacs – Tune In
* The Thunderkats – Melatron (Original Mix)
* Double 99 – Jump (Tuff Jam Remix)
* Headie One & Skepta – Back to Basics (Floating Points Remix)
* Benga – Skank
* Guau – Dangerous (Original Mix)
* Heist – Thought We Were Cool (Todd Edwards Vocal)
* Poolio & Jack D – Little More Time (Sweet Vocal Mix)
* Orazio Fantini – Ghost Jazz
* Pure Garage – Why
* Surusinghe – Bop (Original Mix)
* The Bucketheads – The Bomb (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)
* AKA – Warning (Sunship Remix)
* Colour Girl – Joyrider (Y-Tribe Mix)
* David Howard ft. Jhay Palmer – U & I
* Jay Bee – Mysterious
This sequence of tracks constructs a polyglot survey of electronic dance subcultures, a kind of unruly genealogy that collapses temporal and stylistic distance. Early hip hop and electro (Das EFX, Kraftwerk, Cheri) serve as historical anchors, establishing a lexicon of machine rhythm and street vernacular. These are folded into contemporary house and electro hybrids (Claude VonStroke, Green Velvet, DJ Godfather), which foreground the persistence of funk-derived structures even under digital austerity.
From there, the mix slides into drum & bass: both brooding modernist variants (Satl, Waeys, Buunshin) and canonised touchstones (Pendulum’s rework of Ed Rush & Optical), all of which enact a dialogue around velocity and density. The brief intrusion of Cyndi Lauper’s acapella signals the permeability of pop—its affective intensity as material for reprocessing.
The reggae and dancehall inclusions (Osbourne, Ellis, McGregor, Isaacs) ground the set in a diasporic continuum, their lilt and lyrical directness contrasting with the accelerationist thrust of UK garage selections (Double 99, Sunship, Todd Edwards). In this latter phase, the mix becomes both an excavation and a recombination: garage as the spectral hinge between Afro-Caribbean rhythm, American house, and the UK’s own predilection for bass pressure.
Taken together, the set feels less like a linear journey and more like a cartography—mapping nodes of influence and cross-pollination. Its character is arch and scholarly but not detached, presenting dance music’s messy genealogies as living collisions rather than tidy sequences.
/Percival Drift, 2025