*** Pete Tong
ESSENTIAL MIX
(ffrr/Warner Bros.)
Half a decade ago, when house music was taking over, the London-based ffrr label
was a source for many of the genre’s rawest sessions. DJ Pete Tong’s set recalls
those days. Here you’ll find deep beats unusually textured, hoarse divas, spaced-out
pillow talk, and several returns by the heroes of house music’s glory days (Photek,
in “Mine To Give,” mixed by David Morales; Pete Heller’s “Sputnik”), in which guy
vocals soar and chick singers wobble while stressed-out keyboard riffs poke and
tickle them. Tong has none of Danny Tenaglia’s blissed-out suavity, Louie Vega’s
Latinism, or Junior Vasquez’s voluptuous elegance (to name present house’s three
best turntablists); instead he harks back to the scratch-mixing roughness of Todd
Terry, deep house’s first master. His beats push and shove, whether the voice they
carry is a cute one like Emilina Torini’s (“To Be Free”), or Photek’s (“Mr.
Nice Guy”), or horny gal Rui da Silva’s (“Touch Me”). Neither is it a surprise
to find him selecting “Pilgrimage to Paradise” (by Sourmash), which is harsh
and lumpy with not so even a single soft and dreamy moment. If you like a
hard ride without shock absorbers, Tong awaits you.
— Michael Freedberg
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