Review: RECOMMENDED
There will always be something deeply, infectiously romantic about the early-mid-1990s electronic and dance music scene. It was a time when, comparatively speaking, commercialism was yet to fully make inroads in the landscape, when producers were still often anonymous and few people really knew what DJs actually looked like, the only visual cues distorted by smoke, strobes, and chaos.
The result is there are many, many, many troves for newcomers to discover. Nuron, or Nurmad Jusat, is just one of those, but definitely up there with the most rewarding. Whether you call work like this three-piece EP techno, ambient, or a combination of the two it packs levels of musicality many creators can only hope to aspire to. Elements of Detroit, electro, trance, progressive breaks and more, boxed up in a lush, tranquil but highly usable package equally at home in the dance or mid-Monday morning.
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