The Juan MacLean - Live

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1. Track 01 00:08:00
2. Track 02 00:03:58
3. One Day 00:05:08
4. Track 04 00:04:57
5. Track 05 00:04:09
6. Track 06 00:21:09

Concert information

Review
The Juan MacLean’s experimental electro is made in NYC ! The new school electro. The Underground one. It is – simply put - wickedly bouncy. The Juan MacLean combines beats that could have been made in DFA, lyrical keyboards which remind us Hercules & Love Affair and a linear and insistent rhythmic. Add to their melodies the feminine voice of Nancy Whang - so 80’s – and you’ll obtain an edgy and tasty electro !

L’électro expérimentale de Juan MacLean est définitivement New Yorkaise. Et c’est mortellement dansant ! Des beats sortis tout droit de la cuisse de DFA, des claviers qui s’envolent à la manière d’Hercules & Love Affair , une rythmique linéaire et diablement entêtante…un patchwork musical, celui de Juan MacLean. Ajoutez aux mélodies la voix féminine (teintée de réverb’) de Nancy Whang, héritage classique des 80’, et vous obtiendrez une électro psyché made in NYC de très bonne facture !
Artist info

The Juan MacLean

Prior to becoming one of the most significant names on the DFA label, John MacLean was a member of Sub Pop band Six Finger Satellite. Initially, Six Finger Satellite fit in with the remainder of the Sub Pop roster, but after one EP, they took a sharp turn into herky-jerky post-punk inspired by Devo, Big Black, and Suicide instead of Black Sabbath, the Stooges, and Led Zeppelin. By the time they went to record their final album, 1998's Law of Ruins, Krautrock also began to play a major role, as did future DFA head James Murphy, who produced, engineered, and mixed the sessions, in addition to running the band's live sound.

When Six Finger Satellite broke up, MacLean's aggravated emotional state and long-term drug addiction took him low enough to provoke a move from New York to New Hampshire and a drastic change in lifestyle. Murphy and Tim Goldsworthy, who were getting the DFA label off the ground, provoked MacLean to become interested in making music again. Using the name the Juan MacLean, MacLean took the sound of his defunct band to the dancefloor, retaining flashes of post-punk and '70s experimental electronics while grafting bits of early Euro-disco, electro, Detroit techno, and Chicago house.

A handful of singles -- including DFA highlights "You Can't Have It Both Ways" and "Give Me Every Little Thing" -- led to 2005's Less Than Human, the first album credited to the Juan MacLean. The Future Will Come followed in 2009, preceded by the singles "Happy House" and "The Simple Life" -- both of which featured vocals from frequent collaborator Nancy Whang. During the early 2000s, MacLean also became fairly prolific as a remixer, with Air ("Surfing on a Rocket"), Chromeo ("Me and My Man"), Chicken Lips ("White Dwarf"), and Roy Davis, Jr. ("I Have a Vision") just a few of the acts who sought him out.
Venue

Point Ephémère

The Point Ephémère is truly unique. Facing the Seine river, this former warehouse is one of the coolest place to chill out and hang out with friends drinking cheap beers and listening to the edgiest sounds. More than that, the Point Ephémère is a temporary creative interface, pushing for artistic crossovers and multidisciplinary exchanges. You want to see an urban art exhibit or a vjing show ? The Point Ephémère is THE place. Militant, huge, beautiful, avant-gardist, this venue should become your favorite spot.

Le Point Ephémère est un lieu qui tranche dans le panorama des salles de concerts parisiennes. Cet ancien dock a été réaménagé en une interface temporaire de création artistique, ouverte aux formes d’expression les plus avant-gardistes. Et si vous voulez écouter du pur son en buvant des bières pas chères, c’est carrément l’endroit idéal !

Address:
200 quai de Valmy, 75010, Paris, France

Phone:
+33 1 40 34 02 48

Website:http://www.pointephemere.org/
MySpace:http://www.myspace.com/pointephemere

Music styles
Electronic
Experimental
Electronic
Electro
Dance
Psychedelic
Sounds like
Whomadewho, LCD Soundsystem, Friendly Fires