*Please note, physical and digital tracklists differ slightly*
The third volume in Luke Una’s cherished É Soul Cultura compilation
series on Mr Bongo. A tribute to the dancefloor and its ability to
spread love.
With two deeply cherished compilations already in the bag, Luke Una
steps up for the third volume in his É Soul Cultura series on Mr Bongo. A
love letter to the dancefloor and its power to unite people from all
corners of society amid growing division and extremist politics.
Genre-spanning in nature, the 17 tracks travel between cosmic soul,
boogie, proto-house, slo-mo technoid grooves, drum machine afro, astral
bass-bugging futurism, jazz funk, dance, and disco. Each having the
ability to move the body as much as the heart.
From his formative years in Sheffield to co-founding Manchester’s
much-fabled Electric Chair with Justin Crawford, through to helming the
iconic LGBTQ institutions of Homoelectric / Homobloc, Luke has spent 40
years immersed in dance music. His latest outlet, É Soul Cultura, has
grown from a label to a globe-spanning events series with Luke holding
residencies and embarking on tours across the world from Japan and
Australia to America and Europe.
“For me, the dancefloor was never about a one-dimensional,
thudding, 130 BPM beat only. It's a much more dynamic, broader vision
than that. I cut my teeth in an era where a 100 BPM record had as much
impact, excitement, and energy as a 134 BPM dancefloor jazz funk or
techno record”, Luke mentions. É Soul Cultura Volume 3 is the perfect
embodiment of that notion: “It’s about four decades in the trenches
playing dance music, the late-night afters, the shebeens, the basements,
warehouse parties, the eight-hour journeys in East London, through to
festival sets at Houghton and We Out Here. It’s music unconstrained by
genre or tempo and more about making your body move”.
But this isn’t simply a collection of disparate dance tracks; they carry
meaning and soul. “It’s less about escapism, more about reconnection.
My experience of post-covid has been the coming together of all the
clans in various clubs and gatherings. A reaction to a very toxic world
out there, where the aggro rhythms of division have sought to divide us,
and people don't meet as often. The coming back together face-to-face
in clubs has encouraged a real love in the air, there's a real
togetherness and collective spirit”.
Opening up the compilation is a track that channels that very message,
the transcendental, soul-rousing Harris & Orr ‘Spread Love’. Joining
the dots from there, to the low-slung deep house closer of Fatdog
‘Remember’, you’ll find electronic drum machine Nigerian funk, sitting
side by side with dancefloor Cape Verdean brilliance, a post-punk cover
of Fela Kuti, rubbing shoulders with cosmic electro, and an
Una-championed, 8-minute, kickless DJ Harvey remix. There’s jazz funk in
various guises moving from boogie synth to astral travelling, slo-mo
acidic raw techno, and a ‘79 soul stepper, alongside swirling percussive
Italo disco and tribal-charged house. All infused with an innate
ability to bring people together.
As society becomes increasingly fractured, É Soul Cultura Volume 3’s
message is more than movement. It’s about dance music’s power to unify
people from all walks of life and break down the barriers that divide
us.
Tracklist:
1. Harris & Orr - Spread Love
2. Toshiyuki Honda - Burnin' Waves
3. Igna Igwebuike - Disco Bomp
4. Admin - Step Into Light
5. Grupo Serenata - Sodade, Tem Pena D'Mim
6. Vital Disorders - Zombie
7. Alphonsus Idigo - Flight 505
8. DJ Food - Peace (Harvey's 30 Something Mix)
9. Man Jumping - In The Jungle
10. Naveed - Day Come Through
11. 49th Floor - Night Passage ( Bongo Mix)
12. Orion Agassi - Desacato
13. FatDog - Remember
