Introducing… Lindstrøm & Christabelle

“With his soft Jesus gaze and fluffy beard, Hans-Peter Lindstrøm does not appear your everyday DJ saviour. A dance agnostic in his early 20s, he played Hammond organ in a Deep Purple tribute band, and slid into producing disco seemingly by accident.

The last five or so years, mind, have seen him write an impressive resume, turning out a string of fine space-disco releases on his own Feedelity imprint before making his name internationally with Where You Go I Go Too – a masterpiece of warm, progressive space disco that posited this Norwegian producer as an heir to cosmic-minded 70s producers such as Giorgio Moroder and Daniele Baldelli.

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Introducing… Caitlin Rose

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Caitlin Rose hails from Nashville, Tennessee, but her music doesn’t have the average twang. She cites Bob Dylan, Elliott Smith and Patsy Cline. Her name album is called Dead Flowers. This is what Kyle Pfister has to say about her: “Nashville’s Caitlin Rose tells stories of an evolving country. She speaks in a new generation of American twang and “Im-a-gonnas” about another generation of young American alcoholics falling in love at backyard weddings. The stories are old themes voiced with a new ease and energetic pace. They’re fearlessly grainy in the same way that the black and white photographs of the 1970s differ from those in the 1950s. In the way that writing about evolution is no longer about getting richer, sleeker, or more efficient. Hers are evolutionary stories in surprising but truthful directions, where sometimes dead flowers mean so much more than live ones. It’s the sound of a future grown out of the past, but not out of its expectations.