Milton Jackson - Ghosts In My Machines [Freerange]

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
1,161
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Apr 15, 2011

Counting Laurent Garnier, Danny Howells, Ewan Pearson and Prins Thomas as fans of his latest track, 'Ghosts in My Machines', and with releases to date on such revered dance labels as Glasgow Underground, Freerange, Tsuba, Urbantorque, Silver Network and Icon, Glasgow's Milton Jackson here turns out an exceptional artist album.

Just the right side of wonky, Jackson's house pedigree delivers a strong modern house album for Freerange- perfect for dance-floors from Glasgow to Berlin via London's more discerning basements. Deeper than most, the album's potency lies in its hypnotic dance-floor immediacy. Always on the verge of another groove, twisting chords and effervescent keys take you deeper into the depths, closing with a sub-bass symphony that sounds like Burial's older and wiser Scottish cousin.

Jackson released his first EP aged 19 on Solemusic's Tronicsole imprint. His first LP, The Bionic Boy, was received well by critics and the house fraternity, spawning the Pepe Bradock- influenced 'Sunlight'. He has recorded under a variety of pseudonyms, even venturing into the down-tempo domain as Napoleon Solo. His Bear Trax imprint released Mylo's first vinyl release when the pair recorded as 'The Pretty Boys'.

Crash, the album, was recorded from January to September of 2008. A prolific producer and DJ hitherto, Jackson was close to quitting music in December 07, when Freerange talked him out of it. He then recorded 'Ghosts In My Machines' for the Freerange 100th release, which was probably his biggest track to date. On the basis of that success Freerange asked him to record an album.

The main influences and ideas shaping the record were a return to the organic, yet still quite techy sounds. Says Jackson, "I tried to infuse a bit of feeling and soul into the tracks as well. A lot of the inspiration came from old records by guys like Les Baxter who did quite a few 'exotica' records in the late 60s and early 70s." Many of the samples on the album are from those early records but twisted into something a bit more modern. "I try to take influences from outside dance music if I can, as that's the basis (hopefully) for a fresher sound. I also tried to infuse some Sci-Fi / space elements in there as well as I'm quite into that stuff."

All of the music was produced on a Mac, with most of the tracks written in Jackson's studio- an outhouse in his back garden which came about from the old lady next door complaining of noise levels! On the live front, Jackson is keen to get back to Japan, having played at Womb in Tokyo last year, and is also eager to DJ alongside Jimpster again. The two played this year's Sonar and a few gigs after. Jackson will also play London's End on New Year's Eve- one of the last ever due to the club sadly closing.

Moody, compelling and upbeat, this is deep house at its finest; replete with subtle, wandering nocturnal motifs, cinematic strings, rolling bass-lines and techy bleeps, the slick off-key, tender-tough melodies display an impressive depth in production.

Buy Vinyl Here:
http://freerangerecords.co.uk/shop/titles/info/170

Buy CD Here:
http://freerangerecords.co.uk/shop/titles/info/173

Buy Digital Here:
https://www.beatport.com/en-US/html/content/release/detail/156705/Crash

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (1)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Why this hasn't 999,999,999 Hits?

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more