The Carter Bros - Metropolitain

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  • Having continued to assure its place as a reliable contemporary club label, Tsuba takes an appropriate side step for its second full-length release. Presumably aware of the fact that an album of ten or so similarly floor-facing tracks as those released on 12-inches wouldn't cut it, boss Kevin Griffiths turned to self-styled "party caterers" The Carter Brothers for something a little different. And it's easy to see why going on the Aussie pairing's output to date. They have churned out everything from full-on disco stompers to stripped tech house workouts in the last year or so, most often on Monty Luke's burgeoning Black Catalogue. On Metropolitan there is a similar sonic diversity. Across 13 tracks, it's clear they want to take you on a ride. Starting out at a vibey house party, things slowly move through the found sounds of a street walk and into the darkened bowels of a club, before ending up back at home on the sofa with a doobie, chilling to spaced-out jams. As such, a lot of ground and many styles are covered, and although that can sometimes be a recipe for a mess, The Carter Bros are adept enough producers to nail each mood at which they take aim, cogently threading them together into a nuanced night-time narrative. After the sound of a harpsichord drifts through an underground station on "Metrolude" the ensuing passage is almost a study of genres, from widescreen Redshape moodiness on "Point Taken" to insular deep house via jumbled Revenge-style numbers. As standalone tracks, much of Metropolitan will do the trick on the dance floor, even if a distinctive personality is somewhat lacking. It's their ability to thread these parts together into a greater whole, though, that make The Carter Bros the loveable party caterers they claim to be.
  • Tracklist
      A1 Metrolude A2 Treat Me Right A3 Schooled B1 The Do B2 Forget About C1 Too Many Lovers C2 Use It D1 Rank About D2 Check Me
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