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New Arrivals

2023 marks the tenth year of Music From Memory; a decade of groundbreaking archival releases, cross-generational collaborations and long-standing creative partnerships with our ever-expanding community of artists.To celebrate this milestone, earlier this year we asked our roster of artists to submit a piece of music for an anniversary compilation. As submissions gradually came in, we were blown away by what we received and slowly began to piece them together into what was to become “10”.Featuring work from artists who were present during the formation of the label, such as Gigi Masin, Joan Bibiloni and Michal Turtle, as well as artists like The Zenmenn, RAMZi and Dea, who have helped the label expand over subsequent years, “10” serves as a natural bookmark of where we are musically, whilst simultaneously reflecting on the label's rich musical past.In keeping with the Music From Memory ethos, the music of “10” spans both time and space, with submissions ranging from Vito Ricci's 'Da Hamptons' (1985) to Yu Su & J. Wilson's 'Mitti Atar' (2023). It crosses the globe, with a total of 10 countries represented across 17 tracks. The final result is an immersive musical compilation that flows perfectly from start to finish.Tragically, during the last few weeks of finalising MFM066, label co-owner Jamie Tiller passed away in a sudden accident. “10” was always intended to be a way to reflect on the journey of Music From Memory. The fact that it is now also one of the last releases that the team all worked on together adds a whole other level of reflection and makes it all the more special.* incl. insert liner notes by John Gómez) Artwork by Bráulio Amado. Design by David McFarline.
Alex From Tokyo serves a personal conception of ‘80s-to-‘90s Japanese ambient and dance music, plotted like a DJ mix and studded with charms by Haruomi Hosono, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Yasuaki Shimizu, Hiroshi Fujiwara, Kan Takagi, Susumu Yokota, Silent Poets, Mondo Grosso and Kyoto Jazz Massive A love letter to his adopted home city of decades, ‘Alex From Tokyo Presents Japan Vibrations Vol. 1’ lays out an outsider-insider perspective on native sounds gleaned from many hours spent in Japan’s legendary venues and clubs. Alex From Tokyo is your spirit guide for a journey that opens with a brace of ambient glitter in YMO guy Haruomi Hosno’s ‘Ambient Meditation #3’, and takes in slo-mo downbeat of Silent Poets’ ‘Meaning in Tone (’95 Space & Oriental)’, before shifting gear into spiralling comic synth modes of ’Sun’ by Mind design, and the squashed synth-soul of Quadra’s ‘Phantom’. It only gets perkier form herein, sporting the freestyle-esque swivel of ’Tamare-Tamare’ from Yasuaki Shimizu, and boogie swang of Sakamoto’s ‘Tibetan Dance (Version)’, thru to the swole deep house bass of ‘Hiroshi’s Dub (Tokyo Club Mix)’ from T.P.O., floating ambient breaks by Okihide, Mondo Grosso’s fruity jazz-dance, and atmospheric deep techno-house of Prism and C.T. Scan.
Satoshi Suzuki described his musical practice perfectly on the OBI strip of his 1987 privately pressed LP - Tokyo Contemporary! consisting of 40% Jazz, 30% Soul, 20% Brazil, and 10% Kayokyoku - a musical mixture not too far off from what is now referred to as City Pop.However, this archival compilation of Satoshi Suzuki's works presents a perspective of the City Pop sound not from affluent 1980s Japanese bubble economy-era studios and highly paid studio musicians, but from a one-person band making the most of the instruments in their home studio, inspired by musical traditions from around the world.With notes of city pop, AOR, jazz, soul, bossa, and kayōkyoku - Satoshi Suzuki's intimately recorded pop songs are charming and full of wit, with a seasonal and poetic approach to these musical forms using only a drum machine and an array of digital synthesizers. Sounding a little like Pacific Breeze played on a Casio keyboard and drum machine, Uku Kuut soundtracking a SEGA video game, or the wonderful lo-fi works of Suzuki’s lo-fi homemade pop & jazz contemporaries Ronald Langestraat, Lewis, and Joe Tossini — though most of all, SUZUKI's works show a new and singular perspective of the bubble-era city pop of the Showa period.Distant Travel Companion (​遠​い​旅​の​同​行​者​) introduces Suzuki's musical works to a wide audience for the first time, featuring remastered songs originally released over three privately pressed LPs from the 1980s, as well as a previously unheard CD from 1993. The original works were released in an impossibly limited edition of 100 copies each - printed and assembled on printing equipment at Suzuki’s company office and scarcely distributed, recording these songs at his home studio in his free time. The compilation's design and accompanying OBI and liner notes are a direct homage to the original releases.Satoshi SUZUKI is a Japanese keyboardist, singer, songwriter, and music arranger. He is also an author of literature and winner of the "Shin-nihon-bungaku" (New Japanese Literature) Award. He was born in 1958 in Tokyo, Japan.
Minas 'Num Dia Azul' is a sublime slice of private press bossa nova meets jazzy MPB perfection. Warm and bubbling with youthful spirit, the music is simultaneously loose in swagger, yet slick and tight. The album was originally released in 1983 and reflects the great music coming out of Rio at the time, yet 'Num Dia Azul' wasn't recorded in Rio, but actually in the USA.Recorded in North Carolina just after Patricia and Orlando Haddad had graduated from the North Carolina School of the Arts, the record was only released for the Brazilian market on their own Blueazul Records imprint. As with most private press labels, they could only afford to have it pressed in small quantities. To add to its later obscurity, hundreds of copies were also destroyed in a house fire. They say cream always rises to the top, and fast forward to the 2010s, the word amongst collectors and DJs was spreading about this mythical under-the-radar recording. People from across the globe were contacting Patricia and Orlando for more information, hoping to secure themselves a copy. Luckily the original tapes had remained with the artists and were in great condition, so in 2016 the pair ran a successful Kickstarter campaign to have it remastered and repressed.For this Mr Bongo 2023 re-issue, we have tried to keep it as close to the original 1983 version as possible, both in the packaging and audio presentation. The CD version comes with bonus tracks. We are super proud to keep Patricia and Orlando's serene recordings in the circulation that they deserve to be. One for fans of Brazilian artists such as Burnier & Cartier, Edu Lobo and Joyce. We are sure those fans will lose themselves in the alluring textures of 'Num Dia Azul'. credits
The long awaited official reissue of ‘She Wants’, one of the first UK Street Soul singles originally released in 1985 by The NM Band.The NM Band was an alias for UK Lovers Rock band Natural Mystic, responsible for a number of hits in the late 70’s and early 80’s most notably ‘Runaway Love’ and ‘Groove Rocking’. They released a string of acclaimed reggae LPs and toured extensively throughout the UK, but by 1985 wanted to try something away from their trademark roots reggae sound. Influenced by the availability of affordable hardware the band set about fusing Reggae and Soul using an Akai Drum machine, Yamaha DX7 and Roland sound module. ‘She Wants’ is one of the forebearers of UK Street Soul, raw machine drums paired with an incredibly soulful vocal from Ashley Sommers. The band created their own imprint ‘Mixdown’ to release the single, but it slipped under the radar, despite strong radio play from Choice FM and the then pirate station Kiss. The 12” is backed with Dub Version ‘She Wants’ (More).
After his first album on BLESSYOU "Turquoise", Mogwaa aka Seungyoung Lee from Seoul is back with another stellar contribution this time re-visiting his earlier days of musical appreciation in Reggae music. This album is another entirely instrumental work with 8 tracks, effortlessly displaying his confidence in the studio when it comes to dreamy dubbed out ambient sounds intertwined with heavy digi/stepper and even dancehall influences. A refreshing treat to the ear when it comes to contemporary productions as Mogwaa approaches the Jamaican genre with a refined aesthetic of his own. From Korea with much craft and dedication for the music, a pleasure to have him back. Mastered at Manmade mastering.

Recommended

This record was made in Naarm / Melbourne, Australia. It was conceived in 2019 and completed in 2020 against the backdrop of historic bushfires that burned 18 million hectares. The music is deeply rooted in the Australian landscape, the rhythms and textures of rainfall, coastlines and open spaces.Recorded in collaboration with percussionist Phil Stroud, the rhythm tracks are a fusion of drum machines and hand drums, loose percussion, human voices and tuned percussion immersed in water. Joined by analog synthesisers, layered vocals, processed guitar and field recordings, the music evokes solastalgia and reverence for nature.The final track, Golden Hour, came from an improvisation with multi-instrumentalist Adam Halliwell on flute and jazz musician Jack Doepel on Korg bass, later transposed to modular synthesiser.The cover artwork was painted by Australian artist Charlotte Alldis during the winter of 2020. It depicts regrowth after the bushfires, life returning to a blackened landscape.
Spaces' is an ode to the joy of live performance. It expresses Frahm’s love for experimentation and answers the call from his fans for a record that truly reflects what they have witnessed during his concerts. Breaking the convention of a traditional live album, 'Spaces' was recorded over the course of two years in different locations and on various mediums, including old portable reel-to-reel recorders and cassette tape decks. The decision to select takes that have people coughing and cell phones ringing show that his audience is an integral part of every performance.
On their debut LP “Pome” for Quiet Time, Liai has given us a stunning work of expertly crafted rhythmic ambience, inspired by the intimacy and solitude of the midwestern countryside. Having grown up in rural Missouri, Liai channels the mixed feelings that can accompany solo contemplation in nature - expansiveness, sentimentality, vulnerability and eeriness. This deeply personal set of tracks took 3 years to make, revealed in the precision of sound design and use of space. The work feels at once familiar and organic, yet technical and futuristic, almost alien - a product of digital melodies, granular processing and frequent sampling of their own previous works.
BBE Music present the latest in the acclaimed J Jazz Masterclass Series: Kohsuke Mine 'First', the debut album by one of the leading artists in the new wave of modern jazz that swept Japan in the late 60s and early 70s.
Alex From Tokyo serves a personal conception of ‘80s-to-‘90s Japanese ambient and dance music, plotted like a DJ mix and studded with charms by Haruomi Hosono, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Yasuaki Shimizu, Hiroshi Fujiwara, Kan Takagi, Susumu Yokota, Silent Poets, Mondo Grosso and Kyoto Jazz Massive A love letter to his adopted home city of decades, ‘Alex From Tokyo Presents Japan Vibrations Vol. 1’ lays out an outsider-insider perspective on native sounds gleaned from many hours spent in Japan’s legendary venues and clubs. Alex From Tokyo is your spirit guide for a journey that opens with a brace of ambient glitter in YMO guy Haruomi Hosno’s ‘Ambient Meditation #3’, and takes in slo-mo downbeat of Silent Poets’ ‘Meaning in Tone (’95 Space & Oriental)’, before shifting gear into spiralling comic synth modes of ’Sun’ by Mind design, and the squashed synth-soul of Quadra’s ‘Phantom’. It only gets perkier form herein, sporting the freestyle-esque swivel of ’Tamare-Tamare’ from Yasuaki Shimizu, and boogie swang of Sakamoto’s ‘Tibetan Dance (Version)’, thru to the swole deep house bass of ‘Hiroshi’s Dub (Tokyo Club Mix)’ from T.P.O., floating ambient breaks by Okihide, Mondo Grosso’s fruity jazz-dance, and atmospheric deep techno-house of Prism and C.T. Scan.
Paris via Lyon based Planet Trip family GFH drop their first EP and the freaky 13th disc on PT's forever expanding catalogue.5 diverse cuts dialling into deep downtempo chuggers and breezy tropical triiips, plus a peak time heater on the flip given the magic touch remix treatment by everyone's favourite Leo Lipelis.Another heavy disc with moods and grooves for all hours of the dance.
2023 marks the tenth year of Music From Memory; a decade of groundbreaking archival releases, cross-generational collaborations and long-standing creative partnerships with our ever-expanding community of artists.To celebrate this milestone, earlier this year we asked our roster of artists to submit a piece of music for an anniversary compilation. As submissions gradually came in, we were blown away by what we received and slowly began to piece them together into what was to become “10”.Featuring work from artists who were present during the formation of the label, such as Gigi Masin, Joan Bibiloni and Michal Turtle, as well as artists like The Zenmenn, RAMZi and Dea, who have helped the label expand over subsequent years, “10” serves as a natural bookmark of where we are musically, whilst simultaneously reflecting on the label's rich musical past.In keeping with the Music From Memory ethos, the music of “10” spans both time and space, with submissions ranging from Vito Ricci's 'Da Hamptons' (1985) to Yu Su & J. Wilson's 'Mitti Atar' (2023). It crosses the globe, with a total of 10 countries represented across 17 tracks. The final result is an immersive musical compilation that flows perfectly from start to finish.Tragically, during the last few weeks of finalising MFM066, label co-owner Jamie Tiller passed away in a sudden accident. “10” was always intended to be a way to reflect on the journey of Music From Memory. The fact that it is now also one of the last releases that the team all worked on together adds a whole other level of reflection and makes it all the more special.* incl. insert liner notes by John Gómez) Artwork by Bráulio Amado. Design by David McFarline.
After his first album on BLESSYOU "Turquoise", Mogwaa aka Seungyoung Lee from Seoul is back with another stellar contribution this time re-visiting his earlier days of musical appreciation in Reggae music. This album is another entirely instrumental work with 8 tracks, effortlessly displaying his confidence in the studio when it comes to dreamy dubbed out ambient sounds intertwined with heavy digi/stepper and even dancehall influences. A refreshing treat to the ear when it comes to contemporary productions as Mogwaa approaches the Jamaican genre with a refined aesthetic of his own. From Korea with much craft and dedication for the music, a pleasure to have him back. Mastered at Manmade mastering.
both sides extended mixes.Two more killer 12" disco mix sides from the Jah Life archives. On the A side we have one of Barrington's best, "Black Heart Man", in its original disco mix from 1983, with killer Scientist dub wise. On the flip is one of the all time sleepers from the Jah Life catalog, way under the radar since its original release in the early '80s. Terrie from the Nairobi Sisters voices the immortal "Left With a Broken Heart" on the killer original cut of the rhythm, which follows into a dub wise melodica piece, which sounds to us like the maestro Augustus Pablo. Both sides are pressed using new stampers made from the original mothers, so what you get is identical to the original pressings.
Paris via Lyon based Planet Trip family GFH drop their first EP and the freaky 13th disc on PT's forever expanding catalogue.5 diverse cuts dialling into deep downtempo chuggers and breezy tropical triiips, plus a peak time heater on the flip given the magic touch remix treatment by everyone's favourite Leo Lipelis.Another heavy disc with moods and grooves for all hours of the dance.
2023 marks the tenth year of Music From Memory; a decade of groundbreaking archival releases, cross-generational collaborations and long-standing creative partnerships with our ever-expanding community of artists.To celebrate this milestone, earlier this year we asked our roster of artists to submit a piece of music for an anniversary compilation. As submissions gradually came in, we were blown away by what we received and slowly began to piece them together into what was to become “10”.Featuring work from artists who were present during the formation of the label, such as Gigi Masin, Joan Bibiloni and Michal Turtle, as well as artists like The Zenmenn, RAMZi and Dea, who have helped the label expand over subsequent years, “10” serves as a natural bookmark of where we are musically, whilst simultaneously reflecting on the label's rich musical past.In keeping with the Music From Memory ethos, the music of “10” spans both time and space, with submissions ranging from Vito Ricci's 'Da Hamptons' (1985) to Yu Su & J. Wilson's 'Mitti Atar' (2023). It crosses the globe, with a total of 10 countries represented across 17 tracks. The final result is an immersive musical compilation that flows perfectly from start to finish.Tragically, during the last few weeks of finalising MFM066, label co-owner Jamie Tiller passed away in a sudden accident. “10” was always intended to be a way to reflect on the journey of Music From Memory. The fact that it is now also one of the last releases that the team all worked on together adds a whole other level of reflection and makes it all the more special.* incl. insert liner notes by John Gómez) Artwork by Bráulio Amado. Design by David McFarline.
Hybrid Man lowers the BPMs into balearic territory, offering a shimmering, pulsing and textured contribution of blissful downtempo afterhours jams to local label Wax'o Paradiso Recordings.
‘There is a common assumption about youth which is: Youth is about youth. But that isn’t really true. Youth is really about the past. Youth is not the pool that young men gaze adoringly into; it is the pool that old men gaze in, in order to measure the distance their bodies have traveled’. - Collier SchorrCollier Schorr met Paul Hameline, a young French artist and model, in New York in 2015. A friend of a friend came to her home for a ‘go-see’, which is when a photographer gets to see how a model looks in front of the camera. Paul’s family lives in the Marais section of Paris around the corner from the hotel Collier stays at while in Paris, so they began to meet and to make a project that lasted two years in which Collier would visit Paul at his parents’ house and take pictures and talk. The idea was for Paul and Collier to experience photography as a social space, a conversation in which his body and her eyes could try and understand each other’s fascinations and fantasies. Many of the pictures were published in Re-Edition magazine. Paul’s Book expands that magazine story to form a larger piece about the way in which a photographer and model can search for some greater revelations with the simplest movements and various states of undress.24 x 31 cm, quarter-bound hardback
Started as a visual diary by Jan Philipzen, ‘Ravedeath Convention’ soon grew into a hybrid of autobiography and fiction. While love, joy and friendship are explored, violence and excess come about too, often captured only as traces and symptoms. A collision of different, occasionally mismatched, cultural symbols stresses... ​The first pictures taken at age thirteen, this series of black and white images is the edit of a continuous process of photographing, revisiting and reworking over a span of ten years. In the crippled prints the physical presence of body and photograph merge, celebrating human imperfection. The title references Tim Hecker’s album ‘Ravedeath,1972’.Published by Art Paper Editions20 x 26 cmSoftcover176 pages1st EditionOctober 2020EnglishISBN 978-9-4931465-2-5
In 1994, the New York Times Magazine assigned me to ride along with cops from the Los Angeles Police Department, photographing them at work. This was just two years after the protests that erupted when four officers were acquitted on charges of beating Rodney King, and LAPD needed a public image makeover. So they gave me and the Times unprecedented access to the department, hoping we’d give readers a story about LAPD’s new “kinder, gentler cop.” I was embedded with officers from several divisions and branches, including some of the more notorious ones: the anti-gang unit “CRASH”, the Rampart Division, and the homicide unit. For several weeks, I rode day and night in the back of police cars, taking photos. Most of those photographs have never seen the light of day, until now. Given the potential revolution around policing in the US taking place right now, the time has come to share them with a wide audience. The photos are a reminder that the same problems we are reckoning with today—systemic racism, violence against community members, corruption—have been around for decades. These photographs tell a story about the power imbalance between police and the community, the constant tension between the stated goal of “protecting and serving” and the reality of police violence. From behind my camera, I saw how decades of profiling, racism, and brutality had led to deep distrust in many communities—distrust that the LAPD’s mild attempts at reform couldn’t even touch. The photos capture a particularly turbulent time for the LAPD, just after several very public corruption scandals in addition to the charges of police brutality brought to light by the video of Rodney King’s beating. I was no stranger to this type of assignment. At that time I had already published two books, Spanish Harlem and East Side Stories, which depicted life in impoverished neighborhoods. Covering LAPD gave me a chance to show how police operated in marginalized communities, and how those communities were affected by individual cops and the department as a whole
Throughout the heady years of New York's 1960s and 70s music scenes, James Hamilton was on hand to observe and photograph some of the most significant bands, musicians and performances of the twentieth century. Serving as staff photographer for the Village Voice and Crawdaddy!, Hamilton photographed such musicians as James Brown, Captain Beefheart, Ornette Coleman, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, the Grateful Dead, John Fahey, Mick Jagger, Jethro Tull, Elvin Jones, the Kinks, Madonna, Charlie Mingus, Joni Mitchell, the Ramones, Gil Scott-Heron, Patti Smith, Sun Ra, Tom Verlaine and Stevie Wonder. In You Should Have Heard Just What I Seen, Hamilton opens up his archives for the first time, revealing across 300 pages a trove of previously unpublished black-and-white photographs--portraits, snapshots, sketches, contact sheets--of some of the most recognizable faces in music. Influential for several generations of budding photographers raised on his photographs, the work of James Hamilton is at last collected in this revelatory volume.As a young man in the late 1960s, James Hamilton met the legendary photographers Diane Arbus and Eugene Smith, and was inspired by them to document the changing skyline of New York City. As staff photographer for Harper's Bazaar and the Village Voice, Hamilton recorded the fashion shows, events, protests and riots, happenings, concerts, poetry readings and art openings of that era, and throughout the 1970s, his photographs of musicians and celebrities began to appear in the pages of Crawdaddy! magazine. Later Hamilton joined The New York Observer and began working with filmmakers George Romero, Francis Ford Coppola, Wes Anderson, Bill Paxton and Noah Baumbach as on-set photographer304 pgs, 27 × 30 cm, Hardcover, 2015,
to Be’s second issue explores the theme, Times Are Changing, which delves into our contributors’ approaches to a rapid and radical global environment. Whether it be social identity politics, subcultural plights, or technological advancements, to Be consolidates its contributors’ takes on how the times are affecting their personal and professional outcomes.Some of the contributors include Ed Templeton, Erwin Wurm, Joshua Gordon, Moma PS5, Kembra Pfahler, Chad Moore, Eartheater, Sam Quealy, Eugene Rabkin of StyleZeitgeist, The Drunken Canal, Al Gharib, Ute. Records, Perila and more.
Graphic inspired by 'Gateway Process', a report written in 1983 by the CIA and declassified in 2003, about using a series of exercises to produce states of expanded human consciousness such as astral projection, outer body experiments, and other altered states of mind.Boxy, oversized fit with dropped shouldersHeavy weight, 280 GSM, 26-doubles100% carded cotton (marles 15% viscose)Wide neck ribbing, side seamed, shoulder to shoulder tape, double needle hems, preshrunk to minimise shrinkage We advise acquiring a size smaller than you'd usually purchase!
Classic pink chest screen print- Boxy Oversize fit.- Heavy weight.- Set in sleeve with cuffs.- Two needle coverstitch front pouch pocket and ribwaistband.- Double layer hood.- Low pill fabric.- 310 GSM.- Rib neckline, cuffs and waistband.* Hoodies fit large so we advise buying a size smaller than usualManifactured & designed in Melbourne / NaarmDO NOT TUMBLE DRY, HANG DRY ONLY.
Classic cream chest screen print - Boxy Oversize fit.- Heavy weight.- Set in sleeve with cuffs.- Two needle coverstitch front pouch pocket and ribwaistband.- Double layer hood.- Low pill fabric.- 310 GSM.- Rib neckline, cuffs and waistband.* Hoodies fit large so we advise buying a size smaller than usualManifactured & designed in Melbourne / NaarmDO NOT TUMBLE DRY, HANG DRY ONLY.
The ‘Psyche” Tee is inspired by one of our favorite set posters designed for Kyoto-based Dj & Producer Stones Taro’s, when he featured on our mix series ‘The Inner Sound’ where he unleashed a 1-hour UKG / House / Jungle set that we absolutely loved. The design itself was inspired by vast contrasts of colour and sound, created to encapsulate the varying musical journeys we had been taking throughout the 2021 lockdowns, from Japanese Ambient works, obscure left-field electronica & melodious psychedelic dancefloor experiments from all over the world - apart from having a deep dive into our crates of wax to explore avenues of design inspiration, we also took influence from classic rave posters & flyers such as 1992 / 1993 Fantazia, Dreamscape & World Dance.Printed & Designed locally in Melbourne / Naarm
Our classic record store logo tee screen is printed on 100 percent cotton in Melbourne.The Logo sits 30cm wide across the chest.
Our classic record store logo tee screen printed on 100 percent box fitted cotton tees in Melbourne.The logo sits 30cm wide across the chest
The ‘Psyche” Tee is inspired by one of our favorite set posters designed for Kyoto-based Dj & Producer Stones Taro’s, when he featured on our mix series ‘The Inner Sound’ where he unleashed a 1-hour UKG / House / Jungle set that we absolutely loved. The design itself was inspired by vast contrasts of colour and sound, created to encapsulate the varying musical journeys we had been taking throughout the 2021 lockdowns, from Japanese Ambient works, obscure left-field electronica & melodious psychedelic dancefloor experiments from all over the world - apart from having a deep dive into our crates of wax to explore avenues of design inspiration, we also took influence from classic rave posters & flyers such as 1992 / 1993 Fantazia, Dreamscape & World Dance.Printed & Designed locally in Melbourne / Naarm
Our Adventures In Frequencies Tee is inspired by countless hours spent digging through varying genres of records, both physically and of course, digitally, finding mind-bending experimental masterpieces that inspire us, beautiful avant-garde journeys through sound that creates a drive to further advance our knowledge into the never-ending library of music and subcultures linked to music. we took heavy influence from rave/dance flyers from 1991 - 1993 specifically, such as “Real Dream” presented by Perception in 1992 in the UK which featured Carl Cox & DJ Seduction, although well before our dancefloor days, we marvel at what once was and much like records, we love exploring past explorations into the electronic dance music scene and all the wonderful, mind-bending artwork that was created alongside it. Printed and designed in Melbourne on 100 percent cotton teesPurple Screen Printing On Black TeeFrequency - the rate per second of a vibration constituting a wave, either in a material (as in sound waves), or in an electromagnetic field (as in radio waves and light). "different thicknesses of glass will absorb different frequencies of sound"