ARCHEO 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY VOL.2 (BLACK VINYL)
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Mario Acquaviva - “Notturno Italiano“ (Relative feat club Soda remix)
Sth Notional - “Yawn Yawn Yawn“ (BeLanuit & Phil Cooper Balearic Life Reality remix)
Tony Esposito - “Veronica Song“ (Hear & Now remix)
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BALEARIC/BEATS VINYL 12“
CAT. AR032
TRACKLIST
A1: Riccardo Giagni - Passeggera (Mudd Edit)
A2: Mario Acquaviva - Notturno Italiano (Relative Feat. Club Soda Remix)
B1: Sth. Notional - Yawn Yawn Yawn (Be.lanuit & Phil Cooper Balearic Life Reality Remix)
B2: Tony Esposito - Veronica Song (Hear & Now Remix)
disponibile anche: Shocking Pink Vinyl 27,63 €
Archeo Recordings is a record label. Old, lost, obscure and forgotten gems and a boundless focus on the new Balearic scene for a wider audience of collectors, DJs and music lovers. All releases are limited edition. This release is the second in a series of EPs on which the label's favourite contemporaries pay homage to past masters for ‘10 Year Anniversary’. 4 new Remixes: limited edition on black vinyl (AR032). With the first volume still singing out both in our ears and on our turntables, Archeo Recordings lifts the veil on the second chapter of its celebratory EP series - another shimmering tribute to the timeless and the timely. Once again, the torch is passed to a new ensemble of sonic sculptors, who delve into the archives and emerge with reimagined treasures, equal parts reverence and reinvention. Philosopher and musical polymath Riccardo Giagni made his name as a cultural curator for RAI TV and radio, before lending his expertise in ethnomusicology as a studio musician and songwriter. Originally released to little fanfare and long overlooked until its Archeo reissue in 2019, his 1988 debut LP Kaunis Maa is a masterwork of Balearic ethno-jazz - a guitar-led journey through imagined geographies and dreamt-up dialects. Its closing track, Passeggera, pairs Mediterranean nylon with synth halos, sampled percussion, and the unplaceable vocals of Matia Bazar’s Antonella Ruggiero, singing not in language but in emotion. Now, Claremont 56’s Paul Murphy aka Mudd lends his gentle hand to the piece, reworking its al fresco fusion into something even more languorous. Highlighting the South American sway hinted at in the original, Mudd introduces jazzy synth flourishes, airy percussion, and occasional organ bass, casting the piece anew as a hammock-swung hymn - less a remix than a relocation, from the hills of Lazio to the lush gardens of Mudd’s imagination.

