Recent Articles about Nguzunguzu
Audioccult Vol. 54: Tips for the ’90s Fashionista
In this week’s episode: what’s the stylish retro-modern teen wearing and listening to in 2013? Garb your ears in Lustmord, Crim3s, Slava, Chief Keef, and more. – more
Unexpexual: An interview with Total Freedom
Ashland Mines is well-known in the club music underground for his wildness as a DJ and remixer. Join us to find out what surprising noises he’s making this year. – more
2012 Editor’s Picks: Daniel Jones
From the blissful sorrows of Chelsea Wolfe to the militarized techno grimness of Vatican Shadow, find out what our most esoteric writer has chosen to call ‘audio heaven’ this year. – more
No Trend: an interview with Venus X
Go green with the mind behind GHE20 G0TH1k and one of NYC’s most fascinating DJs: “People would like me to rap but I don’t like what rap does to women. As a woman of color, I feel like I have too much power to just be another female rapper.” – more
Videodrome 80 – This weeks best videos
Time for brand-new videos from around the world, this week V I D e O D R O M E features clips from the likes of Nguzunguzu, Kavinsky, Barker & Baumecker and many – more
Editor’s Choice 12
What’s that? You want to know what’s been going in our ears this week, reverberating our cochleas and sending broader vibrations throughout our bodies and by extension our audio-addled souls? That’s a coincidence: here’s this week’s Editor’s Choice. – more
My name is Mykki: an interview with Mykki Blanco
Fearless. Poet. Performance artist. Rapper. Punk. Mykki Blanco is all of these, and more. I won’t say her debut EP Mykki Blanco & The Mutant Angels is game-changing; the lethal, industrial-punk beats and jagged, take-no-prisoners flow within defy the game. Those who champion the silly idea of ‘gay rap’ group her with equally-intriguing East Coasters – more
The Warm Pulse of Nguzunguzu
Asma Maroof and Daniel Pineda form Nguzunguzu, the LA-based duo who’ve helped changed the way we look at dance music. They’ve returned to give us another beautifully produced EP, seasoned with distant drums, smoke alarms, police sirens, space-like choirs, snappy percussion and an obvious melodic allusion to the X-files theme. Undoubtedly, the five tracks on – more