FUTURE SHOCK, The Debut album from
Dejavoo, Transient’s latest signing. Spawned from the deepest
London underground, Khristian Vinales and Francesco Mura have exploded
on to the global scene with huge dance floor killers.
Focusing on a techier groove and powerful riffs the
boys are now becoming international ambassadors for the newest London
sound. Once again the world turns back to London to find why the
hottest freshest acts are now emerging from the ashes of the long
lost hero’s of the 90’s.
This album is set to turn the focus from Israel back
to the white cliffs and down into the sweaty clubs of Brixton and
Shoreditch. If you havn’t heard the sound of Dejavoo yet,
you certainly will have by the end of summer. Enjoy.
Waiting
High-octane bassbeats and catchy, classy synth hits drive the meat
of this track. With plenty of digital springs and atmospheric pads
keep the energy building, "Waiting" doesn't keep you waiting
for long. Plenty of tension and release amongst the many breakdowns,
buildups and vocal manipulations, topped with writhing melodic gravy.
Loud And Nasty
This is one trance track with a bite. A high energy tempo winds
the clock tight for a heavy diesel bassline layered underneath a
matrix of gritty pads, steadily building blues-tronica melodies
and masterfully filtered and phased highs and snares. This is great
early peak hour music for when the dancefloor tension really begins
to get palpable.
Cyclone
Expounding on the vibratory moods of its forerunner, "Cyclone
is overflowing with intense drum segments and acidic digital squelchwork.
There's massive buildup work done to the audio here, and the flow
is superbly engineered. A short breather moment in the middle launches
you into a thumping full on psy-trance-breaks corkscrew of sound.
Versotran
Robotic voices whisper through interdimensional sonic gateways as
numerically encoded watts of waveforms wind up your mind tighter
than a whole night of noncorporeal arboreal stimuli. The short yet
sonically rich breakdown does wonders for mood changing and science-fictional
aberrational amplitude. This track is a sure-fire wiggle inspirer.
Screaming People
This techy trance track has more than one touch of spooky horror
slipped subliminally into a bouncy groove with plenty of disco-jazz
synth hits amid a morphing, hilly bass. A powerful, sweeping melody
fades in and out and travels about, taking you places on both physical
and mental dancefloors, with a clever percussive breakdown making
it even better.
A Story
This track develops itself slightly more subtly, however with each
layer noticeably crisp and clean without a hint of muddiness to
be heard. Arpeggiated synth melodies navigate through spectrums
of filtration while the bass and percussion play off each other
to create plenty of buildups and drops, keeping each element fresh
and malleable.
Future Shock
Taking the music on a deeper, more tribally progressive turn, Dejavoo
couples groovy percussive licks with cloudy synth pad strata and
a heaving bassline as bouncy as a trampoline. A slightly more relaxed
tempo creates plenty of sonic space to enjoy each atmospheric layer
and neatly gated rhythm. "Shock" has plenty of pulsating
dance flavour.
The Preacher
Retouching on this album's major motif of killer peak hour trance
tunes, "Preacher" hallmarks subliminally eerie warblings
and inimical, supernatural rhythms to create moods of uneasiness
and distension. Added at the right time into a playlist may induce
mass feelings of religious epiphanies by the astute listener delivered
by a most unorthodox reverend.
Diabolical
This final track of Dejavoo's latest album allows for no sense of
fatigue or laziness. This electronic sonic motivator provides just
what you need to get that second wind into you and propel your feet
across your dance place. Key changes amid wet, slippery synthesized
squishiness from bass to melody hold the audience in collective
trance unison.