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Bukaroo Bank
Bukaroo Bank is actually Mauskovicâs second album. There, the band reinvents both their approach and their sound, while maintaining the rhythm-forward euphoria heard on their debut album and surrounding singles. It is one of those albums that sounds brashly live, like youâre in the room while the jams are being kicked out, but in fact uses the studio very shrewdly.
Recorded in 2020, during one of the Netherlandsâ intermittent lockdown bouts, for this one the MDB wanted to step up from their previous homebase, Garage Noord â an ad hoc Amsterdam space for recording, practise and after-hours parties. They chose Electric Monkey, operated by engineer Kasper Frenkel. His stacks of what Nicola calls âvery strange equipmentâ, and ability to sprinkle magic dub dust over everything, suited the vibe perfectly. The results glow and shiver with assembled synth sounds, rhythms spliced and echoed in a way that hails late Jamaican dub great Lee Perry â maybe the bandâs biggest influence.
Some sections might remind you of Afro-disco or slightly older highlife, others industrial prototypes like early Cabaret Voltaire, or 1980s On-U Sound mainstays like African Head Charge, or NYC groovers such as Liquid Liquid... there are outbreaks of saxophone, congas, echo units, wah-wah disco guitars, beats that sound programmed but arenât (a nod to MDBâs industrial side). If that sounds fun to you, be assured that Bukaroo Bank is an irrepressibly fun album â but one that contains multitudes.
Recorded in 2020, during one of the Netherlandsâ intermittent lockdown bouts, for this one the MDB wanted to step up from their previous homebase, Garage Noord â an ad hoc Amsterdam space for recording, practise and after-hours parties. They chose Electric Monkey, operated by engineer Kasper Frenkel. His stacks of what Nicola calls âvery strange equipmentâ, and ability to sprinkle magic dub dust over everything, suited the vibe perfectly. The results glow and shiver with assembled synth sounds, rhythms spliced and echoed in a way that hails late Jamaican dub great Lee Perry â maybe the bandâs biggest influence.
Some sections might remind you of Afro-disco or slightly older highlife, others industrial prototypes like early Cabaret Voltaire, or 1980s On-U Sound mainstays like African Head Charge, or NYC groovers such as Liquid Liquid... there are outbreaks of saxophone, congas, echo units, wah-wah disco guitars, beats that sound programmed but arenât (a nod to MDBâs industrial side). If that sounds fun to you, be assured that Bukaroo Bank is an irrepressibly fun album â but one that contains multitudes.
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Description
Bukaroo Bank is actually Mauskovicâs second album. There, the band reinvents both their approach and their sound, while maintaining the rhythm-forward euphoria heard on their debut album and surrounding singles. It is one of those albums that sounds brashly live, like youâre in the room while the jams are being kicked out, but in fact uses the studio very shrewdly.
Recorded in 2020, during one of the Netherlandsâ intermittent lockdown bouts, for this one the MDB wanted to step up from their previous homebase, Garage Noord â an ad hoc Amsterdam space for recording, practise and after-hours parties. They chose Electric Monkey, operated by engineer Kasper Frenkel. His stacks of what Nicola calls âvery strange equipmentâ, and ability to sprinkle magic dub dust over everything, suited the vibe perfectly. The results glow and shiver with assembled synth sounds, rhythms spliced and echoed in a way that hails late Jamaican dub great Lee Perry â maybe the bandâs biggest influence.
Some sections might remind you of Afro-disco or slightly older highlife, others industrial prototypes like early Cabaret Voltaire, or 1980s On-U Sound mainstays like African Head Charge, or NYC groovers such as Liquid Liquid... there are outbreaks of saxophone, congas, echo units, wah-wah disco guitars, beats that sound programmed but arenât (a nod to MDBâs industrial side). If that sounds fun to you, be assured that Bukaroo Bank is an irrepressibly fun album â but one that contains multitudes.
Recorded in 2020, during one of the Netherlandsâ intermittent lockdown bouts, for this one the MDB wanted to step up from their previous homebase, Garage Noord â an ad hoc Amsterdam space for recording, practise and after-hours parties. They chose Electric Monkey, operated by engineer Kasper Frenkel. His stacks of what Nicola calls âvery strange equipmentâ, and ability to sprinkle magic dub dust over everything, suited the vibe perfectly. The results glow and shiver with assembled synth sounds, rhythms spliced and echoed in a way that hails late Jamaican dub great Lee Perry â maybe the bandâs biggest influence.
Some sections might remind you of Afro-disco or slightly older highlife, others industrial prototypes like early Cabaret Voltaire, or 1980s On-U Sound mainstays like African Head Charge, or NYC groovers such as Liquid Liquid... there are outbreaks of saxophone, congas, echo units, wah-wah disco guitars, beats that sound programmed but arenât (a nod to MDBâs industrial side). If that sounds fun to you, be assured that Bukaroo Bank is an irrepressibly fun album â but one that contains multitudes.























