Tracks featured on
Most played tracks
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.
Part of the NTS family since day dot, Moxie has held her Wednesday show since the stations first broadcasts. Inviting esteemed guests for interviews & mixes and breaking new, unreleased music, she’s got your Wednesday afternoons covered… Tune in to hear anything from Soulful House, Garage, Afro beats and all the way through to rolling techno.
GHUNGHRU welcomes a guest mix by Brooklyn based producer Spf50. This is a re-envisioning of a set he played for my friends while they took a nap at our Airbnb in the woods during a lovely trip a few weeks ago.
Sign up or log in to MY NTS and get personalised recommendations
Support NTS for timestamps across live channels and the archive
Jess takes the stage with Jem-like moves, flashy fashions, and sings superchewydelicious songs that stick to the side of your cranium like a tasty wad of Hubba Bubba. Jeff robotically rocks behind a veritable Death Star of synthetic music-making devices, performing the odd kung fu kick, and when his machines allow for it, Saturday Night Fever hand gestures. Together, Jess and Jeff whip up a hyperkinetic stage show that you'll never forget.
To Hyperbubble, guitars are retro and sequencers are the key to the future. Although their cyberpop contains more than techno's required share of bleeps and blips, songwriting is still a key element. The photogenic duo load their lyrical cannon with fast cars, fast food, 1-800 numbers and love songs to their synthesizers.
Hyperbubble fill their musical test tube with a mixture of both influence and invention. Jess has a voice reminiscent of Blondie, Ladytron, and Young Marble Giants, while Jeff's bouncy synth riffs will appeal to fans of Yello, Devo, and Giorgio. Imagewise, the pair bear a strong resemblance to Hasbro cartoon rockers Jem & The Holograms, as well as another synth-wielding duo from the 70's: The Captain & Tennille.
Hyperbubble's debut CD, Solid Pop, was released in 2004 on the US based Socket Sounds. And now Hyperbubble are back with twelve more blasts from their pink & blue pop gun on the UK label, Filthy Little Angels. On their latest release, Airbrushed Alibis, futurewave action figures Jess & Jeff deliver all new tales of supermodels, cyborgs, and sexy surveillance.
Jess takes the stage with Jem-like moves, flashy fashions, and sings superchewydelicious songs that stick to the side of your cranium like a tasty wad of Hubba Bubba. Jeff robotically rocks behind a veritable Death Star of synthetic music-making devices, performing the odd kung fu kick, and when his machines allow for it, Saturday Night Fever hand gestures. Together, Jess and Jeff whip up a hyperkinetic stage show that you'll never forget.
To Hyperbubble, guitars are retro and sequencers are the key to the future. Although their cyberpop contains more than techno's required share of bleeps and blips, songwriting is still a key element. The photogenic duo load their lyrical cannon with fast cars, fast food, 1-800 numbers and love songs to their synthesizers.
Hyperbubble fill their musical test tube with a mixture of both influence and invention. Jess has a voice reminiscent of Blondie, Ladytron, and Young Marble Giants, while Jeff's bouncy synth riffs will appeal to fans of Yello, Devo, and Giorgio. Imagewise, the pair bear a strong resemblance to Hasbro cartoon rockers Jem & The Holograms, as well as another synth-wielding duo from the 70's: The Captain & Tennille.
Hyperbubble's debut CD, Solid Pop, was released in 2004 on the US based Socket Sounds. And now Hyperbubble are back with twelve more blasts from their pink & blue pop gun on the UK label, Filthy Little Angels. On their latest release, Airbrushed Alibis, futurewave action figures Jess & Jeff deliver all new tales of supermodels, cyborgs, and sexy surveillance.
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.