Tracks featured on
Most played tracks
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.
Heavy vinyl records collector Dr. Kruger digs deep every other Sunday to bring soulful, funky and odd tunes from his crates straight to your home. Sometimes joined by a fellow crate digger/DJ of his choice, just tune in and let the doctor treat you.
A Broad survey of the Scottish post-punk output, covering synth pop, industrial, minimal synth, new wave, goth rock, indie. Featuring obscurities, tracks from well known artists, and a number of interview segments from the era. Created by Are You Before.
Sign up or log in to MY NTS and get personalised recommendations
Support NTS for timestamps across live channels and the archive
During the long wait between their seminal album Frequencies and the recently released Advance, fans of U.K. dance pioneers LFO in 1994 found comfort in two remarkable 12-inches by one half of the renowned duo, operating under the name Speed Jack. Mark Bell, who together with his colleague Gez Varley spent 5 years of hibernation (to do a Stone Roses, as it has become known in record industry circles), in his alternative guise delivered the skullsplitting robo-techno blueprints Storm and C.T.C. on the Belgian R&S label. Later both tracks ended up on the fifth volume of In Order To Dance, a downright token of their elevation to the status of classic dance cuts.
Now Jack The Lad is back with an albumful of grand techno that takes the essence of those first two landmarks even further. Surge, which is preceded by the single Blue Bossa, should make his peers turn green with envy - some connaisseurs even claim the work is easily more impressive than the latest LFO collection, and who are we to contradict them? From uncompromising dancefloor charges to spine-tingling, electro-fed rhythmscapes, Surge has it all. Even two tracks co-written with Robert Leiner, a.k.a. The Source Experience, and a previously unreleased remix of Storm. Now that is what we call techno…
During the long wait between their seminal album Frequencies and the recently released Advance, fans of U.K. dance pioneers LFO in 1994 found comfort in two remarkable 12-inches by one half of the renowned duo, operating under the name Speed Jack. Mark Bell, who together with his colleague Gez Varley spent 5 years of hibernation (to do a Stone Roses, as it has become known in record industry circles), in his alternative guise delivered the skullsplitting robo-techno blueprints Storm and C.T.C. on the Belgian R&S label. Later both tracks ended up on the fifth volume of In Order To Dance, a downright token of their elevation to the status of classic dance cuts.
Now Jack The Lad is back with an albumful of grand techno that takes the essence of those first two landmarks even further. Surge, which is preceded by the single Blue Bossa, should make his peers turn green with envy - some connaisseurs even claim the work is easily more impressive than the latest LFO collection, and who are we to contradict them? From uncompromising dancefloor charges to spine-tingling, electro-fed rhythmscapes, Surge has it all. Even two tracks co-written with Robert Leiner, a.k.a. The Source Experience, and a previously unreleased remix of Storm. Now that is what we call techno…
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.