First Listen: Slex Allen "Fish Are Small" (Slex Allen Remix)

We have certified heater for you today. A bonafide banger for your weekend festivities!

Slex Allen, known by many as the frontman of OptycNerd, has been carving out a name for himself in the vibrant, Denver dance music scene. For his latest release, Slex remixed “Fish Are Small,” originally produced by Levi Double U and Reed Fox (and featuring Reed’s 7 year-old niece, Foofy).

Slex took the tune and made it his own, flipping it into a high-energy, house track laced with lush synths, floaty keys, sharp rhythms and a melody that’ll get stuck in your head for days.

Some of Slex’s musical influences such as Tchami, Classixx and Dombresky shine through on this track. But he maintains a signature sound that is all his own.

“Fish Are Small (Slex Allen Remix)” is an absolute party for your ears. Stream it now on all major platforms.

First Look: Heat Dish (Motion Trap Remix) Video Premiere

We have the exclusive premiere of the video for Heat Dish (Motion Trap Remix). The video features Reed Fox (DeCollage), Megan Crooks (Ancient Elk), Jeremy Averitt (Esmé Patterson) and Kevin Netz (Jurassic Netz). The video is a visual explosion of beauty backed by the catchy house rhythms.

"Video feedback is a technique I learned from John Grigsby (local bass legend) and he learned it from his father. It involves taking a live camera and pointing the camera back into its own output until it creates a repeating spinning image. Then we added a few images between the camera and the screen." ~ Jeremy Averitt

"We borrowed an old analog video camera from the Oriental Theater with a VCR inside of it. We realized it belonged to Eldren's VJ after watching what was on the VCR. He was happy to get it back (he left it there after a show). We shot the video in 4 takes live in time with the song. Then Josh Heenan helped me edit it a month later between taking breaks to play with video feedback on a stack of 5 TV's. We wanted to throw in extra video of all of the musicians involved but our goal was to stay true to the footage we filmed that magic night with Jeremy and Kevin." ~ Reed Fox

According to Wikipedia: "Video feedback is the process that starts and continues when a video camera is pointed at its own playback video monitor. The loop delay from camera to display back to camera is at least one video frame time, due to the input and output scanning processes; it can be more if there is more processing in the loop."




First Listen: "Heat Dish" Motion Trap x Reed Fox ft. Megan Crooks

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We have music for you courtesy of Motion Trap and Treed Fox ft. Megan Crooks. I know you are saying to yourself “i’ve seen these names before”, chances are you have they all dabble in several projects here in Denver. These individuals got together for this track and wanted to share a bit of the background on how it came to be.

Reed Fox:

Jeremy Averitt, Kevin Netz, Megan Crooks & I are in a band called Moon Hammer. I became obsessed with House music two years ago and started writing my first House track that developed into Heat Dish when Kevin, Jeremy, and I were hanging out. Megan and I have collaborated on a few dozen tracks and we scheduled a time for her to write lyrics and record vocals over it. She's one of my favorite people to collaborate with and she wrote and recorded the vocals in a couple of hours. It was the dead of winter and all we had to keep warm was a heat dish in Moon Magnet Studios at the time so we named the song after it.

Moon Hammer reimagines and performs Heat Dish live at shows. We're playing it on PBS Sounds on 29th this Saturday as well as the UMS and MCA later this summer.

The original is out on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/track/7vTMO4USo7ficLsSfFMmg1?si=MP2iBIhdRkOGZVmn3vRbgw

Megan Crooks:

Sometimes beautiful things come together in the chaos of this world. I truly believe that the musical bond we share is cosmic! 

When asked how the idea for this specific track came about Kyle of Motion Trap explained:

I’m pretty sure the idea first came up at Fort Greene in Denver during a Nothing Matters event. I remember running into Reed and we started talking about some new Decollage songs he was planning to release. He mentioned he was thinking about remixes on a couple of the tracks. Motion Trap has always loved their music so I jump at a chance to give my spin to it. I think I texted him the next morning asking for the files.

One trend we have noticed recently in the Denver music scene is the amount of collaborations that have recently popped up. Kyle mentions that collaborations are “definitely complimentary! It’s a lot of fun for me to work with other artists’ songs. It’s always fun to see how other people create and what their process is like. Reed is a fun dude to be around too!”

Crooks added, “I've noticed that trend as well! I think it is something that is happening naturally. We are experiencing so much change both in the music community, and in personal lives that things are shifting. But we're musicians, we can't just stop creating! I think as a whole people are banding together in new ways to embrace the shock of inevitable change- politically, in community, and personally! “

Tell us what you think of the new jam?


First Listen: Levi Double U & Reed Fox “Fish Are Small” & “Poodlez”

Denver-based producers Levi Double U & Reed Fox have come together, with the help of Reed’s seven year old niece, Isa (aka Foofy), to make possibly the coolest dance tracks about animals you will hear in 2019. The two-song EP, Animalz & Stuff, shows off the dynamic producer duo’s love for hard-hitting house music, while giving a taste of the lyrical genius of the seven year old Foofy in her debut.

‘Fish Are Small’ and ‘Poodlez’ draw inspiration from some of Levi and Reed’s favorite artists, such as Wax Motif, Joyryde, and AC Slater. With bass-heavy drops, bouncy drums, and animal-inspired lyrics, the tracks are well-suited for any dance hall or nightclub.

The Animalz & Stuff EP will be available on all major platforms on March 29th, 2019.