Peggy Gou for Cercle
at Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille, France
Peggy Gou playing in a French palace for Cercle is the kind of high-concept setting that could easily tip into pretension, but she promptly dismantles that fear by opening with a haunting, obscure Persian pop track. We're in the Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille, all marble and majesty, but the vibe quickly becomes that of an intimate, slightly trippy basement party where the decor is just a bonus. This is eclectic house and techno with a deep, psychedelic undercurrent, all rolling out at a steady 130 BPM average. The harmonic foundation is overwhelmingly in 12A, creating a cohesive, hypnotic thread through eleven tracks, with subtle forays into 3B and 7A adding texture.
The energy profile is deeply immersive: a colossal low-end average of 0.8177 provides a warm, all-enveloping bass bed that feels physically restorative, while the mid-range at 0.1605 and minimal high-end at 0.0208 allow space for intricate melodies and atmospheric details to breathe. Mixing is patient and atmospheric, with long, evolving blends that suit the grand surroundings. The tracklist is a digger's dream. Ebi's 'San' is a breathtaking, melancholic opener that sets a uniquely cinematic tone.
The inclusion of Commix's 'Satellite Song (Underground Resistance Remix)' is a stroke of genius, a drum & bass classic slowed and morphed into a deep, aquatic techno tool. Jellybean's 'Twilight Drone' offers a moment of serene, ambient drift, while Dancer's 'Boom Boom (Jerome Hill Edit)' injects a shot of raw, analog acid funk. Spacetime Continuum's 'Drug #6' and Ongaku's 'Mihon #1' are pure 90s electronica obscurities that reward the nerds in the crowd. The journey begins in the emotional depth of 'San', weaves through layers of hypnotic grooves and leftfield electronics, and concludes with the sparse, melodic pulse of Woody McBride's 'Darrin Houston', a closing track that leaves us floating rather than crashing.