Following a collaboration-heavy full-length for !K7 titled &,
Michael Mayer returned to the label with an installment of the ever-popular DJ-Kicks series. Most of
Mayer's commercially released mix CDs have appeared on Kompakt, the Cologne-based techno institution he helps run, and are typically heavy on material released by the label, but the only Kompakt-issued track featured in the mix is
Justus Köhncke's 2007 cover of
Michael Rother's "Feuerland." As with most of
Mayer's mixes other than the Speicher CD series, he's not aiming to show off the latest wares of his label or a treasure trove of rare or unreleased productions by himself or his colleagues. He's going for emotional impact, and the tracks' sequencing is of greater importance than anything else. A spacious, tabla-driven piece by trombonist (and
Arthur Russell associate)
Peter Zummo begins the mix, and seamlessly floats into
Mayer's own "The Horn Conspiracy," the only new, exclusive track on the program. The first third or so of the mix consists of slightly dazed astral disco, sometimes with spoken words (in English and Russian), and sometimes with flutes or strummed guitars. Starting with
Mayer's remix of "Honey" by Brazilian band
CSS, the songs are significantly more sentimental, particularly
Kasper Bjørke's devastating breakup anthem "Apart" (also remixed by
Mayer) and
Röyksopp's mix of
Mekon and
Marc Almond's "Please Stay." Even instrumental tracks such as
Alter Ego's new wave electro stormer "Gary" are just as dramatic as the ones with lyrics. Later on,
Mayer resurrects
Basement Jaxx's Simon Ratcliffe's surprisingly great remix of
Throbbing Gristle's classic "Hot on the Heels of Love," and follows it up with a Chris & Cosey remix of
Death in Vegas that could've fit on one of the ex-
TG duo's albums from the '80s. As with most DJ-Kicks volumes, this one seems geared toward home listening rather than attempting to replicate a club set, but other than a shimmering interlude by Idioma near the end of the mix,
Mayer keeps the beats steady most of the time. His mixing style, as ever, is minimal and unobtrusive, letting the records speak for themselves. Minimal, however, is not at all an accurate descriptor for the actual tracks contained within this powerful, stirring mix. ~ Paul Simpson