Jon Hester

Converge Part I

Rekids

REKIDS164

Jon Hester

Converge Part I

Rekids

REKIDS164

Rekids164_3000px
ARTIST
Jon Hester
TITLE
Converge Part I
LABEL
Rekids
CAT NO.
REKIDS164
FORMAT
2 x 12"
RELEASE DATE
  • 25/09/2020 [INITIAL RELEASE]
TERRITORY
Worldwide
BARCODE
197188529727
GENRE
Deep House House Techno
FEATURING
Jon Hester

TRACK LISTING

play all

  1. A1. Sending Signals  ▾
  2. A2. Metropolitan  ▾
  3. B1. Haze  ▾
  4. B2. Rain  ▾
  5. C1. Dreamstate  ▾
  6. C2. Free  ▾
  7. D1. Flex  ▾
  8. D2. Equinox  ▾

SALES NOTES

Prolific American artist Jon Hester returns to Rekids for the first instalment of his new album, ‘Converge’, this September.

Jon Hester grew up in the Midwest US, living in Chicago and Minneapolis while taking musical cues from Detroit. Initially he was a dancer, and later transitioned to the decks with a refined understanding of what it takes to move a club. He progressed to hosting his own events, holding residencies, and working at a record shop, and now brings his physical rhythms and adventurous drums to his productions, with output on respected labels such as Transmat, Deeply Rooted, Dystopian, Klockworks, and LET Recordings, not to mention multiple appearances on Rekids.

Continuing to show fine form on his debut album, Hester now serves up eight of his signature house and techno fusions with plenty of his trademark directness across four sides of vinyl. The superb 'Sending Signals' opens the album with scene-setting synth modulations full of sci-fi atmosphere. It's the calm before the storm as 'Metropolitan' then immediately sets off on a cantering groove that is eventually run through with busy, jazzy piano keys that bring the soul.

'Haze' has excellently taught kick drums with hypnotic synth tones adding colour, and features Hester on saxophone. When 'Rain' comes, things grow darker and more menacing, with shakers and urgent stabs keeping you moving at a slick pace.

The second half of this compelling record features the loopy punches and pulses of the super smooth 'Dreamstate', beautifully cosmic and widescreen techno of 'Free' and pensive but urgent deep electro of standout cut 'Flex.' Last of all, 'Equinox' is lit up with distant chords which bring a far-sighted gaze to the rolling, robust kicks.

Published: 24th August 2020

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