Juno Daily

Music and tech news, interviews, features, reviews and more.

Visit Juno Daily

安全购物

Studio equipment

Our full range of studio equipment from all the leading equipment and software brands. Guaranteed fast delivery and low prices.

Visit Juno Studio

安全购物

DJ equipment

Our full range of DJ equipment from all the leading equipment and software brands. Guaranteed fast delivery and low prices. Visit Juno DJ

new vinly this week
USD
我的语言
我的货币
Your wishlist is empty
Items in wishlist:
Recently added:
Loading...
购物车
您的购物车为空
Items in cart:
总和:
Recently added:
Loading...
查看购物车
首页  Back In Stock  Leftfield  Leftfield  14 days

Filter

Back in stock period

Back in stock: Leftfield

Leftfield vinyl represses and restocks
Options
Items 1 to 10 of 10 on page 1 of 1
Electro Soma I & II
Electro Soma I & II (2xCD + 32 page booklet)
Cat: WARPCD 9R. Rel: 25 Aug 17
Soundtrack Of Space (CD1: Electro Soma)
Hall Of Mirrors
Mondrin
Obsessed
Bio Dimension
Basic Emotion
Metropolis
Obtuse
Telefone 529
Drift
Debris (CD2: Electro Soma II)
Ecliptic
Ming
Bubbles
Kaxaia-80
Satori
Paradroid
Transient Pathways
Fear Of Expression
Go With The Hiss
Eiyla
Static Emotion
Review: B12's 1993 debut album, Electro-Soma, has long been regarded as one of intelligent dance music's "must-have releases". Offering a decidedly intergalactic blend of otherworldly techno, ambient and deep space electronica, it remains a brilliant piece of work. Here, Warp Records give it the reissue treatment, packaging the peerless original album with a second disc of early B12 rarities and hard-to-find cuts recorded during the same period. There's naturally plenty to admire on this bonus disc, from the shimmering electro bustle of "Transient Pathways" and Motor City futurism of "Debris", to the intoxicating ambient brilliance of "Go With The Hiss". That this material is every bit as good as the tracks included on Electro-Soma is testament to the (then) duo's rarely matched brilliance.
Read more
Played by: Thread London
 in stock $13.92
Chance Versus Causality
Cat: CABS 29CD. Rel: 30 Aug 19
Chance Versus Casualty (part 1)
Chance Versus Casualty (part 2)
Chance Versus Casualty (part 3)
Chance Versus Casualty (part 4)
Chance Versus Casualty (part 5)
Chance Versus Casualty (part 6)
Chance Versus Casualty (part 7)
Review: In 1979, Cabaret Voltaire - then consisting of all three founder members, Richard H. Kirk, Stephen Mallinder and Chris Watson - recorded a soundtrack for an experimental film "for two projectors" by Babeth Mondini. 40 years on, that soundtrack has finally been given a release. It's similar in tone to some of the Sheffield experimentalists' other soundtrack work from the period, offering discordant, unsettling and otherworldly sound collages that fuse heavily modified and processed instrumental parts (guitar, bass, drums, clarinet, saxophone) with tape loops, sampled dialogue and the band's ever-present electronic tones. Whether you're an obsessive Cabs fan or not, it's well worth a listen. This is, after all, a slice of previously hidden musical history.
Read more
 in stock $9.80
Shadow Of Fear
Cat: CABS 30CD. Rel: 20 Nov 20
Be Free
The Power (Of Their Knowledge)
Night Of The Jackal
Microscopic Flesh Fragment
Papa Nine Zero Delta United
Universal Energy
Vasto
What's Goin' On
Review: The arrival of a new Cabaret Voltaire album - the first since 1994 according to our records - should excite all those who hold the work of the pioneering Sheffield outfit dear. It's now a solo project from Richard H Kirk (he decided to keep the name after parting company with Stephen Mallinder in the late '90s), but the distinctive stylistic ticks remain (think paranoid sonic textures, metallic percussion hits, clear dub influences, plentiful spoken word samples, curious electronic noises and nods towards the industrial funk, EBM and post-punk). Naturally it's not as ground-breaking as Kirk and company's work in the '70s and '80s, but it is undeniably a Cabaret Voltaire album - and one that subtly updates the Cabs' particular brand of dense, dancefloor-ready paranoia for a new century.
Read more
 in stock $9.80
Rampen (APM: Alien Pop Music)
Cat: 525475 2. Rel: 05 Apr 24
Wie Lange Noch?
Ist Ist
Pestalozzi
Es Konnte Sein
Before I Go
Isso Isso
Besser Isses
Everything Will Be Fine
The Pit Of Language
Planet Umbra
Tar & Feathers
Aus Den Zeiten
Ick Wees Nich (Noch Nich)
Trilobiten
Gesundbrunnen
Review: Einsturzende Neubauten's description by label Potomoak - as a band that constantly evolves - is accurate enough. Over forty years on from their debut album Kollaps in 1981, Rampen appears as the latest and most unruly incarnation of their sound yet. Here, Blixa Bargeld, N. U. Unruh, Alexander Hacke, Jochen Arbeit, Rudolph Moser and Felix Gebhard present their least predictable and conventional sides: APM is described as alien pop music; the songs therein have been specially crafted not only for our universe but for every adjacent parallel universe to ours, with every slight multiversal variation in humanity's collective tastes held firmly in mind. The album fully lives up to its billing as anti-pop as alien pop, its challenging twists and turns fully sating the difficult whims of society's outcasts and cosmic punks.
Read more
 in stock $21.65
Scope Neglect
Cat: CDSTUMM 503. Rel: 29 Feb 24
Lamb Shift
Chimera
The River Of Light & Radiation
_1993
Turning The Prism
Load Up On Guns, Bring Your Friends
Tritium Bath
Unreal In The Eyes Of The Dead
Review: While Ben Frost's work has long been marked out by deft-touch dark ambient, experimental instincts and clandestine aural textures, he's always thrown in surprise excursions and drawn on musical inspirations that other like-minded producers would fear to embrace. This latter characteristic comes to the fore on Scope Neglect, his first solo set for six years. Remarkably, it utilises the moodiness, weight and ten-ton guitar licks of metal - played by Car Bombs guitarist Greg Kubacki and bass-slinger Liam Andrews of My Disco fame - as a starting point. Frost naturally puts these through the sonic wringer, combining them with his own skittish, IDM-influenced beats, dark ambient soundscapes and razor-sharp electronics. The results are unusual, impressive and emphatically enjoyable, sitting somewhere between timeless electronica, Nine Inch Nails and experimental metal.
Read more
! low stock $10.83
Singularity
Cat: WIGCD 352. Rel: 04 May 18
Singularity
Emerald Rush
Neon Pattern Drum
Everything Connected
Feel First Life
Cosm
Echo Dissolve
Luminous Beings
Recovery
Review: Having taken time out to travel the world and experience new things (including psychedelic substances in California), John Hopkins planned to make Singularity, his ninth album, "a sonic ecosystem that starts and ends on the same note". He soon got frustrated by these limitations, so instead just laid down a fluid and hazy album that combines his usual luscious, ambient electronics with a variety of sparse, heavy and off-kilter rhythms. While undeniably laidback in parts, the album also boasts a number of foreboding techno workouts and uses a wider palette of instrumental sounds than we've come to expect (including some fine strings and his own intricate piano playing). The resultant set is rather impressive, all told, and while not quite a "sonic ecosystem", it's certainly an enjoyable journey.
Read more
Played by: Indian Wells
 in stock $9.27
The Endless Echo
Cat: GBX 045CD. Rel: 05 Apr 24
The Awful Majesty
Decision Point
Lacunae
On The Clock
Unnatural Span
Chronos
Heat Haze
Momentary Permanence
Written In Water
All Things Pass
Deeptime
Vault
Archaic
Counting The Hours
Green Pulse
Unremembered
Review: Analogue synth spooks rejoice, Pye Corner Audio is back with further explorations of the sweet spot between nostalgic fuzz and circuit-borne futurism. Ghost Box is a spiritual home for Martin Jenkins' flagship project, and he continues to edge out the scope of the Pye Corner sound without derailing the fundamental atmosphere. On The Endless Echo, warm, pulsing melodics set to eerie keys abound, and there's a fine balance between gorgeous ambient atmospheric pieces and sinewy, danceable rhythms, but Jenkins manages to sound fresh and inspired even while reliably holding true to the overall project aesthetic.
Read more
 in stock $13.40
Please Touch
Cat: EAUX 1691CD. Rel: 22 Jun 23
Joy Of The Worm
Rib Cage
Pleasure Vessels
Spore
Feeding Time
Spines
Disappared
The Illuminating Glass
Turning Blue
Review: Mysterious techno artist Rrose presents their first ever CD release, and their second full-length project to date. Following 2019's Hymn to Moisture, Please Touch features 11 slippery slinkers, flaunting Rrose's penchant for hypnotics and minimalisms; the likes of 'Spores' and 'Spines' refuse to indulge too many novel sounds, preferring to allow their more immersive textures to rattle and ricochet over each mix, producing a delugey wash. Thematically, the LP deals with themes of touch, intimacy and embodiment, doing some of the work to bridge the schizophonic gap that's remained open since the dawn of recorded music.
Read more
Played by: Joachim Spieth
 in stock $10.06
Jon Savage's Ambient 90s (B-STOCK)
Jon SAVAGE / VARIOUS
Cat: CTRUE 32CD (B-STOCK). Rel: 01 Jan 90
Sandoz - "Limbo"
Lobe - "Placebo"
2 Cabbages On A Drip - "Calm"
React To Rhythm - "Intoxication" (Clubfield mix)
Strange Cargo - "Montauk Point"
Rapoon - "Bol Baya"
Aphex Twin - "Utopia 3"
GOL - "No Bounds"
Moonwater - "Space Indian"
Underworld - "Blueski"
U-Ziq - "Phiesope"
Biosphere - "En-trance"
Review: ***B-STOCK: Product has light surface marks/scratches, but otherwise in perfect working condition***


The 1990s was arguably the first 'golden age' of ambient - a time when the inherently atmospheric and laidback style not only exploded in popularity, but also became the post-club soundtrack of choice for a whole generation. This personal survey of the 90s ambient scene from journalist and author Jon Savage does a good job in gathering together a representative selection of genuine gems and overlooked classics, drifting between the bubbly, deep space brilliance of Richard H Kirk's Sandoz project ('Limbo'), bleeping ambient house ('Calm' by 2 Cabbages on a Drip), early progressive house (React 2 Rhythm), electronic psychedelia (the tabla rhythms and swirly noises of Rapoon), ambient blues (Underworld), IDM (U-ziq), and glacial, slow-motion bliss (Biosphere).
Read more
 in stock $6.71
Dostrotime
Cat: WARPCD 366. Rel: 29 Feb 24
Arkteon (1)
Enbounce
Wendorlan
Duneray
Kronmec
Arkteon (2)
Holorform
Akkranen
Stromcor
Domelash
Heliobat
Arkteon (3)
Review: Given the uniqueness of his madcap and mind-altering trademark sound, the release of any new album from Tom Jenkinson AKA Squarepusher is big news. Given that his last new full-length landed four years ago, the arrival of Dostrotime has got an awful lot of experimentalists in a bit of a lather. Like many albums that have surfaced in the last couple of years, it was apparently inspired by the "novel, eerie, sublime silence of lockdown", with the title being a reference to "how time passed differently". Quite how this plays out within the music itself is open to interpretation; for the most part, what's on offer is prime Squarepusher - all distorted, full-throttle acid lines, mutilated experimental D&B beats, analogue electronics and rasping, strobe-lit nods to raves,
Read more
 in stock $12.90
Items 1 to 10 of 10 on page 1 of 1
Cart subtotal: