In the Studio With Dirtybird Producer Vangelis

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In the Studio With Dirtybird Producer Vangelis

The latest on Dirtybird comes from sound engineering wiz Vangelis Kostoxenakis. This Greek producer has honed his skills as a studio perfectionist immersed in the dance sounds of Athens. Building a discography on labels like Dirtybird, Moon Harbour, Snatch! and Toolroom, it’s safe to say Vangelis’ records are jammed in the crates of Europe’s top talent. His new one comes in the form of a three-track EP released with west coast house icons Dirtybird. Punchy bass lines and tight percussion make it immediately evident why the big man Claude picked this one for the label.

Cosmic leads like that found in title-track ‘Take Your Shirt Off’ don’t come pre-packaged. This guy knows his way around the studio and has probably spent endless nights fiddling with gear. Vangelis’ attention while molding each pulse results in a clear drum punch elegantly layered with synth love. Packed with diverse dancefloor sounds, the EP is made for club sweat. Three tunes with variety, you can put this one on the decks in consecutive play with no problem. The release is out now, so stream while you scroll and visualize those sounds already.

We touched base with Vangelis to hear more about what’s fueling his studio. It’s no surprise that his lineup features some strong hardware. Scroll through this quick peek at gear in heavy rotation, hear what the man himself has to say about these beauts.

MFB-DOMINION 1

The dominion is one of my favorite pieces. There’s not one track that this beast of analog mono synth haven’t been used since I bought it. It’s 3 oscillators are really raw combined with a filter that reminds a bit the old oscars. It’s endless modulation possibilities and 2 separate lfos make it my standard to use when I need some really quirky sounds.

ARP Odyssey

This is a reissue of the classic arp odyssey. Korg followed faithfully the original design and included for us geeks all 3 filter revisions just with a flip of a switch. It definitely has endless character and can achieve some really dope basses but I think is mostly strong when u start messing with the lfo combined with sample & hold or messing with the pulse width modulation.

Moog Subsequent 57

 

Not much too say about the subsequent 37 because it’s simply terrible……. maybe in the planet Deaf a review like this could exist. On planet Moog though it’s a completely different story. I don’t think even Moog thought that they would make such a huge hit. It’s literally a beast and managed to be a studio standard. There are endless reviews out there about this synth and to me is my go-to machine for basses what else. However, it can achieve some amazing lead sounds as well as quirky ones. Simply great.

Dave Smith Instruments Prophet Rev2

 

Dave Smith is one of my favorite engineers. He really knows his stuff and is not called randomly The Godfather of midi. The prophet rev2 is a prophet8 on steroids. Endless modulation routings, fast envelopes and a mediocre filter that if u find its sweet spot you can create some analog poly heaven. I don’t use it that much lately as I’m tending to write monophonic music, however whenever I need some warmth or record some ravey chord stabs this synth never failed me.

Apollo mk2

Last but not least the center of all. The new Apollo mk2 is terrific. They did a great job upgrading the word clock but their plugins? All I can say is that I can’t work without them. Everything else sounds sterile and characterless. I have invested in a series of compressors and eqs ranging from neve to teletronix and more and seriously they do almost the same job like the real thing.

Keep watch for more from Vangelis as he continues to dish out high quality, dance floor sounds. Between his own label, ‘Talk of the Town’ and a steady stream of release head, this studio native should be in your crate.

Stream the EP Here

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