- Music
- 14 Jan 05
New York producer Abe Duque used to make music that was too adventurous and off the wall for dance floor friendly consumption, but somewhere along the way - probably when he was co-producing Gigolos boss Hell’s last album, ‘NY Muscle- he saw the light.
New York producer Abe Duque used to make music that was too adventurous and off the wall for dance floor friendly consumption, but somewhere along the way - probably when he was co-producing Gigolos boss Hell’s last album, ‘NY Muscle- he saw the light. The result of this artistic volte face is an album’s worth of grungy, quirky dance floor tracks. Alternating between frenetic club tracks, sweaty electro house and old skool techno jams, Duque also delivers a few seductive, sexy numbers and gives two fingers to the 303 revivalists with the classic ‘back in the day’ tirade with Blake Baxter on ‘What Happened’. The real stars are still underground.