Kaleidoscope Companion
by DJ Food

— Released 16th July 2021 on Ahead Of Our Time

Released in April 2000, Kaleidoscope marked a new era for the DJ Food alias first conceived by label founders Coldcut. Now under the expert control of fellow Ninjas Kevin Foakes, aka Strictly Kev, and Patrick Carpenter, aka PC, the album broke with the past by reflecting a possible future of beats and pieces. Twenty years later, amid the first national lockdown in England, Kev and PC decided to celebrate Kaleidoscope's 20th anniversary by digging through their personal archives for material f...

Released in April 2000, Kaleidoscope marked a new era for the DJ Food alias first conceived by label founders Coldcut. Now under the expert control of fellow Ninjas Kevin Foakes, aka Strictly Kev, and Patrick Carpenter, aka PC, the album broke with the past by reflecting a possible future of beats and pieces. Twenty years later, amid the first national lockdown in England, Kev and PC decided to celebrate Kaleidoscope's 20th anniversary by digging through their personal archives for material from the original recording sessions. They found more than they bargained for, compiling versions, alternate mixes, and unreleased ideas into a series of mixes that have now been further refined into the Kaleidoscope Companion and presented alongside the original album on quadruple vinyl.

Opener 'The Ents Go To War' with its brooding arrangement and heavy drums feels stunningly current, as does the hypnotizing dance between bassline and snare on 'Skylark' or the fidgety percussion and airy synthesizers of 'Zoom Zoom'. Sonically, at least, DJ Food's vision of the future wasn't that far off and as Kev remarked when they first released the mixes some of these tracks "should have never been left in a drawer for two decades."

Elsewhere, the Kaleidoscope Companion throws up plenty of "hey I know this!" moments. The big-band-meets-easy-listening 'Hip Operation' was repurposed for the first version of Sukia's 'Feelin' Free' remix while the swirling funk of 'A Strange Walk' was an unreleased version of the same remix that eventually made it onto the Xen Cuts bonus disc. 'Stealth' is an alternate version of the Gentle Cruelty remix of 'The Ageing Young Rebel' (also included on Xen cuts) but with Nordine's vocal replaced by a somber voice mulling the disasters of morbid self-attention.

'The Crow (Slow)' stretches out the melodic theme of one of the most recognizable tracks in the DJ Food repertoire, extending it into a soothing soundscape that eventually dissolves into an alternate dub version. At 13 minutes long, 'Quadraplex (A Trip To The Galactic Centre)' is the Companion's meditative piece de resistance, pieced together from various takes of its separate composite tracks. Originally intended for the album, these tracks were instead reworked and cut up into an EP shortly after. Closing this trip into alternate possibilities is 'Boo Hoo', an early, shorter version of 'The Sky At Night' that gently carries the cinematic mood of the album back to now.

As Kev puts it, "It’s not a new DJ Food album, it’s an old one that never was. In an alternate reality it might have become Kaleidoscope but now, 20 years on, it’s a companion to the original album." And while we're stuck with our reality this companion is ideal for anyone wanting to peer into mirrors of possibilities.

Kaleidoscope Companion
by DJ Food

— Released 16th July 2021 on Ahead Of Our Time

Physical

4xLP (AHED030)

Quadruple LP including Kaleidoscope 2LP on marbled Blue 140g vinyl plus the previously unreleased Kaleidoscope Companion 2LP on marbled orange and red vinyl, packed in gatefold sleeve, including Music Declares Emergency poster/information flyer insert. Comes protected by bio-based shrinkwrap.

 

Digital

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MP3 (AHEDDNL030)
£5.00
 
16-bit WAV (AHEDDNL030W)
£7.00
 

Physical

Digital

4xLP (AHED030)

Quadruple LP including Kaleidoscope 2LP on marbled Blue 140g vinyl plus the previously unreleased Kaleidoscope Companion 2LP on marbled orange and red vinyl, packed in gatefold sleeve, including Music Declares Emergency poster/information flyer insert. Comes protected by bio-based shrinkwrap.

SAVE TO SPOTIFY

Add this release to your Spotify account now

You will be asked to login with your Spotify Account

Read our Terms & Conditions about this service here

MP3 (AHEDDNL030)
£5.00
16-bit WAV (AHEDDNL030W)
£7.00

Tracklist

  • 4xLP
  • MP3
  • 16-bit WAV
  1. 1
    The Ents Go To War
  2. 2
    Prototype I & II
  3. 3
    The Crow (Slow)
  4. 4
    A Strange Walk
  5. 5
    Hip Operation
  6. 6
    Skylark
  7. 7
    Zoom Zoom
  8. 8
    Quadraplex (A Trip to the Galactic Centre)
  9. 9
    See Saw
  10. 10
    Stealth
  11. 11
    The Rook + Type 3
  12. 12
    Boohoo
  13.  
    Play All (12)
  1. 1
    The Ents Go To War
  2. 2
    Prototype I & II
  3. 3
    The Crow (Slow)
  4. 4
    A Strange Walk
  5. 5
    Hip Operation
  6. 6
    Skylark
  7. 7
    Zoom Zoom
  8. 8
    Quadraplex (A Trip to the Galactic Centre)
  9. 9
    See Saw
  10. 10
    Stealth
  11. 11
    The Rook + Type 3
  12. 12
    Boohoo
  13.  
    Play All (12)
  1. 1
    The Ents Go To War
  2. 2
    Prototype I & II
  3. 3
    The Crow (Slow)
  4. 4
    A Strange Walk
  5. 5
    Hip Operation
  6. 6
    Skylark
  7. 7
    Zoom Zoom
  8. 8
    Quadraplex (A Trip to the Galactic Centre)
  9. 9
    See Saw
  10. 10
    Stealth
  11. 11
    The Rook + Type 3
  12. 12
    Boohoo
  13.  
    Play All (12)

Released in April 2000, Kaleidoscope marked a new era for the DJ Food alias first conceived by label founders Coldcut. Now under the expert control of fellow Ninjas Kevin Foakes, aka Strictly Kev, and Patrick Carpenter, aka PC, the album broke with the past by reflecting a possible future of beats and pieces. Twenty years later, amid the first national lockdown in England, Kev and PC decided to celebrate Kaleidoscope's 20th anniversary by digging through their personal archives for material f...

Released in April 2000, Kaleidoscope marked a new era for the DJ Food alias first conceived by label founders Coldcut. Now under the expert control of fellow Ninjas Kevin Foakes, aka Strictly Kev, and Patrick Carpenter, aka PC, the album broke with the past by reflecting a possible future of beats and pieces. Twenty years later, amid the first national lockdown in England, Kev and PC decided to celebrate Kaleidoscope's 20th anniversary by digging through their personal archives for material from the original recording sessions. They found more than they bargained for, compiling versions, alternate mixes, and unreleased ideas into a series of mixes that have now been further refined into the Kaleidoscope Companion and presented alongside the original album on quadruple vinyl.

Opener 'The Ents Go To War' with its brooding arrangement and heavy drums feels stunningly current, as does the hypnotizing dance between bassline and snare on 'Skylark' or the fidgety percussion and airy synthesizers of 'Zoom Zoom'. Sonically, at least, DJ Food's vision of the future wasn't that far off and as Kev remarked when they first released the mixes some of these tracks "should have never been left in a drawer for two decades."

Elsewhere, the Kaleidoscope Companion throws up plenty of "hey I know this!" moments. The big-band-meets-easy-listening 'Hip Operation' was repurposed for the first version of Sukia's 'Feelin' Free' remix while the swirling funk of 'A Strange Walk' was an unreleased version of the same remix that eventually made it onto the Xen Cuts bonus disc. 'Stealth' is an alternate version of the Gentle Cruelty remix of 'The Ageing Young Rebel' (also included on Xen cuts) but with Nordine's vocal replaced by a somber voice mulling the disasters of morbid self-attention.

'The Crow (Slow)' stretches out the melodic theme of one of the most recognizable tracks in the DJ Food repertoire, extending it into a soothing soundscape that eventually dissolves into an alternate dub version. At 13 minutes long, 'Quadraplex (A Trip To The Galactic Centre)' is the Companion's meditative piece de resistance, pieced together from various takes of its separate composite tracks. Originally intended for the album, these tracks were instead reworked and cut up into an EP shortly after. Closing this trip into alternate possibilities is 'Boo Hoo', an early, shorter version of 'The Sky At Night' that gently carries the cinematic mood of the album back to now.

As Kev puts it, "It’s not a new DJ Food album, it’s an old one that never was. In an alternate reality it might have become Kaleidoscope but now, 20 years on, it’s a companion to the original album." And while we're stuck with our reality this companion is ideal for anyone wanting to peer into mirrors of possibilities.