Friday, February 20, 2026

BPM on PBS

Played some house and techno on the radio last week!


Some new stuff and some new old stuff - all available here.



Tracklist:

Artist

Song

Label (Year)

Choc Eletrique

Shadows (Illinton's Shadow Warrior Dub)

Invincis (2001)

Artificial

Lollipop

Melbourne Underground Konsortium (1999)

Arrow

O' La Soca (Techno Dub)

Mango (1989)

DJ Fett Burger & DJ Sommer

Sommer Burger One

Sex Tags UFO (2025)

Holy Balm

Fashion (Andras Dub Mix)

Chapter Music (2017)

DJ Senze

Spring Day

Grow! (1999)

Loopy

Mixed Emotions

Sporadic Groove Records (1999)

Idjut Boyz & Quakerman

Radio Rage (16B Club Mix) [Idjut Boys Edit]

Glasgow Underground (1999)

Maxwell

Till The Cops... (Shelter Vocal)

Restricted Audio (2007)

DJ Central

Blink

NES (2025)

Glory B.

Premier

Grow! (1998)

Aril Brikha

Groove La Chord

Transmat (1998)

Subq

Anyway You Want It ([Love] Tattoo Remix)

Kompactr (2001)

DJ Jes

Come High Tonight

Siesta (2001)

Moby

All That I Need Is To Be Loved (Moby Dub)

Elektra (1993)

Trevor Rockcliffe

Adgar

Bush (1999)

Isimistik

Miditrip

Djax-Up-Beats (1991)

Excalibur & DJ Spence

Medium Rare

Doo (2026)

Bryan Zentz

With Incident

Jericho (1999)

The Armadillos

Drop & Hope

VA Recordings (2000)

Layo

Love Story (Bushwacka! Remix)

XL Recordings (2002)

RP Boo

All Over

Planet Mu (2021)



Thursday, February 12, 2026

Trip Switch - V1

A real underground Melbourne gem getting some air time on the channel.

A product of the incredible Ollie Olson and Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) funding, Trip Switch V1, provides a nugget of perspective into Melbourne's burgeoning dance music, radio and youth scene in the 1990s.

Released on minuscule label Technical Revolution of Sound, the compilation features a number of "experiments in trip hop," spanning breakbeat, techno and downtempo.

The CD also claims that some of the tracks appeared on short-lived ABC TV show Raw FM, based on the real efforts of Melbourne radio station Hitz FM to provide youth centered radio and serve the dance music community. 

Raw FM never had the originally promised second season and was ridiculed by the audience it was supposed to serve. Cliche-heavy and dismissive of issues that young people in Hitz FM confronted, the show was unable to connect with young people. 

There's a great recording of Julie Doyle of Hitz FM presenting a scathing review of the show on Radio National here. Adults making shows about what they think kids do never seem to hit the mark with the kids they portray.

Aside from the poor production of Raw FM, getting Ollie Olson involved clearly supported the soundtrack. Aside from his involvement, for information on producers featured in Trip Switch is incredibly thin. Some tracks appeared later in the 1990s on Australian techno label Odessa Mama. 

I couldn't find any info on Dr. Roopa, but their tune Vincent seems to be a great example of the trip hop experiments on Trip Switch. Atmospheric vocals, ethereal guitar along a downtempo breakbeat show a remarkable forgotten piece of Melbourne electronic music.




Artwork also clearly deserves a mention. Still looks incredibly fresh for something from 1992. Here's some more photos of the CD.