|
Review |
|---|
This Australian breaks DJ has been a rising star over the last few years. Initially making his name as a DJ, playing alongside FreQ Nasty, Soul of Man and the Stanton Warriors as resident of Melbourne club Out of Order, he's moved into production with ease. With remixes of The Stantons and Deekline under his belt, this new EP sees Thayer hitting harder than ever.
Title track Ca$h Money is a blinder, a peak-time slice of ravey goodness that's sure to work well on any number of dancefloors. Get Dum is even funkier and a proper delight for DJ's, with countless drops to hold people's attention and an intro that practically launches itself like a rocket.
Trevor Loveys teams up with Thayer on Dirty Lickin', which has some nice Ghetto-Tech style vocals that take the tune into a brand new dimension about half way through, proving that when DJ's write their own material, it's always with the crowd in mind. Reach For The Lazers comes with two mixes, one exclusive to Juno, and both almost off the scale in terms of sheer dirty dancefloor delight. Ignore these at your peril - this EP is a seriously heavy hitting selection from Mr Thayer.
Title track Ca$h Money is a blinder, a peak-time slice of ravey goodness that's sure to work well on any number of dancefloors. Get Dum is even funkier and a proper delight for DJ's, with countless drops to hold people's attention and an intro that practically launches itself like a rocket.
Trevor Loveys teams up with Thayer on Dirty Lickin', which has some nice Ghetto-Tech style vocals that take the tune into a brand new dimension about half way through, proving that when DJ's write their own material, it's always with the crowd in mind. Reach For The Lazers comes with two mixes, one exclusive to Juno, and both almost off the scale in terms of sheer dirty dancefloor delight. Ignore these at your peril - this EP is a seriously heavy hitting selection from Mr Thayer.
