Warmth by Cole Odin

With the success of funders one and two, we are back with number three. Already getting support from Brighton to San Francisco to Italy to Birmingham to Ibiza to London and home again.

In these times we need 'Warmth' some kindness and escape from all that is going on. Confusing times, eh? This Ep offers you a space to zone out in and remember the good times, but also allows you to dream and get excited about the future again. (and dance like crazy in your Kitchen)

This is a fact not lost on San Francisco DJ, producer and multi-instrumentalist Cole Odin, who lightens the mood and lifts the spirits with two new tracks: “This Kitchen Is for Dancing” and “The Warmth of your Sun”.

With “Kitchen” Odin uses looping, motorik momentum and endlessly inventive guitar motifs to create a sonic landscape that’s satisfyingly familiar and yet littered with sonic signposts to new, exotic destinations. It proves that you don’t need decking or bi-fold doors to bring the outdoors indoors – you just need a soundsystem.

Bristol-based producer and DJ Jack Priest puts an elasticated snap back into the beats for his blissful, bass-heavy remix and manages to find an extra minute and a half behind the toaster while he’s at it. Taking the kitchen disco into cosmic territory, the result is flawless, grown-up, slo-mo disco for the discerning dancefloor.

Odin’s second composition, “The Warmth of your Sun” is a very different beast – the yin to its counterpart’s yang. Everything slows as eyes close – music for lazy days where everything sways. A warm, electric bass buzz offers a scene-setting static hum onto which guitar tones etch out shapes and highlight moods, all the time anchored by the weight of a colossal kickdrum. 



Adam Warped (Whisky Pickle) takes up the remix reins for “Warmth”. Picking up the pace, he twists and turns the guitar lines into new, decorative shapes to suit his dance-friendly deconstruction, one which pivots perfectly into an undulating, acidic groove.

It’s a release to keep things locked down on lockdown. Stay safe.

With the success of funders one and two, we are back with number three. Already getting support from Brighton to San Francisco to Italy to Birmingham to Ibiza to London and home again.

In these times we need 'Warmth' some kindness and escape from all that is going on. Confusing times, eh? This Ep offers you a space to zone out in and remember the good times, but also allows you to dream and get excited about the future again. (and dance like crazy in your Kitchen)

This is a fact not lost on San Francisco DJ, producer and multi-instrumentalist Cole Odin, who lightens the mood and lifts the spirits with two new tracks: “This Kitchen Is for Dancing” and “The Warmth of your Sun”.

With “Kitchen” Odin uses looping, motorik momentum and endlessly inventive guitar motifs to create a sonic landscape that’s satisfyingly familiar and yet littered with sonic signposts to new, exotic destinations. It proves that you don’t need decking or bi-fold doors to bring the outdoors indoors – you just need a soundsystem.

Bristol-based producer and DJ Jack Priest puts an elasticated snap back into the beats for his blissful, bass-heavy remix and manages to find an extra minute and a half behind the toaster while he’s at it. Taking the kitchen disco into cosmic territory, the result is flawless, grown-up, slo-mo disco for the discerning dancefloor.

Odin’s second composition, “The Warmth of your Sun” is a very different beast – the yin to its counterpart’s yang. Everything slows as eyes close – music for lazy days where everything sways. A warm, electric bass buzz offers a scene-setting static hum onto which guitar tones etch out shapes and highlight moods, all the time anchored by the weight of a colossal kickdrum. 



Adam Warped (Whisky Pickle) takes up the remix reins for “Warmth”. Picking up the pace, he twists and turns the guitar lines into new, decorative shapes to suit his dance-friendly deconstruction, one which pivots perfectly into an undulating, acidic groove.

It’s a release to keep things locked down on lockdown. Stay safe.

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Warmth by Cole Odin

Cole Odin
12” Black vinyl (45 rpm)
Digital Download Included
~£ 11.00 Shipping to United States
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