This week, Salem released a mixtape for DIS magazine, an art outfit that fits the Salem worldview. The mix, entitled Raver Stay Wif Me, is 32 minutes of both familiar and obscure tracks, twisted and manipulated to the edge of recognition. The titular raver is paid tribute by classic tracks like "Better Off Alone" by Alice Deejay, "Sandstorm" by Darude, and "Can't Stop Raving" by Dune, trance tracks whose hypnotic affect is still apparent, even if the music is better suited for cough syrup sipping than Ecstasy popping.
Download the mix after the jump.
It may be an act, but only Salem is twisted enough to include a track by a convicted sexual predator: South Park Mexican's "Vogues" is a record-skipping center piece of the tape. Too sick for you? They include "Unchained Melody" and "Young Forever," classic love songs that just seem wrong in contrast to the rest of the mix.
Not much is known about the Michigan trio of John Holland, Heather Marlatt, and Jack Donoghue; they don't give many interviews, or take photographs, or humor the social media crowd. Instead, they keep a public image that mirrors their music: dark, mysterious, unnerving. Their music videos don't give many clues, either, except that the band may need psychological help. Check out the NSFW clip for "Skullcrush," a video that makes M.I.A.'s "Born Free" look like a Disney film.
SKULLCRUSH from bea fremderman on Vimeo.
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