Fact Mix 784: Wordcolour
Fact Mix 784: Wordcolour Photo by: Jemima Yong
A twisting, turning exploration of tempo from one of the UK’s brightest new club producers.
Nicholas Worrall’s multifacted musical career began with him composing and arranging music for TV and theatre, but a few years ago he adopted the Wordcolour alias when he began making club music and sampling human voices from musique concrète tapes, YouTube memes and film dialogue.
His first EP as Wordcolour, Tell Me Something, released on Barcelona’s Lapsus Records in June, is one of the year’s strongest debuts. Combining a wide variety of strange and unexpected vocal samples with a crisp, intricate production style that seems to draw on everything from ’80s FM pop to post-dubstep, his signature is both formally inventive and rich in emotion.
be considered by some as a political statement. the nfl has long supported the military and veterans and will again salute our service members in the super bowl. what do you think i m a kimberly kimberly: yes, i am done with this kneeling thing, to be 100% honest with you. it s enough already. completely convoluted. let s show respect for the military, veterans, patriots who have served this country, those who have given their lives and honor their families. for me, this is the super bowl. let s pull together. don t make it about you and your individual particular ideology of the day. something you want to flash on. do something about the team and play the sport and honor the occasion. juan: the nfl did approve please honor our veterans and please stand for our veterans but they did not approve please
just admonish you because they know, at least in new jersey, there is no such law prohibiting it so they can t charge you for committing a crime that is not a crime. if this is a federal judge and we ve got a graphic of states that challenged headlights flashing. florida, new jersey, missouri, ohio and tennessee. does this impact people across the country or just the missouri case? this is the first case to rule this way by a federal court, it is likely others will follow. it is a well reasoned, easy to understand decision that basically says this enhances safety and it s just free speech in the form of a light. so flash on. flash away. don t misinterpret that, kilmeade. flash your headlights away. that is good news because that car has the