Review
Five years ago, it may have seemed presumptuous for Gregg Karukas to call one of his most popular recordings You'll Know It's Me, but back then, his sugary, ultra-melodic, slightly funkified keyboard style was truly identifiable from the first few notes of any song he played. Since then, however, he's pushed the rhythmic and stylistic envelopes in so many exciting, new directions that the Karukas of 2000 isn't quite the same guy anymore.
Released in 1998, Blue Touch lived up to its title by moving in what Karukas calls a "bluesy, funky, greasy and organic" direction. His NCoded debut Nightshift - so named for Karukas' propensity to work vampire-like in his studio all night - move...
Review
Five years ago, it may have seemed presumptuous for Gregg Karukas to call one of his most popular recordings You'll Know It's Me, but back then, his sugary, ultra-melodic, slightly funkified keyboard style was truly identifiable from the first few notes of any song he played. Since then, however, he's pushed the rhythmic and stylistic envelopes in so many exciting, new directions that the Karukas of 2000 isn't quite the same guy anymore.
Released in 1998, Blue Touch lived up to its title by moving in what Karukas calls a "bluesy, funky, greasy and organic" direction. His NCoded debut Nightshift - so named for Karukas' propensity to work vampire-like in his studio all night - move...