PREVIEW Patrick Bodmer and Philipp Jung have known each other for 22 years. But according to Jung, the two DJs behind Berlin minimal house outfit M.A.N.D.Y. "sometimes lose each other" amid their various musical commitments. The most recent solution to this problem was pretty chilling: an extended stint in Iceland, where they spent three weeks recording in the wintry cold of February. Staying an hour outside of Reykjavík, they sketched out songs with help from Lopazz, a signee to their Get Physical label whose vintage equipment and field recordings of Mongolian sheep came in handy for M.A.N.D.Y.
"You don't have the time to sit down and write songs in Berlin," Jung said over the phone from Berlin. "It was good to be isolated, but we weren't sure if we could survive out there." Survive they did, but don't be fooled by their frigid choice of studio. It's the glowing warmth of their remixes and skillful manipulation of the clean 4/4 beat at house music's foundation that has reaped them so much admiration as producers at home and abroad. Their original productions which include the bassy synth sparkle of 2004 hit "Body Language," a co-production with Booka Shade and their remixes for such artists as Röyksopp and the Knife bring into spare focus each track's pliable, underlying blip-pulse, carefully giving the melody the space to kick one's space-disco synapses into joyous movement.
They primarily have been engaged in remixes during the past couple of years, most recently releasing a mix disc for the Fabric imprint in January. Their present tour, which showcases the Get Physical roster, pushes forth into a year that will see the release of a new 12-inch and a return to the 10- to 12-hour nights they customarily spin in Europe. "We like playing really long sets," Jung explained excitedly. Clearly there's little sleep to be had in M.A.N.D.Y.-land.
GET PHYSICAL NORTH AMERICAN TOUR with M.A.N.D.Y., Booka Shade, and Heidi. Fri/25, 10 p.m. doors, $22 advance. Mezzanine, 444 Jessie, SF. (415) 625-8880, www.mezzaninesf.com
Also from this author
Even those turned off by his surly stage persona admired the garage rock hero
Rank/Xerox makes nervy sounds for anxious times
The Raincoats are back in fashion with a great local band that adores them
Also in this section
The band makes "inside-out-echo-laser-garage-psych-rock."
Antwon and Pictureplane flip inspiration from another decade
Mark Mothersbaugh and Devo aim to infect commercialism from within
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- New Rules... - May 20, 2013
- Oh, yeah. Lilli's tender ears. - May 20, 2013
- ha ha ha - May 20, 2013
- Not agreeing with a progressive - May 20, 2013
- "You're crazy."----Tim - May 20, 2013
- So the omnipresent commenter - May 20, 2013
- The Doors-like band he had at - May 20, 2013
- Disgusting Troll. You are the bigot or you wouldn't be repeating - May 20, 2013
- As though I'm really talking - May 20, 2013
- Agree with the gist, - May 20, 2013








