10 records that made Eglo a trend-setting label - Features - Mixmag
Features

10 records that made Eglo a trend-setting label

Looking back on a decade in the game for the London label that brought us Floating Points and Fatima

  • Joe Roberts
  • 11 May 2020

When Alexander Nut moved to London in 2003 there was no grand music plan, despite having been a DJ in his native Wolverhampton. But after getting a job in music PR, he started making mixtapes and one reached Rinse founders Sarah Lockhart and Geeneus. Initially asked to cover one show, it morphed into eight years on the station.

It was while doing this he discovered Floating Points on Myspace. Initially acting as his manager, when no major labels were interested in putting out his music, they thought “Fuck it, let’s do it ourselves,” and Eglo was born.

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From the beginning, it’s been a close-knit affair. Fatima, Eglo’s homegrown vocal star, used to live with Alex. “It was plain to see she was a massive talent,” he says.

Recently celebrating its tenth anniversary, the label has continued to attract like-minded souls, from Steve Spacek and Shafiq Husayn to Henry Wu and Dego & Kaidi. And inspired by the open-minded spirit of the sadly-closed London club Plastic People, it’s blazed a trend-setting musical trail that many are just catching up with.

LabeL co-FOUNDER: Alex Nut

What is the ethos behind Eglo?

“It’s the sum of a lot of different parts. The obvious standout thing is Plastic People. Myself, Sam [Floating Points], Fatima and Funkineven were all going there day in, day out. It didn’t matter what night it was or what style of music. We all came to the table with that mindset, we’re influenced by all these different things. It’s a shared appreciation of underground dance music and black music: British-Jamaican bass music and soundsystem culture, and Chicago and Detroit.”

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After a decade, what challenges and successes stand out?

“It’s definitely hard running a small independent record label that specialises in quite niche music. From being a hobby and labour of love to having Fatima signed to the label and there being a lot more investment – you’re making music videos and handling represses – there are a lot of things to juggle. But then you have the first time aspect: the first party at Plastic, the first time we did a stage at Dimensions, starting to work with peers like Dego & Kaidi, Steve Spacek and Shafiq Husayn. You get this childish excitement. It’s been a constant source of that.”

What’s next?

“We have an album from soul singer Natalie Slade from Sydney, who’s been on two Steve Spacek tracks. As soon as I heard her voice I was drawn to it, she reminds me slightly of Róisín Murphy and has worked with Bugz In The Attic. It’s co-produced by Simon Mavin, the keyboard player from Hiatus Kaiyote who I’m a massive fan of. Then we’ve got an album from Destiny71z, who we’ve put music out before as Kirkis. That was crazy electronic jazz stuff. Now he’s made more club music, but still with that wild sound to it.”

10 key releases chosen by Alexander Nut

1
Floating Points ‘Vacuum Boogie’

“The beginning of Sam’s journey into house music. I knew it was massive”

2
GB ‘Presents The Abstract Eye’

“This is the true definition of dreamy techno. It’s beautiful, GB is a genius”

3
Mizz Beats ‘Scientific Brainpriest’

“This is completely unlike anything I’ve heard before, real technicolour weirdo computer music with all these grime elements”

4
Funkineven ‘Rolands Jam’

“A real breakout moment for Funkineven. Uncompromising acid house for the club”

5
Fatima ‘Yellow Memories’

“The culmination of years of hard work, collaborating with amazing producers including Computer Jay and Floating Points”

6
Steve Spacek ‘If U Wan 2 Find Me’

“I consider Steve a genius, his sound has changed the game in ways he’ll probably never be credited for”

7
Dego & Kaidi ‘EP2’

“I’ve been listening to both of these guys since I was a teenager, from Reinforced Records to 4Hero and Bugz In The Attic”

8
Shafiq Husayn ‘The Loop’

“Our ‘biggest’ project to date, featuring major collaborations including Erykah Badu, Flying Lotus and Anderson Paak”

9
Byron The Aquarius ‘Leaving This Planet’

“‘Song For A Friend’ off this EP remains one of my favourite tracks to play”

10
Natalie Slade ‘Humidity’

“Check our video on Eglo’s YouTube of Natalie performing this with a group of very special friends and musicians”

‘Eglo Records Vol 2’ is out now

Joe Roberts is Mixmag's house editor, follow him on Twitter

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