
Colleen Murphy comes heavy from the psychedelic tradition. In her world, music is more than a background, it drives motion through dance, and emotion via alterations of mood and feeling. Through the long running Classic Album Sundays sessions, numerous festival and club gigs and radio shows (where it all began) she has more than proven her selector chops. The knowledge is deep and musical curiosity unending. All the time honouring the legacy of her mentor, David Mancuso, while very much cutting her own path.
Vol.4 of any series feels like a big number, but the BB series just keeps getting better and better. Testing the boundaries of style, rhythm and tempo of what can work together musically to create a satisfying whole but at the same time holding true to the ethos of the show from which it takes its name. Genres aren’t really a thing in this world, it’s more about feeling, building connections between the music to pull it all together into a single experience.
The low rumble and cosmic reel of Paz’s ‘Kandeen Love Song’ makes for a perfect starter. Its petals opening and expanding before the ears, in a mix of flutes and forest sounds. In terms of laying down a marker, 13+ minutes of 70s UK jazz fusion is the way to do it. Slowly evolving and enveloping the listener as it traverses some serious playing and solos to a hallucinatory close.
Santino Surfers’ ‘Freedom Surfers’ is centred by a heavy guitar riff and surrounded by pounding drums. Sounding like something from the times of freak out, but bang up to date, appropriately via Music For Dreams. Kenneth Bager’s label another brother with his own take on psychedelia. Saint Etienne are kind of in ‘do no wrong’ territory with whatever they do, and Cosmo’s take on ‘Alone Together (Cosmodelica Remix)’ is a respectful but shapeshifting beast. It lifts the original’s almost lullaby feel and evolves it into a more upbeat bossa-esque slice of sunshine music.

Paqua are another act who know their way around a twisted guitar led odyssey and ‘Akaliko’ is them at their best. Motorik, dense, exotically twisted and very much at home here. In a more deeply emotional place is Tar Blanche and ‘Iguana’. That Balearic feel, naturally, is at the top. Acoustic picks and subtle tabla cover the sunset bases nicely. Murphy remixes again on ‘Moving Forward (Cosmodelica Mix)’ by Bryony Jarman-Pinto. The Tru Thoughts singer has her compact modern groove taken into an outersoul location.
New Zealand next, for Troy Kingi with ‘Chronophobic Disco’, more soulful music with a contemporary take on a classic vibe. It would be remiss to not include some actual disco and Ilya Santana comes up with the goods on the inevitable ‘Cosmovision (Disco Version)’. Searing synths, the odd lazer and some spacey funk. Finally, Gloria Ann Taylor’s ‘Love Is A Hurtin' Thing (12" version)’ rounds off the set. Bridging the gap between the heartstring pulling power of a Northern anthem and the more cosmic end of the soul spectrum inhabited by the likes of Rotary Connection. Incredible music that hits, right there.
Balearic Breakfast Vol.4 is out via Heavenly on 29 August.