A1 High Desert
A2 Open Sky
A3 The Landscape
B1 Sweet Sounds
B2 High Desert [Seahawks High Sky Remix]
Over the course of a 19-year career, Marshall Watson has released all manner of musical treats for a similarly wide array of labels, yet it¡Çs the effortless beauty of his downtempo works – and particularly his ambient and Balearic excursions – that have often left a lasting impression.
It certainly caught the attention of NuNorthern Soul founder Phil Cooper, who brought the West Coast producer to the label in the summer of 2021. That EP, Sunsets on Larkin Parts 1 & 2, was undeniably special. The same can be said about his belated return to the label, Foothills, an EP packed to the rafters with slow-burn melodies, sustained chords, becalmed textures and gently unwinding grooves.
Watson¡Çs distinctive take on Balearic naturally comes to the fore on EP opener ¡ÆHigh Desert¡Ç, a soft-focus delight where languid electric guitars, starry electric piano lines, echoing chords and gently pulsing electronics stretch out across a shuffling groove. While tailor-made for watching the sun set off his beloved Pacific Coast – and over the Mediterranean Sea – ¡ÆHigh Desert¡Ç offers a dose of hazy sonic sunshine that can brighten up even the greyest of days.
Fittingly, the accompanying remix comes from long-time friends of the label Seahawks, whose textured, layered and atmospheric productions similarly blur boundaries between Balearic, ambient, pitched-down dancefloor grooves and glassy-eyed psychedelia. Employing opaque, shape-shifting pads, effects-laden guitars, subtle spoken word snippets and yearning, almost melancholic chords – all atop a crunchy, head-nodding beat and toasty bassline – the duo deliver a remix that¡Çs as emotive and sonically stunning as Watson¡Çs original mix.
The EP¡Çs three other tracks amply demonstrate the subtle variety within Watson¡Çs downtempo output. Vocalist Julie Childe makes her mark on ¡ÆSweet Sounds¡Ç, a brilliant blend of warming deep house and laidback Balearic nu-disco that sports subtle hints to his work as one half of synthwave duo Causeway, while ¡ÆOpen Sky¡Ç brilliantly wraps undulating TB-303 acid lines and echoing Spanish guitars around a hypnotic, locked-in dancefloor groove.
Then there¡Çs ¡ÆThe Landscape¡Ç, a deliciously saucer-eyed slab of breakbeat-powered, TB-303-sporting genius that evokes the immersive, early morning waviness of the ambient house era, the beach party psychedelia of San Francisco¡Çs free party movement, and the bleeping wonder of turn-of-the-90s UK dance music. Like the rest of the EP, it¡Çs an enveloping, head-soothing and mind-expanding treat.