GRX

Baby Pantera x Mssingno — Apotelesma
out now
Second single from “Desidia”
Via: @slagwerk_
Mix & Master: @chrispawlusek
Cover art by: @sadcheerleader
audioreactive visualiser for @mssingno's epic brandy throwback 'think of me'
made with 𝒄𝒆𝒍𝒆𝒔𝒕𝒆
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
@mssingno returns with his first new music in five years, releasing the single Think Of Me. The track samples legendary R&B singer Brandy’s “All In Me”. Fans of the London producer will know this isn’t the first time he’s flipped Brandy’s vocals, having previously reworked her voice on 2013’s “Brandy Flip” and his M1 Personal Trainer mix in 2016.
“As soon as I learnt how to import and edit vocals in Cubase, the first singer that came to mind was Brandy,” MssingNo explained. “Before stem separation became accessible, there wasn’t a huge amount of choice for acapellas, only the digital versions taken from 12” singles that had been uploaded online somewhere. I used to hoard Brandy acapellas and ended up with a folder with around 15 of them.”
“When I made ‘Brandy Flip’ I was chopping up the acapella for ‘Right Here (Departed)’ but ended up just building the track around the entire vocal. Building around her vocals has been a regular practice for me for a long time. She is The Vocal Bible.”
While @brandy has enjoyed a long, critically acclaimed career in her own right, her vocals have also taken on a second life in the UK underground. Jungle and UK garage producers have long repurposed her acapellas into club anthems, with her 1998 duet with Monica, “The Boy Is Mine”, playing an important role in shaping the sound of UK garage.
That same year, a 2-step bootleg of “The Boy Is Mine” by The Architechs began circulating on white label after premiering on Rampage sound system at Carnival to a huge reception. The remix flipped the CD single’s acapella over a 2-step beat and reportedly sold more than 100,000 copies on the underground. It helped spark a movement where UK garage producers took popular American R&B vocals and turned them into homegrown unlicensed anthems.
As garage evolved into new sounds, Brandy’s voice continued to echo through each wave. Even this year, beyond MssingNo’s latest release, her vocals feature in tracks from Sammy Virji and Skepta, and AJ Tracey and Jorja Smith, proving her lasting influence as The Vocal Bible.
MssingNo celebrates the release of Think Of Me with a free event at CU Dalston this Wednesday.
Think Of Me - Out Now
Directed by PASTDOWN & @arranashan
Link in @mssingno bio
Special thanks to @brandy & @rodneyjerkins
#brandycore
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