Let’s Dance – Junior Sanchez: Songprints, Vol. 1 (D4 D4NCE)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Junior Sanchez is something of an unsung star in the world of house music, making quality productions since the 1990s and collaborating with the likes of Daft Punk, DJ Sneak and Roger Sanchez – to name just a few.

Collaboration is the name of the game this time around, too, with a host of vocalists lending their pipes to a set of songs the New Jersey DJ began during lockdown. The project has executive production from Dallas Austin, marshalling the eight guest singers into a set of productions compressed into radio edits and aimed squarely at the dancefloor.

What’s the music like?

Sanchez has struck gold here, his craft evident in all nine of the grooves on show – and with a series of superb, floor filling beats.

The album sets out its stall with So Hype, its deeper beats topped by excellent vocals from Mýa, and sets the listener down in a heap some 40 minutes later having danced and sung themselves to a standstill. This is thanks to songs like Higher, where Dawn Richard gets higher than anyone else to deliver a brilliant and catchy song.

Drip is enjoyably saucy, with lots going on in the company of Johnny Apollo and Cookiee Kawaii, while I Need More – with the brilliant Darlene McCoy – is a bouncy number. Sanchez uses solid four to the floor beats throughout, each lifted by fluid bass lines and quality house music production.

Does it all work?

It does. The quality level barely lets up, partly because of Sanchez’s skilful use of guests – and each voice brings a fresh perspective to his music.

Is it recommended?

Enthusiastically. Sanchez deserves a great deal of kudos for this album, which reinforces his credentials as one of the leading lights in house music. Great songs, brilliantly executed.

For fans of… Luke Solomon, Purple Disco Machine, Tensnake, The Juan Maclean

Listen & Buy

Published post no.2,287 – Saturday 31 August 2024