BBC Review
The Berlin duo's latest volume of floor-fillers...
Amar Patel2007
Berlin is hotter than ever right now: From a perceived art renaissance to the burgeoning property market and the new order of dj/ production outfits such as Ame. Wahoo is the highly talented Berlin production pairing of musician/ singer/ songwriter Georg Levin (who sauntered on to the scene with such charm in 2001 crooning âWhen Iâm With Youâ preceding his Canât Hold Back debut album on Sonar Kollektiv) and Innercity Visions DJ/ promoter Steffen âDixonâ Berkhahn.
In fact, Dixon lent his seductive house rhythm to "Somebody New" on that album. Initially conceived as a remix act (of some force if youâve ever felt their remix of Jazzanovaâs âThat Nightâ) the duo found their own sound and soon progressed to making their own tracks, starting with 2004âs worldwide floorfiller âMake 'Em Shake Itâ, featuring likeable rapper/ vocalist Capitol A and included on this album. Itâs on tracks like this and âDamnâ that their combination of contemporary beats production, cheeky chunky synths a la Prince and catchy vocals have most impact.
Take It Personal is rather schizophrenic and saccharine in places (like âWishingâ, the unleaded Ramones rock of âDiamond Weddingâ and the Felix Basement Jaxx-voiced limp skank of âIâm Your Loverâ) but having fun with myriad styles didnât do The Purple One much harm, did it? Irresistible opener âDonât Take It Personalâ is a slow-burning northern soul floorfiller with Detroitâs Paul Randolph in fine voice and âSun In My Candlelightâ demonstrates Levinâs effortless songwriting.
Wahoo is Levin and Dixonâs vent for making music with emotional impact (notice how they bookend the album with âlife messagesâ) while refusing to take themselves too seriously; theyâre unashamedly âpopâ. Their debut album is modern music for soul folk with thousands of different songs on their iPod, shuffle button at the ready. Definitely make room for a few Wahoo tracks on there and keep an eye out for the duo in future.
