The first part of his big city tale entitled Großstadtmärchen acted like a catapult for Oliver Koletzki in
2009, pushing him from the DJ booth into the limelight of electronic pop music. Now, three years later,
Oliver releases a sequel to the successful long player in the form of Großstadtmärchen 2. In addition,
Stil vor Talent is presenting its second jam-packed double vinyl remix package of some of the albums
many highlights.
While Oliver Koletzkis funky beats and Jake the Rappers charismatic musings on how to best treat
everyones favourite vital organ already provided one of the wittiest moments of Großstadtmärchen
2, Fifty Ways to Love Your Liver gets a well deserved club treatment on the first vinyl. Starting things
off, Berlin/Cologne boys Andhim transform the track into a slow grooving monster that borrows the
originals warming saxophone and Jakes vocal hooks and marries them with a big bass line and
quirky synths. Following the original mix, the flipside bares Murat Kilic take, which ups the tempo into
butt shaking tech house territory, while adding a classic filter house touch thanks to its killer piano workout. Try standing still to this! Finally, Animal Trainer take you on a journey of echoes, stumbling
beats and romantic melodies that should get any floor excited due to its deep bass line.
On the second vinyl Oliver Koletzki once again showcases his favourites of the album in their original
mixes. It should come as no surprise that he picked The Power of Rausch featuring Nagel: the
combination of the literary talents trippy after hour monologue and Olivers equally sketchy beats and
guitar loop are both, incredibly innovative and effective. Bohlweg is Olivers homage to his hometown
of Braunschweig. Originally included on the bonus edition of the LP, the track bedazzles with grooving
percussion and quirky vocal snippets. Next up, the uplifting Sunset presents Oliver and his wife Fran
on top form as we are treated to three minutes of pure bliss reminiscent of their hit Hypnotized. Last
but not least, Olivers very own exercise in Daft Punk-style house rounds of this killer package as the
distinctly French sounds of 1994 come flying through the speakers.