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  1. Jul 8, 2009 · The rolling groove of "Subspace Radio" is imbued with lush pads and oriental riffs, but its true strength is its resonating, snaking bass, lending what sounds like an ethereal take on Portable's deep house real dance floor muscle.

  2. Abrahams’ solution to this malaise was to take to the microphone, and reinvent himself as a latter-day Jamie Principle. The move obviously worked, as last summer brought the veritable smash “Release” on Perlon, followed by the similarly provocative “The Emerald Life” for Musik Krause.

  3. Alan Abraham (aka Portable , Bodycode ) belongs to the special world of electrical thump and sizzle. For his first release on Musik Krause, he presents two personable pieces. The first features big-mouthed beats held at gunpoint against a restrained, early '90s zeitgeist and today's production know-how.

  4. Mar 13, 2014 · 'Ok Then' is an immaculate sleazy house cut that rolls along picking up momentum and anything else in its path along the way. Listen: Portable - Ok Then Discogs: http://www.discogs.com/Portable-The-Emerald-Life/release/1563461

  5. In London, Alan Abrahams began recording as Portable, the experimental, atmospheric project that acts a living link between the indigenous African sounds of his youth, and those first records...

  6. Jun 22, 2009 · What are the difference between the Bodycode and Portable projects? Your Portable remix of Oleg Poliakov’s “Rainy Dayz” and your Portable singles for Perlon and Musik Krause sound to me a lot like your new Bodycode album.

  7. Alan Abrahams AKA Portable AKA Bodycode has been in motion his whole life—growing up in South Africa, coming of age in London, decamping to Lisbon and finally settling in Berlin—and his deeply syncopated brand of electronic dance music has evolved with every step of the journey.