Layo and Bushwacka arrive at Audio to mark the release of their third album, Feels Closer, which is out a week on Monday.

Released on their new label, Olmeto, it features collaborations with Green Velvet, Groove Armada's Tim Hutton, Brazilian superstars Jota Quest and Weather Report percussionist Mino Cinelu, who the pair bumped in to when they popped out to buy a sandwich.

More eclectic than its well-received predecessors, Low Life and Night Works, the album was recorded in Brooklyn's Good and Evil studios.

The studio's live room had a big influence on the record's sound, with jazz, heavy metal guitar solos and even a dash of opera working their way into the mix.

"Rather than just the two of us going back in to a small room, we felt the end result would be a lot better, a more coherent piece of work," says Matt.

"It feels closer to the best end of what we can do and what we want to be. We also feel closer to where we want to be in our lives."

Layo Paskin and Matthew "Bushwacka!" Benjamin met working at Mr C's studio. The three went on to set up The End, designed by Layo's architect father, which has been a standard bearer for London's club scene for over a decade.

Despite claims of clubland's imminent demise - generally made by people who have never set foot in a club in their life - Matt and Layo feel the scene is as healthy as it has ever been.

"It's a delight to go record shopping at the moment," Matt enthuses. "The music hasn't been this exciting for years. People are keen to push the envelope. By culling the more commercial end of dance music, the reaction has been more than when the scene was at its height."

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