TWITCHY and jerky party music will be coming to a kitchen near you as soon as the debut single from three electronic music afficionados finally hits the airwaves.

Synthesizer and bass player Joe Berditch, 28, along with brother 31-year-old Dom, the drummer, and guitarist and synthesizer player, Jonny Wharton, 28, collectively known as Concrete Disco - released their first track 'We Make' on Monday as a digital-only download.

The trio, who all from Harrow, came under the spotlight last year when they reached the semi-final of the Sky 1 talent show Must Be The Music under their former name - Toxic Funk Berry.

They enjoy a production style that sees everything thrown into the mix: thumping kick drums, rapid-fire synth stabs, grumbling basslines, frenetic drum breaks, computer-style glitchy sounds, and chopped up vocal samples and snippets from other famous records.

Joe said: "We started the band because we started getting bored of listening to DJs and wanted to bring something different into dance music.

"Our idea was to come up with a sort of 'mash up' mixed with our own compositions and doing a live set, adding keyboards and whatever other equipment would could lay our hands on.

"After our experience on Must Be The Music we decided we wanted to get some releases out and get a fan base, so we have been working for a year getting that in place. It's taken that long to get to this stage."

Joe said they heeded the advice of their new manager and are releasing We Make - which they wrote at Jonny's parents' farm in Bath - as their debut single in order to encapsulate their sound in a track.

"That's been the stumbling block," Joe said. "We do four-and-a-half or five minute versions of our songs live and we needed something that was three-and-a-half minutes and could be heard on the radio.

"We found our music didn't translate that well into recorded tracks and we've had to change the arrangements quite considerably on some of the tracks but we're working some new producers in Dalston, east London, who are making things sound wicked.

"Lots of times we'll get inspiration from a sample or get an idea while thinking about a really old track, or it may come from a new plug-in we have bought for our synth. Actually, the main hook in We Make was made of four synth sounds using different pre-sets as we aimed to get that 'dub wobble' sound.

"We wanted to produce not just another 12 inch record as we wanted to put a live feel to it."

Joe said their style would suit a series of three or four song EPs to really showcase their genre-defying unusual output, not least because a problem with simply issuing an album of their existing numbers would be getting clearance for all the little samples - some obvious, some obscure - they've borrowed from their favourite older records.

He said: "We certainly have enough material for a long mix. We'll write tracks over the Christmas break and have a second single out by March."

However,Concrete Disco's say their first love is to leave live audiences grinning from ear to ear thanks to their trademark high-octane whirlwind performance in which they pound the drums, thrash guitar, twiddle with the knobs on their synths, and using effects pedals to trigger audio on their two ever-present laptops, in order to fluidly meld the sound in front of people's eyes.

"We want people to, frankly, go mental when they come to see us," Joe said. "Even when the crowd is quiet, we're jumping around on stage."

Commercial success is surely only round the corner for these guys, following their appearance on the reality TV series, a string of international gigs and exposure on influential radio station Xfm, all of which is helping to grow much-needed industry recognition.

Joe said: "I feel it's been a long time coming but I'm really proud of what we have done, so hopefully we can build on it. There's a lot more we want to do."

n To find out more about Concrete Disco see www.concretedisco.com