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From:
Christopher William Niemitz
To:
idm list
Date:
Fri, 10 Nov 1995 23:02:42 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
(idm) Reviews
Msg-Id:
<Pine.3.89.9511102227.A22278-0100000@ese.UCSC.EDU>
Mbox:
idm.9511.gz
Well the shit has been piling up for the past month or so & I finally have a few free moments to get some reviews in. various: DigiDub 16 millionth of an inch (incoming) Not what you might expect from Incoming! This compilation is packed with thumping dancefloor tunes w/ 130+ bpm's. Ethnic & trippy samples worked into the mixes. #1 has quite the same feel as a fast Transglobal Underground tune. #2 is bouncy, less "ethnic" w/ a straightforward synth line & dubby background echoe. #3 sounds like a Zion Train tune speeded up +6. Overall this one sounds like what is left after throwing a Nation records compilation, a Rising High compilation and a Universal Egg compilation into a blender. Novel sounds, formulaic song structure, interesting to listen to at times, though probably my least favorite Incoming release (i don't feel this one will stand the test of time very well). Various: Trance Atlantic 2 (Volume) Well Volume seems to be pumping out the releases. The full listing for this is probably on their web site http://www.demon.co.uk/volume this one features a jungle tune w/ a jazzy feel by Jamie Myerson, a tune by K Hand that samples C&C's remix of Aretha Franklin's version of Deeper Love which is pretty good dance floor fare, but pales by comparison to the original tune which it samples. Josh Wink's "just a track" has some quirky synth sounds in it, but the monotonous Strictly Rhythm house beat is so stale even birds won't bite it. Wamdue kids' People is a bit formulaic, but much better than many of the other house tunes on this comp., a little like todd terry vs. coco steel & lovebomb (though a little more variation in the beat wouldn't hurt, but then again Volume tunes aren't generally the most innovative stuff around). Stand out tunes: Lenny Dee & the outlander's "Emotional response" has enough variation in melody, beats & synth sounds to keep your interest through it's duration & would make good dancefloor fare to boot. Single Cell Orchestra's Threefold sounds a little like Crystal Method & is about the only tune on this thing under 120 bpm's. Otherwise most of the tunes on this are throwaways.