Cheap Art Core, Vol. 2: Art of Drum & Bass (Music) (Various Artists) Price
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| ARTIST: | Various Artists |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | React America |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | Next Time Around - Starflyer 59, Broken - Phantasmic, Transylvania - Joy Electric, Welcome - Sal Paradise, See It in Me, Try, Carrousel - Driver Eight, Lemonade, Parting - Velour, Aeroliner, Found - The O.C. Supertones, She Thinks I'm Nothing, Green & Violet Wavecaps [Demo Version] - Morella's Forest, I Am Falling, Washed - Waysect Bloom, Song for Every Speaker, Den of Thieves |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 601796600223 |
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Customer Reviews of Art Core, Vol. 2: Art of Drum & Bass
Art Core Free form social engineering is what it is. Brilliant stuff, every single track.
Superb
this CD flows from beginning to end like one big song. it's an unusual combination of music that makes you feel relaxed and upbeat at the same time. this can only be explained by the rapid-fire beats and soothing rythms that go with it. it's made in 1996, but it doesn't matter, this is timeless. i don't listen to much drum n' bass, but this CD is so good you don't need to be a seasoned listner to appreciate it. for some reason the CD i have has 18 tracks, the one showed here has 11, not sure why this is. rock on
Definitive, well-rounded, and elusive.
No one will ever find or buy this album because a)it is a v/a compilation, b)it has no (really) big names, c)it is "old", and d)not only is it far from pop...it's a genre that has fallen out of favor with the hipsters. That's a crying shame, as this is indeed a near-classic that holds its own against the whole of electronica.
Regarding D&B household name Goldie with mild dislike, being able to name few other artists, and having heard of none on this album, I'm surprised and pleased not be able to dismiss D&B as a one-horse electronic subgenre. I did so before, having heard little more than the club nonsense, to which the title D&B does justice. These, however, add a wealth of instruments and even utilize vocals effectively (minimally), which is apparently very difficult. The first, third, and eleventh tracks are my favorites, largely fitting a pattern of waiting a moment before adding the drums or the bass. These kinds of tweaks are needed to spice up rhythms which, like the wall-thumping beat of most other electronica, are very similar. Almost enough to make me seek full-lengths by these artists.