electronic
Fabric 37 豆瓣
Steve Bug 类型: 电子
发布日期 2008年2月5日 出版发行: Fabric
Considered one of Germany ’s dance music pioneers, Steve Bug has been DJing prolifically for over 16 years, becoming a globally recognized minimal Tech-House master producer and performer, acclaimed for stripping down futuristic House music with amazing musical diversity. Fabric 37 is the latest installation in what is considered a prolific and admired career in mixed releases, including the much loved Steve Bug Presents The Flow, The 3rd Da Minimal Funk, Bugnology series and Skin Is In compilations. Fabric. 2007.
Dettmann 豆瓣
Marcel Dettmann
发布日期 2010年4月27日 出版发行: Ostgut Ton
Marcel Dettmann, a resident at Berlin’s notorious Berghain club and a producer and remixer on the club’s Ostgut-Ton label (also home of Shed, Prosumer, Steffi and more) will release his debut album, Dettmann, this coming April.
A solo Dettmann album has been a long time coming: he’s one of the world’s most in-demand DJs, and his Berghain 02 CD one of the most talked-about mix CDs of the last half-decade. In 2007 he released the 2×12″ Blank Scenario, an excellent, agenda-setting collaboration with Ben Klock.
Featuring ten Dettmann productions bookended by an intro and outro (‘Quasi’ and ‘Taris’ respectively), we’re promised moments of grace and subtlety to counter the heavy, rolling techno that Dettmann – and the Berghain – have made their name with.
In the words of the man himself, “I like music with a depth that I can feel. There is no formula for that. It could be a concept album or one that makes use of various styles.”
Dettmann will be released on both CD and triple vinyl featuring every track. The album will be preceded by a single release, Dettmann Remixed, featuring remixes of ‘Shift’ and ‘Vertigo’ by Norman Nodge and Wincent Kunth respectively.
BBC Radio One Essential Mix 豆瓣
Nicolas Jaar
发布日期 2012年6月2日 出版发行: Self published
Beginning with Angelo Badalamenti describing the creative pinprick that produced the gloriously macabre Twin Peaks theme, Nicolas Jaar pulls no punches on his dancefloor-averse Essential Mix for Radio 1. The Ivy League student behind last year’s massively acclaimed ‘Space Is Only Noise’ LP draws on a dizzyingly broad variety of music, from a snippet of Jay-Z to Jonny Greenwood’s soundtrack for There Will Be Blood.

Also featured are composer Shigeru Umebayasi (the man behind the music to Hong Kong love film In The Mood For Love), Smog’s Bill Callahan and nearly 10 minutes of plaintive solo piano from Keith Jarrett – a brave choice for weekend peak time, surely. Elsewhere you can hear a few selections from Jaar’s Clown & Sunset label, like the mysterious Nikita Quasim and Pavla + Noura, and burst of N*SYNC.
Jaar's ingenuity is on full display on his Essential Mix. His knack for electronic music that moves your mind more than your soles, and his appreciation for and manipulation of silence have never been so evident. According to Jaar, “I’ve watched Jurassic Park twice in my life – once when I was six and the second time a couple of weeks ago. It inspired me to think about how gaps in time change our way of perceiving.” That might explain why he threw in an *NSYNC song in there. Also, big ups to Nico for using our #1 song of 2011, Beyoncé's "1+1."
2016年2月14日 听过
感觉可以听一个月。找到曲目单发在下面的论坛里了。
electronic idm
Night Drive 豆瓣
8.4 (5 个评分) Chromatics 类型: 电子
发布日期 2007年1月1日 出版发行: Italians Do It Better / Revolver
Ditching your aesthetic (hairy noise-rock troupe) in favor of its polar opposite (neatly groomed pop-dance trio) is a sure way to get some pre-release hype, but the transformation of Chromatics has been so effortless that it's still easy to be wowed by the results. Those who caught the swooning glide of the Chromatics' "Nite" single last year-- or their contributions to the After Dark compilation earlier in 2007-- won't be shocked by the similarly sleek Night Drive (aka IV). But listeners who are only familiar with the band's forays into shambling punk will certainly be surprised by Night Drive's assured songwriting (which would wow even if the band had been chasing this narcotic Eurodisco sound for years) and how it wrings ravishment out of electro moves that should be long-drained of their charms.
Credit some of this to Johnny Jewel-- Chromatics member, one half of Glass Candy, and the economical production whiz/secret weapon in the much-feted Italians Do It Better camp. I have no idea how duties on Night Drive were divvied up between Jewel, founding member Adam Miller, and vocalist Ruth Radalet. But you can certainly hear all of the IDIB trademarks: doleful disco-punk guitars (the menacing clang of "Healer"), starkly monochrome synth patches (especially gorgeous on the bumping goth club slow-jam "Let's Make This a Moment to Remember"), watery keyboard progressions (ditto), and exploitation flick arpeggios ("Tomorrow Is So Far Away"). Even as they've dumped the genre's sonic baggage, Chromatics have retained punk's taste for spare arrangements, but drawing on overripe Moroder-style dance music and early 1980s synth melancholia makes for some sumptuous spare arrangements.
Of course, sumptuous production is often not enough, especially if all you're doing is cloaking a dead heart in good taste. But while the languorous, mid-tempo Night Drive may sway like it's half-drugged, its heart is still beating, thank you very much. The record opens with a female voice (presumably Radalet) dialing her lover as the club rats scatter home from their nights out, and when she winsomely closes the call by telling him that she loves him, she proves that (however much she comes across like a cutie pie version of Nico) she's no ice queen. Even when she sounds half-tranquilized, it's Radalet that adds the very necessary soft touch to all those implacable sequencers. Throughout Night Drive, whether at a kittenish whisper or a husky, longing sigh, her cauterized range fits the band's vision of disco recast as heartsick pop. And even when wholly instrumental on "The Killing Spree"-- forget the title, the sinister descending keyboard fuzz does a perfect job evoking a murderous robot sci-fi flick on its own-- the band uses what could be sterile pastiche to pull your strings. Tastefully.
Night Drive's peak is the rightfully praised cover of Kate Bush's "Running Up That Hill", where the band shifts the focus of the (already minimal) arrangement onto three sour keyboard notes and a dapple of guitar. Radalet sounds like the school wallflower trying on the queen of frou frou art-pop, her unsteady hold on Bush's delivery cracking into a yearning coo at the chorus (about as demonstrative as she gets), making for the only moment on the record where the band really lets their emotional guard down. Haters and fans alike often call this neo-disco stuff "cold" and "dark," but I think that's just code for "not kitschy" (on the plus side) or maybe "not emotionally open enough" (on the minus side). But while Night Drive might not be warm, it does feel intimate, like a 3 a.m. ride home, where you're not alone but exhaustion and intake have made talking impossible, the city is silent, and the traffic patterns are as comforting and regimented as a drum machine click track. One of those moments, to paraphrase Ms. Bush, when you should be crying, but you'll be damned if you let it show.
-Jess Harvell, October 11, 2007
Paracosm 豆瓣
7.2 (8 个评分) Washed Out 类型: 电子
发布日期 2013年8月13日 出版发行: Sub Pop
二零零五我们零零碎碎的理论 豆瓣
7.7 (23 个评分) 超级市场 类型: 电子
发布日期 2010年1月10日 出版发行: 摩登天空
《二零零五我们零零碎碎的理论》已是超级市场乐队的第五张专辑,前四张专辑分别为《模样》《七种武器》《繁荣的》《音乐会》。这张最新专辑实际上是超级市场乐队自2000年至2006年的现场原音实录,并且曲目均为从未发表的作品,比之录音室作品更多一份随性及恢弘之气,也更具有电子音乐的现场魅力,对于喜欢电子乐的乐迷来讲,这张专辑会是一张必收之作。推荐曲目:《她是我的生命》《时间》。
Kill For Love 豆瓣
8.2 (11 个评分) Chromatics 类型: 电子
发布日期 2012年5月23日 出版发行: Italians Do It Better
Chromatics is an American electronic music band from Portland, Oregon, formed in 2001. The band consists of Ruth Radelet, Adam Miller, Nat Walker, and Johnny Jewel. The band originally featured a trademark sound indebted to punk and lo-fi that was described as "noisy" and "chaotic".
Companion 豆瓣
Gold Panda 类型: 电子
发布日期 2011年3月22日 出版发行: Ghostly International
Before Gold Panda unleashed Lucky Shiner in all its nostalgic, sample-stuffed glory, the UK producer woodshedded, quietly releasing a series of EPs on Make Mine (UK), Avex (Japan), Various (Japan) and his own Notown Records. Even then, the hallmarks of the Gold Panda sound—static-y slices of recontextualized sound, soul-stirring chord changes, an air of heavy-lidded melancholia—were in place. For Companion, we’ve compiled three of Gold Panda’s early 2009 EPs ( Before, Miyamae, and Quitter’s Raga) along with one non-EP track (“Police”) into a seamless listening experience, a journey into the heart of one of the finest beat-based musicians around.
Companion opens with the cinematic “Quitter’s Raga”, a not-so-distant cousin of Lucky Shiner’s calling card “You”. Over the track’s all-too-brief two minutes, Gold Panda spreads Indian classical-music samples (sitars, tablas, sweetly chanted vocals) liberally over heartstring-tugging chord changes, evoking the fluttery feeling of spotting that special someone across a crowded room. “Back Home” (from the Miyamae EP) pulls its source material from what sounds like a late-night barroom slowdance—tinkling chimes, softly blown horns, trembling fiddles—and whips them up into a bedroom dance party. “Long Vacation” (also from Miyamae) opens with an unnamed speaker intoning “sometimes you make plans… sometimes they don’t work out,” and eases into a state of sonic confusion, all water-droplet percussion and frantic machine noises. “Win-San Western” (from the Before EP) smashes a gonzo drum ‘n bass rhythm up against a toy xylophone and somehow ends up with the chase music from an imaginary Sergio Leone film.
A fitting complement to Gold Panda’s inimitable full-length, Companion shows a restless Gold Panda searching for his voice and, like all good creative minds, reveling in the process. Lucky for us, the searcher unearthed more than a few gems along the way.