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The Album Formerly Known As...

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Download links and information about The Album Formerly Known As... by Carl Craig. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:11:37 minutes.

Artist: Carl Craig
Release date: 2005
Genre: Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 01:11:37
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Technology (Version) 6:52
2. They Were (Version) 4:54
3. Mind of a Machine (Version) 6:57
4. Science Fiction (Version) 5:39
5. One Day Soon (Version) 6:33
6. Landcruising (Version) 6:12
7. Einbahn (Version) 5:29
8. Home Entertainment (Version) 5:44
9. Sparkle 5:02
10. A Wonderful Life (Version) 6:55
11. Technoloambient (Max Dub) 5:44
12. Home Entertainment (Caya Dub) 5:36

Details

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Met with a muddled chorus of hisses and hurrahs, Carl Craig's 2005 overhaul of 1995's Landcruising is, for a lot of Detroit techno and IDM heads, a divisive issue and a possibly baffling way to look back at a touchstone. No matter how much you've bonded with each twist and turn of the album, ten years have not been kind to each one of them — a few components dated rapidly while others have continued to sound just like progress. Rest assured, Craig knew exactly what wrongs to right. After comparing each original version to these adjusted updates, it becomes apparent that this is a sharper, bolder, more immediate, and more durable Landcruising. "Science Fiction" leaves the greatest impression, with every single element made more incisive and pliable. Craig also knows where to hold back, as he does with "A Wonderful Life" — its changes are minor, while the sound is vastly improved. In addition to a couple decent remixes tacked at the end, there's a new track: if Lil' Louis' "French Kiss" is an illicit one-night rendezvous, the appropriately titled "Sparkle" is a bliss-smacked first kiss. Earlier in 2005, Craig released a promising 12" of new material, so it was disappointing that his long-on-hold follow-up to More Songs About Food and Revolutionary Art remained on hold for yet another revisitation like this (Planet E's reissue schedule had long been more busy than its new release schedule), but one scan through the results here should wipe out most grievances. Craig's actions have made permanent the classic status of an album that was sounding a little less classic as the years wore on. The true debate raised by this release is whether or not the original has been rendered obsolete. It hasn't, but those who never owned the original needn't seek it out as long as this remains easier to obtain. [Planet E issued this on triple vinyl, while Amsterdam's Rush Hour handled the CD version and used different artwork.]