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No Ground Under

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Download links and information about No Ground Under by Ghislain Poirier. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, House, Techno, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Jazz, Dancefloor, Reggae, Dance Pop, Bop genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 54:39 minutes.

Artist: Ghislain Poirier
Release date: 2008
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, House, Techno, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Jazz, Dancefloor, Reggae, Dance Pop, Bop
Tracks: 16
Duration: 54:39
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.39
Buy on Songswave €1.84

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Courto 0:39
2. Blazin (feat. Face-T) 3:21
3. Diaspora 4:08
4. Jusqu'en Haut (feat. Omnikrom) 3:41
5. Hit & Red 3:08
6. No More Blood (feat. Face-T) 2:47
7. Go Ballistic (feat. Zulu) 3:58
8. One Hand Can't Clap 1:38
9. City Walking (feat. Abdominal) 2:53
10. Ladies & Gentleman (feat. DJ Netix & Ambitieux) 3:01
11. It's War War War 4:44
12. Exils 3:37
13. Dem Nah Like Me 4:44
14. Mangnen L'boulé 3:35
15. Blazin (Modeselektor Remix) [feat. Face-T] 4:48
16. No More Blood (Megasoid Remix) [feat. Face-T] 3:57

Details

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Montreal beat-maker Ghislain Poirier has long been enticing club-goers worldwide to shake "le gros" with his squelching, bass-heavy dance tracks. Though he started his own label, Rebondir, in 2006 (which issued the fantastic Rebondir EP), he also signed to the respected avant electronica outfit Ninjatune not too long after. On No Ground Under, his first release with Ninjatune, he allows his influences to really show through, which means even more ragga and hip-hop than before. Unfortunately, this isn't always for the best. Omnikrom show up on one track, "Jusqu'en Haut," and though the MCs' voices are just as crazed and expressive as ever, Poirier lays down a soul sample-esque beat and a basic drum line that's, honestly, pretty boring, even by simpler rap standards. And while West Indian singers Face-T and Mr. Lee G are both able in their own rights, lyrically and thematically they get a little too repetitive. Poirier is most exciting when he's just writing his own beats, when he doesn't have to consider how his guests will fit over them (an exception to this is the excellent "Exils," featuring the violinist Abdelhak Rahal, which manages to sound supremely organic and industrial at the same time and is one of the best things on the album), and so tracks like the ominous "It's a War War War" and nearly indie electronic "Diaspora" stand out, the interplay between the bass and treble, the different distorted keyboards, coming through more clearly when not obfuscated by the vocals. That's not to say that there aren't some non-instrumentals that really bounce; "Ladies & Gentleman," featuring Ambitieux and DJ Netik, is fast and heavily percussive, while "Go Ballistic," with vocals from Panamanian MC Zulu, is provocative and very, very club-worthy. But in comparison to Poirier's other work, No Ground Under doesn't quite have the same consistently exuberant energy that makes it so fantastically unique and danceable.