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Nautilus

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Download links and information about Nautilus by Jake Slazenger. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 4 tracks with total duration of 26:07 minutes.

Artist: Jake Slazenger
Release date: 1996
Genre: Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 4
Duration: 26:07
Buy on iTunes $3.96

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Nautilus 6:19
2. Slaz Thing 6:08
3. The Penultimate 4:35
4. Marks Made In China 9:05

Details

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Mike Paradinas was wise to release Nautilus under his Jake Slazenger alias, as three of the four songs are in the vein of the funky work he featured on the Jake Slazenger Makesaracket album. The title track is one of the standout tracks from the second Slazenger album Das Ist Ein Groovybeat, Ja?. While The track follows the light, airy style of the Gary Moscheles one-off Shaped to Make Your Life Easier, it benefits from a stronger arrangement and fuller production. Clear, chirping sounds and wobbly bass pour out of the song with great energy. Where the Moscheles album settled on lo-fi, albeit fun, repetition, "Nautilus" rockets out of the gate. "Slaz Thing" is more controlled brilliance, as clanging robotic sounds and throbbing, distorted bass mingle with fuzzy synthesized organ sounds and a comical, whiny fake saxophone. If it gets a bit grating, that's part of the Slazenger attack. "The Penultimate" introduces an entertaining rap sample of "this is the ultimate/I can't go for it." The song's down-tempo grooves, laid back tone, and wacky wah-wah style suggest a hip-hop score to an old Atari 2600 game. "Marks Made in China" is rather uncharacteristic of a Slazenger creation. The song's dark sonic sludge and ominous pounding crunch would seem better fitted to Bluff Limbo or the first Kid Spatula album, Spatula Freak. Nautilus certainly doesn't represent Paradinas' best work, but it's wild exuberance and eclectic charms make it a worthwhile EP.