Create account Log in

Blue Divide - Remodelled

[Edit]

Download links and information about Blue Divide - Remodelled by Norken. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 55:22 minutes.

Artist: Norken
Release date: 2003
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 11
Duration: 55:22
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Painting (Remodelled By Tom Churchill) 5:02
2. Motor Breeze (Remodelled By Swamay) 3:16
3. The Way (Remodelled By Chamber) 7:33
4. Static (Remodelled By Simex) 4:54
5. Just a Phase (Remodelled By Alex Johnson) 5:32
6. Echo Ecru (Remodelled By Rabbits) 3:54
7. Shifting Towards (Remodelled By Aii) 4:43
8. Southern Soul (Remodelled By Dbit) 5:11
9. East (Remodelled By STM) 5:38
10. Fern (Remodelled By Maxim) 5:32
11. Which Way (Remodelled By Sarokin & Landau) 4:07

Details

[Edit]

The second in a trilogy of remix projects inspired by Lee Norris aliases (Metamatics and Nacht Plank were the others), Norken's Blue Divide: Remodelled showcases the work of 11 producers with close ties to the electronic community, but without a lot of releases to go around between them. Ranking halfway between amateur and professional, but with plenty of taste to compensate for their lack of drawing power, they came up with a surprisingly analogous set of understated downtempo harking back to the glory days of ambient techno and evoking bygone producers from B12 to Balil to Stasis. First off is DJ, producer, and Emoticon label-head Tom Churchill, with a great track reminiscent of the softened dub-techno of Berlin's Kompakt label. A fabulous transition eases the way into Swamay's "Motor Breeze," a track superficially in tribute to Kraftwerk but boasting an assortment of great production tricks like the grinding electro bassline. Simex's remix of "Static" and Alex Johnson's redo "Just a Phase" are the other highlights, heavily chilled downtempo house that illustrate the influence of early Metamatics on another generation of producers.