Enter the Spektrum
Download links and information about Enter the Spektrum by Spektrum. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to House, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:48:27 minutes.
Artist: | Spektrum |
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Release date: | 2004 |
Genre: | House, Dancefloor, Dance Pop |
Tracks: | 20 |
Duration: | 01:48:27 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Interference (Radio Edit) | 3:49 |
2. | Breaker (Broken Album Edit) | 6:04 |
3. | Spek-t-t-t-trum | 0:28 |
4. | Kinda New | 5:40 |
5. | New Sound Word Power | 0:28 |
6. | Music Alchemy | 6:29 |
7. | Shall I Jump | 0:26 |
8. | Freefall | 6:27 |
9. | Freakbox | 6:10 |
10. | Country Licks | 4:58 |
11. | Listen Girl | 4:01 |
12. | Ikerlude | 0:33 |
13. | Lychee Juice | 4:40 |
14. | Low Down | 13:37 |
15. | Fallen (2004 Edit) | 6:44 |
16. | Freakbox (Alter Ego Remix) | 8:35 |
17. | Kinda New (Tiefschwarz Dub) | 8:15 |
18. | Interference (Caspa Codina Remix) | 4:35 |
19. | Lychee Juice (Sound Architecture's Where Eagles Dare Remix) | 7:09 |
20. | Freakbox (Vilalobos Remix) | 9:19 |
Details
[Edit]Spektrum is an anomaly on the Playhouse label. They're an actual group, not a single producer or duo. They play a somewhat awkward, skeletal version of funk that involves some apt — if very overstated — comparisons to post-punk bands like ESG and A Certain Ratio, and a good number of their tracks resemble Remedy/Rooty-era Basement Jaxx, albeit with all the crazy ornamentation (some would say "fun parts") stripped off. The group owes plenty to the past yet remain modern-sounding (the very Devo-like "Interference" excepted), applying a minimalist house re-fashioning to their decades-old inspirations. And though they don't seem like the easiest fit for Playhouse, they've had a little help from remixes granted by Losoul, Alter Ego, Tiefschwarz, Ricardo Villalobos, and Richie Hawtin. Enter the... Spektrum is an album that conveniently includes the past A-sides but is based around new material, much of which stacks up to those past singles quite well. Listeners may have trouble with Spektrum's skewed, less-is-more take on funk, and an hour of Lola Olafisoye's pinched-nose vocals can be as potentially taxing as that of Cameo's Larry Blackmon. Still, this should be a nice change of pace for Playhouse followers, who may appreciate a breather from the label's recent spate of disco/boogie-influenced releases.