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Past Movements

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Download links and information about Past Movements by Stasis. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:52:45 minutes.

Artist: Stasis
Release date: 2004
Genre: Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:52:45
Buy on iTunes $19.80

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Point Of No Return 6:33
2. Into The Other World (featuring Phenomyna) 6:46
3. Thing 1 (featuring Paul W. Teebrooke) 8:13
4. Questions For Vanmanan 4:43
5. Got The Urge (featuring Phenomyna) 6:27
6. Funky Purple Hotpants From The Planet Disco 3:56
7. Solitude 7:36
8. A Face At The Window (featuring Paul W. Teebrooke) 6:47
9. Earth Fall (featuring Phenomyna) 8:07
10. Funky Purple Hotpants (Reprise) 1:40
11. Alone 8:20
12. Most Of The Time 6:25
13. Reminisce 5:28
14. Black Rain (featuring Phenomyna) 8:22
15. Inbetween Places (featuring Paul W. Teebrooke) 4:49
16. With Luck There Will Be No Drama (featuring Paul W. Teebrooke) 2:51
17. Smooth Emotion 6:11
18. Making A Connection 2:38
19. Objectives (featuring Phenomyna) 3:03
20. Past Movements (featuring Paul W. Teebrooke) 3:50

Details

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Techno fans may not have realized that Steve Pickton deserved a collected-works volume, but Past Movements states the case brilliantly. The set comprises two discs, one of rare tracks and one of unreleased tracks (though the scarcity of Pickton's greatest releases, many vinyl-only, makes the first disc basically a best-of collection). Grabbing productions from his three main aliases — Stasis, Phenomyna, and Paul W. Teebrooke — Past Movements displays the moody man of British techno in all his glory, from his 1993 B12 debut "Point of No Return" to the best tracks from his Phenomyna CD Unexplained on ART. Pickton's methods are easy to recognize after listening to just a few tracks, but his keen ear for making machines emote marked him early on as one of the masters of early British techno before IDM or ambient techno. Thanks be to Peacefrog for continuing to be a prime source for techno of the past and present.