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Artifact:Perspectives

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Download links and information about Artifact:Perspectives by Sts9. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 01:14:50 minutes.

Artist: Sts9
Release date: 2005
Genre: Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 15
Duration: 01:14:50
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Better Day (Remix) 4:05
2. Tokyo (Remix) (featuring Machine Drum) 5:00
3. Possibilities (Remix) (featuring Collective Efforts) 3:46
4. Tokyo/Better Day (Remix) (featuring Ming) 5:07
5. By the Morning Sun (Remix) (featuring Slicker) 5:31
6. Somesing (24hr. White Knuckle Mix) (featuring Eustachian) 3:45
7. Possibilities (Remix) (featuring Eliot Lipp, Leo 123) 4:16
8. Better Day/Trinocular (STSDevine Remix) (featuring Richard Devine) 6:02
9. By the Morning Sun (Remix) 5:03
10. Possibilities (Remix) (featuring Mr. Lif) 3:37
11. Tokyo (Shinjuku Flashback Mix) (featuring Bill Laswell) 9:11
12. Somesing (Remix) (featuring Bassnectar) 2:38
13. ReEmergence (Beat the Science Remix) (featuring Karsh Kale) 6:42
14. Peoples (Cause & FX Remix) [feat. Audio Angel & ill45] 5:49
15. Better Day (Remix) (featuring Genetic) 4:18

Details

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Artifact: Perspectives is the companion disc to Sound Tribe Sector 9's previous album, Artifact. It's a remix collection featuring new versions of selected songs from the original program rendered by an A-list roster of beat freaks, including Ming + FS, Bill Laswell, Bassnectar, and Karsh Kale, among others, and while none of the mixes is exactly groundbreaking or surprising, almost all of them are deeply groovy. Highlights include Laswell's dark, dub-drenched "Tokyo Shinjuku Flashback Mix," glitchy interpretations of "Better Day" and "By the Morning Sun" by Richard Devine and Metrognome, respectively, and Ming + FS' gloriously dreamy, hyperkinetically jungly take on "Tokyo." Elsewhere, Mr. Lif brings a strong hip-hop element to "Possibilities" and Bassnectar applies weird rhythmic changeups and Spike Jones sound effects to "Somesing," while Machine Drum turns "Tokyo" into a showcase for jittery funk breakbeats and Steve Reich-style glockenspiel loops. You'll be tired by the end, but it will be a good tired.