| | Field From Here We Go Sublime CD - Import Field Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
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On 2007's FROM HERE WE GO SUBLIME, Axel Willner's first full-length Kompakt outing under the moniker of the Field, the Swedish electronica artist presents a mesmerizing set of minimalist techno that garnered international raves. Sometimes working in the same dreamy vein as fellow Europeans Ulrich Schnauss and M83 (see the arctic opener, "Over the Ice"), Willner streamlines that aesthetic, and steers it into deep house and trance territory (the propulsive "Good Things End"), resulting in an album that's wholly appropriate for both headphones and dance floors. While those who lean towards warmer, more organic-sounding electronic music may be left out in the cold, SUBLIME will easily pull many fans of house-tinged techno into its exquisitely chilly climate.The Wire (p.45) - "[A]t once thrillingly stripped down and thrillingly luxurious....Something deliriously beautiful and affecting." From Here We Go Sublime Music Field From Here We Go Sublime Songs | 1. | Over the Ice |
| 2. | Paw in My Face, A |
| 3. | Good Things End |
| 4. | Little Heart Beats So Fast, The |
| 5. | Everday |
| 6. | Silent |
| 7. | Deal, The |
| 8. | Sun & Ice |
| 9. | Mobilia |
| 10. | From Here We Go Sublime |
| From Here We Go Sublime Music Review Purchase From Here We Go Sublime CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Junior Boys So This Is Goodbye CD (2006)
From Here We Go Sublime
$11.59
| | Lcd Soundsystem Sound Of Silver CD (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$8.85 As wryly noted on LCD Soundsystem's debut 2002 single, "Losing My Edge," in the underground music arms race, aging hipsters are losing ground against young upstarts who are (perhaps) unaware of their own influences. And if influences are the stuff with which post-millennial musicians are made, Murphy has trumped us all. Touching on reference points ranging from disco, krautrock, Bowie, house, and post-punk, to singer-songwriter types, SOUND OF SILVER is a veritable catalog of left-field ...
| | Panda Bear Person Pitch CD (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$11.35
| | Stars Of The Lid And Their Refinement Of The Decline CDs (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$14.09
| | Battles Mirrored CD (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$12.89 If modern day indie music appears to consist of an endless queue of groups that are either bland emo retreads or glitzy disco punkers, it is then that much more refreshing to encounter a band like Battles. With a lineage that consists of some of indie rock's most accomplished musicians, Battles is ...
| | Burial Untrue CD (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$13.75 If most musical projects aim for at least a measure of popular notoriety, the clandestine U.K. producer known as Burial seems to thrive on self-imposed anonymity. In interviews, the London-based dubstep artist explains his willful obscurity as an effort to draw a formal boundary between underground and pop--to effectively become "untrackable, unreadable, just a distant light." Whether this is pure hype-sheet driven strategy or a bona fide lob at the ...
| | Screaming Trees Buzz Factory CD (1989)
From Here We Go Sublime
$12.29
| | Lambert Ringlage Pearls CD (2009) (Import) Import
From Here We Go Sublime
$31.89
| | Kama Linden Uninhibited CD (2004)
From Here We Go Sublime
$10.15 This is the earliest inception of the album. I strongly recommend checking out the NEW Uninhibited with the remixes and better versions of Bitter Lemon and UninhibitedKama Linden, aka ANGRICHIK, is a singer-songwriter who has performed in many respected venues such as;(nyc:)THE BITTER END,ELBOW ROOM, FEZ, and outside the NYC area: Club 218 in Philly, Music Millenium NW in Portland, Oregon, and more in NJ. Kama's music has thoughtful, insightful and sometimes lyrics, and the genre varies according to whim...but is pop/rock top 40 with a tad of a country crossover to some songs, as she says she is from SOUTH NEW YORK (Staten Island).Kama is an outspoken woman who uses "no" as motorfuel to plow forward. Sure, the B word has been used to describe her "uninhibited" nature...but hey, thee is a little angrichik in all of us (men included). It is not really anger but insightfulness, passion, ...
| | Ted Nash In The Loop CD (2006)
From Here We Go Sublime
$12.59
| | Ezekiel Honig Scattered Practices CD (2006) Limited Edition
From Here We Go Sublime
$14.09
| | Stars & Stripes God Bless The Soldiers CD (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$12.05
| | 10,000 Laughs: Best Of The Comedy Festival CDs (2007)
From Here We Go Sublime
$14.49 It is probably fair to say that, as the title indicates, there are 10,000 laughs on this 16-comedian, two-hour-and-18-minute double-CD set, at least in terms of the sounds from the audience at the Boston Comedy Festival. Whether listeners to the album will get as many laughs out of it is another question. Comedy, especially the one-joke-after-another style of single-person standup comedy, can be local and topical, and the references heard repeatedly on these discs bear that out. Among the 16 comics, all of them men, are ones with names like Jim McCue, James P. Connolly, and Rob O'Reilly, which offers a hint that there are plenty of discussions about what it's like to be Irish-American and Catholic and that the college name most often mentioned is Harvard (not that any of the comedians sound like they've attended Harvard, though some sound like they may be in college now). Perhaps not coincidentally, drinking comes up quite a lot. But then, that may simply be because there are laughs to be found in drinking and drinking to be found at comedy clubs. Drugs factor in, too, along with lots of sex, more often in complaints about its absence than anything else. Fast food makes many appearances, too, though not so much as an actual subject of humor as a common reference point between the comedians and their listeners. So does George W. Bush, who is the butt of many jokes. That's not surprising, of course. But it does seem odd that homelessness and those charities that ask people to adopt poor Third World children for pennies a day are frequently mentioned. These are comedians who have much in common, but with slight variations. Tom Simmons finds a lot of humor in sports, although he really gets revved up (and funniest) at the end criticizing his wife. Connolly seems to want to become the next Steve Martin, adopting the same sort of insensitive and boorish character Martin used to play in his standup act. Ryan Hamilton mines laser eye surgery for a surprising number of laughs. Several comedians make punch lines of themselves, but their self-deprecation must work better for audiences who can see them. (O'Reilly gets his biggest laugh when he refers to ...
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