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Various - Cream Separates - The Collection FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

Darren Emerson 67:59
1.01 Envoy Seawall 3:13
1.02 Modus Vivendi Modus Vivendi 7:19
1.03 51 Days Paper Moon 3:21
1.04 Neal Howard Indulge 5:42
1.05 Virgo Four In A Vision 3:49
1.06 Blue Maxx Unicorn 2:16
1.07 Oneiro Warrior 4:19
1.08 Dan Curtin Airport Martini 7:31
1.09 Willpower Party 2:14
1.10 Nimbus Quartet Sugar 5:01
1.11 Sueño Latino Sueno Latino (The Paradise Version) 8:37
1.12 Cliff Hanger Song For Olivia 4:00
1.13 Holy Ghost* Ark Lukm 4:49
1.14 Underworld Confusion The Waitress 5:46
Deep Dish 71:39
2.01 Rhythm & Sound W/ Tikiman Never Tell You
Vocals – Tikiman
4:02
2.02 Sandy Rivera Of Kings Of Tomorrow Rise 4:05
2.03 The Horn Flirt 2:56
2.04 Two Lone Swordsmen Glide By Shooting 4:20
2.05 K.O.T.* Fade II Black (Original Mix) 5:21
2.06 Mysterious People Love Revolution (Mood II Swing Remix 1)
Remix – Mood II Swing
5:52
2.07 Basement Jaxx Fly Life 4:18
2.08a Listenin' Parlour* Untitled (Acapella) 5:11
2.08b L.W.S. Gosp (Be Bop '96 Mix)
Mixed By – Stefano Amerio
2.09 Jerald Daemyon Summer Madness 7:29
2.10 DJ Garth & E.T.I. Twenty Minutes Of Disco Glory 3:17
2.11 Chiapet Tick-Tock (War Of The Worlds Mix) 5:06
2.12 Dubbing Double Don't Ever Stop 4:31
2.13 The Innocent Theme From The Blue Cucaracha (Triptonnite Dub)
Remix – Jason Miles, Jay Chappell
3:31
2.14 Summer Daze Samba Magic 6:26
2.15 Latino Circus In Your Soul (Deep Blue Mix) 5:13
Ryder/Bleasdale 75:52
3.01 The Ragga Twins Love Talk 3:23
3.02 Dirty Beatniks Gettin' Stupid 7:09
3.03 Word Up We Wanna Go Back 4:54
3.04 Dub Pistols There's Gonna Be A Riot 6:29
3.05 Ceasefire Trickshot 4:43
3.06 Eborman Karaoke With Buddah 6:52
3.07 Mantronix King Of The Beats 5:15
3.08 Electroliners Loose Caboose 3:39
3.09 Laidback Wrecktify 2:55
3.10 Slacker Scared 5:36
3.11 DJ Sneak And Armand Van Helden Psychic Bounty Killaz 4:37
3.12 The Innocent Jack Another Day 3:39
3.13 Fiasco Fat Cow 4:13
3.14 Wulf 'n' Bear* Body Music 5:22
3.15 As One Theme From Op-Art 7:06

Companies, etc.

  • Marketed By – Deconstruction
  • Distributed By – BMG
  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Deconstruction Ltd.
  • Copyright (c) – Deconstruction Ltd.
  • Edited At – Transfermation
  • Mastered At – Transfermation
  • Made By – Disctronics S

Credits

  • Compiled By [Selected], DJ Mix – Darren Emerson (tracks: 1.01 to 1.14), Les Ryder (tracks: 3.01 to 3.07), Paul Bleasdale (tracks: 3.08 to 3.15)
  • DJ Mix – Dubfire (tracks: 2.01 to 2.07), Sharam* (tracks: 2.08 to 2.15)
  • Mastered By – Richard* (tracks: 3.01 to 3.15)
  • Mixed By, Edited By – Deep Dish (tracks: 2.01 to 2.15)
  • Sleeve [Packaging] – Farrow Design

Notes

3.01 is incorrectly listed as "Illegal Gunshot".

"Darren Emerson"
Edited and Mastered at Transfermation.

"Deep Dish"
Part One Dubfire. Part Two Sharam.
Mastered at Transfermation.

"Ryder/Bleasdale"
Tracks 1-7 selected and mixed at Cream Liverpool.
Edited and Mastered at Transfermation.

Manufactured in the EU.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (Scanned): 743214637821
  • Barcode (Text): 7 43214 63782 1
  • Label Code: LC 8280
  • Matrix / Runout (CD1): DISCTRONICS S 743214-62012 02
  • Mastering SID Code (CD1): IFPI L502
  • Mould SID Code (CD1): IFPI 8796
  • Matrix / Runout (CD2): DISCTRONICS S 743214 62002 03
  • Mastering SID Code (CD2): IFPI L501
  • Mould SID Code (CD2): IFPI 8701
  • Matrix / Runout (CD3): DISCTRONICS S 743214-62022 05
  • Mastering SID Code (CD3): IFPI L501
  • Mould SID Code (CD3): IFPI 8780

Various - Cream Separates - The Collection FLAC album

Musician performer: Various

Title: Cream Separates - The Collection

Date of release: 1997

Style: House, Techno, Big Beat, Tech House

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1407 mb

Rating: 4.7 / 5

Votes: 395

Other Formats: DMF AA MP4 XM VOC FLAC DTS

Related to Various - Cream Separates - The Collection FLAC Albums

BeatHoWin
About 10 years ago I was working in a crappy factory where I had to put plastic injection moulded boxes into bigger cardboard boxes. It was dreadful, but it meant I had beer money for a while. Anyway I was chatting to a colleague one day and we got onto the subject of music and it became apparent that I liked that 'electronic shite' and he didn't, and from there our relationship waned. A few weeks later out of the blue he came up to me and give me a cassette with the words, 'This is probably up your effing street', or words to that effect. The cassette was the Deep Dish mix from the Cream Separates box set and I managed to wear it thin.So eventually, via that bidding behemoth Ebay, I managed to bag the 3xCD collection, and am very very chuffed to say that this mix has stood the test of time and still sounds as magical and uplifting (not in a Ferry Corsten at Gatecrasher, I've just boshed a load of Mitzis way).The mix offers two sides of the Deep Dish duo with Dubfire mixing the first half and then Sharam finishing the next half.In my opinion you can't go wrong starting a mix with the sublime Rhythm & Sound, particularly 'Never Tell You', which was later immortalised on Richie Hawtin's 'Decks, EFX & 909'. Dubfire then takes us on a mini tour of what feels like a template of Yoshitoshi - groovin'(Sandy Riviera), techy (The Horn), aquatic (Two Lone Swordsmen), funky (K.O.T.), epic (Mood II Swing) and the phasing synthy wonk of Basement Jaxx.Sharam takes control through the Listenin' Parlour a cappella that serves as a perfect transition between the duo before the violin (or fiddle?) laden Summer Madness is unfurled in all of its sunshine glory. '20 Mins of Disco Glory' follows like a throwback to Back to Basics before the dark ominous plodder 'Tick-Tock' swings into action - the mere fact that it has a 'War of the Worlds mix' gives it a dark edge I think. 'Don't Ever Stop' bleeps and vocalises with gusto and funk whilst 'Theme From The Blue Cucaracha' has a quality piano/synth line in the break that is very reminiscent of John Carpenter's Halloween theme. 'Samba Magic' then rolls up with pure Carnaval vibes - cowbells a-go-go; before 'In Your Soul' Deep Houses and smokes its way into a celestial groove that brings you back to reality.I've heard mixes before and after this one by Deep Dish as a duo and as individuals, but I feel that they absolutely nailed it with this - hats off.I should add that I haven't even bothered to listen to the other two mixes on this CD as I feel Darren Emerson is a mediocre DJ at best, and as for Les Ryder and Paul Bleasdale - yawn.
BeatHoWin
About 10 years ago I was working in a crappy factory where I had to put plastic injection moulded boxes into bigger cardboard boxes. It was dreadful, but it meant I had beer money for a while. Anyway I was chatting to a colleague one day and we got onto the subject of music and it became apparent that I liked that 'electronic shite' and he didn't, and from there our relationship waned. A few weeks later out of the blue he came up to me and give me a cassette with the words, 'This is probably up your effing street', or words to that effect. The cassette was the Deep Dish mix from the Cream Separates box set and I managed to wear it thin.So eventually, via that bidding behemoth Ebay, I managed to bag the 3xCD collection, and am very very chuffed to say that this mix has stood the test of time and still sounds as magical and uplifting (not in a Ferry Corsten at Gatecrasher, I've just boshed a load of Mitzis way).The mix offers two sides of the Deep Dish duo with Dubfire mixing the first half and then Sharam finishing the next half.In my opinion you can't go wrong starting a mix with the sublime Rhythm & Sound, particularly 'Never Tell You', which was later immortalised on Richie Hawtin's 'Decks, EFX & 909'. Dubfire then takes us on a mini tour of what feels like a template of Yoshitoshi - groovin'(Sandy Riviera), techy (The Horn), aquatic (Two Lone Swordsmen), funky (K.O.T.), epic (Mood II Swing) and the phasing synthy wonk of Basement Jaxx.Sharam takes control through the Listenin' Parlour a cappella that serves as a perfect transition between the duo before the violin (or fiddle?) laden Summer Madness is unfurled in all of its sunshine glory. '20 Mins of Disco Glory' follows like a throwback to Back to Basics before the dark ominous plodder 'Tick-Tock' swings into action - the mere fact that it has a 'War of the Worlds mix' gives it a dark edge I think. 'Don't Ever Stop' bleeps and vocalises with gusto and funk whilst 'Theme From The Blue Cucaracha' has a quality piano/synth line in the break that is very reminiscent of John Carpenter's Halloween theme. 'Samba Magic' then rolls up with pure Carnaval vibes - cowbells a-go-go; before 'In Your Soul' Deep Houses and smokes its way into a celestial groove that brings you back to reality.I've heard mixes before and after this one by Deep Dish as a duo and as individuals, but I feel that they absolutely nailed it with this - hats off.I should add that I haven't even bothered to listen to the other two mixes on this CD as I feel Darren Emerson is a mediocre DJ at best, and as for Les Ryder and Paul Bleasdale - yawn.
Shakanos
... I agree, the Deep DIsh mix was the attraction back in 1997; for me anyway.However, never write off Darren Emerson - pop on some headphones and delve into his ethereal soundscape of classic house rhythms, minimal beats, techno stabs and a wonderful Underworld acetate to bring up the rear. Also, Ryder and Bleasdale offer up a heady mix of sounds and breaks with As One's masterful finale...Keep the music strong....
Shakanos
... I agree, the Deep DIsh mix was the attraction back in 1997; for me anyway.However, never write off Darren Emerson - pop on some headphones and delve into his ethereal soundscape of classic house rhythms, minimal beats, techno stabs and a wonderful Underworld acetate to bring up the rear. Also, Ryder and Bleasdale offer up a heady mix of sounds and breaks with As One's masterful finale...Keep the music strong....