» » Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama - Drumfiles 3.0
Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama - Drumfiles 3.0 FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

A Drumfiles 3.0
Vocals – Sara K.
5:43
B Drumfiles 3.1 5:43

Companies, etc.

  • Published By – Copyright Control
  • Distributed By – Intergroove
  • Lacquer Cut At – The Exchange

Credits

  • Mastered By [Master Cut] – Nilz*
  • Written-By, Producer – Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama

Notes

Master cut at The Exchange (London, UK).

Published by Copyright Control.
Distributed by Intergroove.

Track durations not mentioned on release.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Label Code: LC 01070
  • Matrix / Runout (Runout Etchings A): SPIEL 22-A NiLZ - THE EXCHANGE
  • Matrix / Runout (Runout Etchings B): SPIEL 22-B NiLZ - THE EXCHANGE

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
SPIEL 22-6 Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama Drumfiles 3.0 ‎(12", Promo) Spiel-Zeug Schallplatten SPIEL 22-6 Germany 2003


Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama - Drumfiles 3.0 FLAC album

Musician performer: Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama

Title: Drumfiles 3.0

Country: Germany

Date of release: 2003

Style: Techno

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1297 mb

Rating: 4.8 / 5

Votes: 225

Other Formats: MP1 FLAC AUD MMF VQF APE MP3

Related to Axel Bartsch & Asem Shama - Drumfiles 3.0 FLAC Albums

Urllet
Nice driving release with tribal percussions and a definite retro charme. The a-side features housy vocals in the break and while this is all good and surprisingly fitting, when the beat comes back it might go slightly over the top, reminding me a bit of too cheesy 90s dancefloor. Luckily this only lasts some 20 seconds. Whether this is tongue-in-cheek or just cheesy one will have to decide for himself. I like it. The b-side is essentially the same track without vocals, making it a well done tool. No milestone, but a good effort.
Urllet
Nice driving release with tribal percussions and a definite retro charme. The a-side features housy vocals in the break and while this is all good and surprisingly fitting, when the beat comes back it might go slightly over the top, reminding me a bit of too cheesy 90s dancefloor. Luckily this only lasts some 20 seconds. Whether this is tongue-in-cheek or just cheesy one will have to decide for himself. I like it. The b-side is essentially the same track without vocals, making it a well done tool. No milestone, but a good effort.