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Various - Trance Atlantic FLAC album

Tracklist

Spacetime Continuum 101 South Of Heaven
God Within Conjure Bass Bass (While The Double Agents Lurk)
Im.mortal Music Slam Dance
Yennek Dancing Tides
Aux 88 Phantom Power
Dan Curtin Round Trip
Mark Gage Rex Me Fecu
Damon Wild Red Moon
Joey Beltram Back Porch
Storm Acts Of Worship
Mike Dearborn Atmosphere 16
DJ Skull Flicker
Meat Beat Manifesto Simulacra Part 1
Himadri Trace
Plastikman Hump
Hawke I Have Her
Nev Chewy Soulmate, Someday
Infiniti Martians At Work
Black Balls Clap Ya Hands (Remix Acid)
Born Under A Rhyming Planet Blop
Thomas Barnett Let There Be Light
Eddie "Flashin" Fowlkes* Lodge Freeway
Mazdaratti Pulverized
Psychic TV & Genesis P-Orridge Mindfeeled

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
talp1 Various Trance Atlantic ‎(4xLP, Comp, Ltd) Volume talp1 UK 1995
tacd1 Various Trance Atlantic ‎(2xCD, Comp + Box) Volume tacd1 UK 1995
tamc1 Various Trance Atlantic ‎(2xCass, Album) Volume tamc1 UK 1995
WT-739 Various Trance Atlantic ‎(Cass, Comp, Unofficial) Western Thunder Records WT-739 Ukraine 1995


Various - Trance Atlantic FLAC album

Musician performer: Various

Title: Trance Atlantic

Country: UK

Date of release: 1995

Style: Trance, Breaks, Techno, House

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1502 mb

Rating: 4.3 / 5

Votes: 621

Other Formats: AUD APE MMF MOD MIDI AAC MP2

Related to Various - Trance Atlantic FLAC Albums

kinder
FYI: Thomas Barnett's - 'Let There Be Light' was actually written and produced back in 1991. Great track.
kinder
FYI: Thomas Barnett's - 'Let There Be Light' was actually written and produced back in 1991. Great track.
Hap
Not as strong as the purely Euro-centric early compilation but Space Time Continuum & Plastikman I never turn a blind ear too. Wish he was making more music. Not a bad compilation just not as engaging as the early vol 1 & 2 which will always remain in my music library!
Hap
Not as strong as the purely Euro-centric early compilation but Space Time Continuum & Plastikman I never turn a blind ear too. Wish he was making more music. Not a bad compilation just not as engaging as the early vol 1 & 2 which will always remain in my music library!
Kazracage
nice compilation.
Kazracage
nice compilation.
Anazan
The first disc has two songs that are stellar. Spacetime continuum displays his typical talents of using soft pings and reverberated pongs to give a holophonic effect. The better composition is Dancing tides. Yennek, aka Kenny Larkin, produces this lush, jazzy breakbeat symphony (with a sax!). It is much better than his Azymuth productions. On the second disc, Plastikman, suprisingly offers something more than percussion. A slow, dubby roller with an un-acidic tb-303 line, he grooves and gives like the other funky Detroit boys. To beat him, you need Eddie Fowlkes. Lodge freeway has maybe a little too much energy, but I think the influence is from the Berlin scene at that time. Lesser but still pleasant tracks include those from Aux 88 and Born under a rhyming planet. Phantom power is slow, soulful, and electro-tinged. Blop is kind of like a mid-phase Matthew Herbert orchestra of household objects coming to life and tapping or bouncing away in a barely melodic manner. The book is even more fun to read, as Richie Hawtin tells you which brand of apple juice is the best (I tried them and he's right).
Anazan
The first disc has two songs that are stellar. Spacetime continuum displays his typical talents of using soft pings and reverberated pongs to give a holophonic effect. The better composition is Dancing tides. Yennek, aka Kenny Larkin, produces this lush, jazzy breakbeat symphony (with a sax!). It is much better than his Azymuth productions. On the second disc, Plastikman, suprisingly offers something more than percussion. A slow, dubby roller with an un-acidic tb-303 line, he grooves and gives like the other funky Detroit boys. To beat him, you need Eddie Fowlkes. Lodge freeway has maybe a little too much energy, but I think the influence is from the Berlin scene at that time. Lesser but still pleasant tracks include those from Aux 88 and Born under a rhyming planet. Phantom power is slow, soulful, and electro-tinged. Blop is kind of like a mid-phase Matthew Herbert orchestra of household objects coming to life and tapping or bouncing away in a barely melodic manner. The book is even more fun to read, as Richie Hawtin tells you which brand of apple juice is the best (I tried them and he's right).