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Luke Slater - Wireless FLAC album

Tracklist

A1 In The Pocket 1:32
A2 Sum Ton Tin 3:38
A3 Hard Silence (Part One) 0:46
A4 Sheer Five Five 3:56
A5 Let Eat All Vanbrook 4:06
B1 Body Freefall, Electronic Inform 3:57
B2 You Butterfly 4:09
B3 Hard Knock Rock 6:05
C1 All Exhale 5:55
C2 Bolt Up 4:38
D1 I Thought I Knew You 7:10
D2 Weave Your Web 6:55
D3 Out The Pocket 1:22

Credits

  • Drums [Additional] – Alan Sage
  • Guitar – Seth Hodder
  • Mastered By – Graeme*, Nilz*
  • Vocals – Speech Recognition
  • Written-by, Producer, Recorded By, Mixed By, Arranged By, Drums [Additional] – Luke Slater

Notes

Un-Mixed versions.
Written, produced, recorded, mixed and arranged at Space Station 0, UK.
Mastered at The Exchange, London.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 5016025382446

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
NOMU70CD, NoMu70CD Luke Slater Wireless ‎(CD, Album, P/Mixed) NovaMute, NovaMute NOMU70CD, NoMu70CD UK 1999
TOCP-65332 Luke Slater Wireless ‎(CD, Album) NovaMute TOCP-65332 Japan 1999
7243 8 48131 2 3 Luke Slater Wireless ‎(CD, Album, Mixed, P/Mixed, Dig) Labels, NovaMute 7243 8 48131 2 3 France 1999
NovaMute 3052-2, 3052-2 Luke Slater Wireless ‎(CD, Album, P/Mixed) NovaMute, NovaMute NovaMute 3052-2, 3052-2 US 1999
Nomu70LP Luke Slater Wireless ‎(2xLP, Album, Promo, W/Lbl) NovaMute Nomu70LP UK 1999


Luke Slater - Wireless FLAC album

Musician performer: Luke Slater

Title: Wireless

Country: UK

Date of release: 1999

Style: Breaks, Electro

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1295 mb

Rating: 4.1 / 5

Votes: 273

Other Formats: MIDI RA VOC MOD MP1 FLAC MP3

Related to Luke Slater - Wireless FLAC Albums

Manris
The follow-up to a very well received major-label debut, Wireless sees Slater expanding his range as a producer into backbeat-driven styles like old-school rap and electro, a far cry from the pummeling techno of his youth but no less intriguing despite the fact. From a lesser techno producer, Wireless would smack of a breakbeat sellout, an album that simply trades in Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim's brand of old-school techno. But just as Moby wisely stuck to his melodic strengths while crafting a breakbeat-inspired album (the same year's Play), Slater never deserts his own strongpoint — intense, pummeling drum programming. There is a big difference, here; Slater's not just reaching for copies of old blues records and drum breaks. The tracks here are upfront, sinister, electro-inspired throwbacks, songs like "Sum Ton Tin," "Hard Knock Rock," and "Body Freefall, Electronic Inform" that throw dozens of electro effects into the pot with a subtle flair, from deep vocoder vocals to acid squelches to waves of synth menace. Wireless is a listen that's immediately rewarding and compelling.
Manris
The follow-up to a very well received major-label debut, Wireless sees Slater expanding his range as a producer into backbeat-driven styles like old-school rap and electro, a far cry from the pummeling techno of his youth but no less intriguing despite the fact. From a lesser techno producer, Wireless would smack of a breakbeat sellout, an album that simply trades in Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim's brand of old-school techno. But just as Moby wisely stuck to his melodic strengths while crafting a breakbeat-inspired album (the same year's Play), Slater never deserts his own strongpoint — intense, pummeling drum programming. There is a big difference, here; Slater's not just reaching for copies of old blues records and drum breaks. The tracks here are upfront, sinister, electro-inspired throwbacks, songs like "Sum Ton Tin," "Hard Knock Rock," and "Body Freefall, Electronic Inform" that throw dozens of electro effects into the pot with a subtle flair, from deep vocoder vocals to acid squelches to waves of synth menace. Wireless is a listen that's immediately rewarding and compelling.