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Machine Code - Environments FLAC album

Tracklist

A Circadian 5:14
B Confession 4:57
C In The Shell 4:59
D KJG 5:43
E Machine Freak 6:15
F Flatline 4:46
G Fried Bread 5:03
H The Shadow 4:38

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
SUBTCD001 Machine Code* Environments ‎(2xCD, Album) Subtrakt SUBTCD001 UK 2011


Machine Code - Environments FLAC album

Musician performer: Machine Code

Title: Environments

Country: UK

Date of release: 2011

Style: Drum n Bass, Ambient, Industrial, Dubstep, Abstract, Experimental

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1876 mb

Rating: 4.5 / 5

Votes: 332

Other Formats: FLAC AHX ASF TTA DTS APE MPC

Related to Machine Code - Environments FLAC Albums

Dagdalas
Driving and (less?) momentum, but not as good as "Back2theMachine". I miss some variance as well as some piercing higher frequences that saves the arrangements from drowning in the deepness of Bassline Doom. Unfortunately you are looking forward for something "terrible" to happen, but instead of the record is over. :/
Dagdalas
Driving and (less?) momentum, but not as good as "Back2theMachine". I miss some variance as well as some piercing higher frequences that saves the arrangements from drowning in the deepness of Bassline Doom. Unfortunately you are looking forward for something "terrible" to happen, but instead of the record is over. :/
Obong
Buy this. Save yourself time that could be better spent listening to this god-damn album and buy it right now. A lot of nonsense has been thrown around the internet over the last couple of years about Dubstep. Whether you love, loathe or tolerate the genre it’s fair to say that a statement like “that drop is so filthy it’ll make you murder your grandma” is hilarious but rarely does the music itself live up to these lofty claims… However, the exception may have finally been found. In halving the tempo of their technoid DnB, Current Value and Dean Rodell have somehow ramped the intensity by exponential levels. I’ve literally been waiting years for these tracks to see the light of full release and they sound as mind-blowing now as they did back then.The vinyl presents eight servings of brutal electronica; dark, melodic, dense, hypnotic and driving in the truest sense of the words: ‘Circadian’ sets the scene with Twelve Monkeys’ James Cole forewarning the apocalypse only to be followed by American Psycho’s Patrick Bateman in the acidic monster that is ‘Confession’, a personal favourite. “All things change in a dynamic environment” or so ‘In The Shell’ tells us with ‘KJG’ delivering on this claim with a flurry of rhythmic pressure breaking-down to bass-driven 4/4 kicks. ‘Machine Freak’ is another stand-out for me, inciting almost palpable dread which can’t escape comparison to the looming, unstoppable antagonist from The Terminator. ‘Flatline’, in my opinion, is perhaps the only real low-point on the album. Still sounding good but more like an off-cut from CV’s ‘Back To The Machine’ than the tracks that have proceeded it. The final plate more than makes up for this momentary stumble though, ‘Fried Bread’ presenting echoing vocals overlaying a bass-driven and switched-down amen-break and ‘The Shadow’ rounding out the psychedelic quotient behind walls of bass.Your grandmother had best watch the fuck out because ‘Environments’ has finally landed.
Obong
Buy this. Save yourself time that could be better spent listening to this god-damn album and buy it right now. A lot of nonsense has been thrown around the internet over the last couple of years about Dubstep. Whether you love, loathe or tolerate the genre it’s fair to say that a statement like “that drop is so filthy it’ll make you murder your grandma” is hilarious but rarely does the music itself live up to these lofty claims… However, the exception may have finally been found. In halving the tempo of their technoid DnB, Current Value and Dean Rodell have somehow ramped the intensity by exponential levels. I’ve literally been waiting years for these tracks to see the light of full release and they sound as mind-blowing now as they did back then.The vinyl presents eight servings of brutal electronica; dark, melodic, dense, hypnotic and driving in the truest sense of the words: ‘Circadian’ sets the scene with Twelve Monkeys’ James Cole forewarning the apocalypse only to be followed by American Psycho’s Patrick Bateman in the acidic monster that is ‘Confession’, a personal favourite. “All things change in a dynamic environment” or so ‘In The Shell’ tells us with ‘KJG’ delivering on this claim with a flurry of rhythmic pressure breaking-down to bass-driven 4/4 kicks. ‘Machine Freak’ is another stand-out for me, inciting almost palpable dread which can’t escape comparison to the looming, unstoppable antagonist from The Terminator. ‘Flatline’, in my opinion, is perhaps the only real low-point on the album. Still sounding good but more like an off-cut from CV’s ‘Back To The Machine’ than the tracks that have proceeded it. The final plate more than makes up for this momentary stumble though, ‘Fried Bread’ presenting echoing vocals overlaying a bass-driven and switched-down amen-break and ‘The Shadow’ rounding out the psychedelic quotient behind walls of bass.Your grandmother had best watch the fuck out because ‘Environments’ has finally landed.