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-- Sasha Album Tracklisting and review
Sasha Album Tracklisting and review
Taken from the Muzik Weekly e-mail flyer....
NEW SASHA ALBUM: WORLD FIRST TRACK-BY-TRACK PREVIEW!
It�s one of the most eagerly awaited dance music albums of all time � the debut artist album from Alexander Coe, aka Sasha � and we didn�t want you to have to wait a moment longer. As soon as we�ve got hold of the album we�re telling you about it.
This is the world�s first track-by-track preview of one of the biggest albums of the year. Released on August 5th through BMG, Sasha�s �Airdrawndagger� avoids pure dancefloor fodder in favour of a more understated, almost chilled out approach. It melds his love of breakbeat and soundtrack work and pays tribute to some of his biggest influences.
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�Airdrawndagger�
1. Dremples 1:23
A short burst of shimmering, bleepy, analogue soundscape clocking in at just under a minute and a half. A warm-up to get your ears attuned.
2. Mr Tiddles 4:53
As with much of the album, �Mr Tiddles� seems to pay tribute to an era in the early Nineties when artists such as Spooky and The Drum Club were at their peak. A cool, understated five minute introduction that unfurls with all the production manners of Future Sound Of London circa �Lifeforms�, it�s bass-heavy with loads of delay, like a Germanic minimalist cathedral of synthetic sound supplemented with massive, washing synth sounds.
3. Magnetic North 5:17
A bass pattern rises out of the darkness. A flurry of shuddering drums and shifting, haunting keys. This is where things move subtly up a gear with a glimmer of a nu-skool breaks rhythm track.
4. Cloud Cuckoo 8.26
A pure ethereal soundtrack with menacing keys is split by a tough West Coast drum pattern with an up-front snare sound. More deep, brooding, bass-heavy breakdowns with cascading synth patterns filtering down. Ends with a Jan Hammer/Miami Vice-style drum stab and melts directly into. . .
5. Immortal 4:54
A brooding, buzzing nu-skool bassline underpins this downbeat slice of breakbeat. Hovering around the 110 bpm mark, the track is covered in crisp, cut-up hi-hats (sounding like high-pitched scratching) with a rising and descending �horror movie� hook line the creates a lot of tension. Includes another rippling bass breakdown. Wouldn�t sound amiss in a Meat Katie DJ set.
6. Fundamental 9:13
Dark, robotic breakbeat atmospherics with a touch of the Timo Maas in the bassline and lots of twisted filters. Morse code bleeps play in the upper frequencies. Really kicks in round the six minute mark and rides the same dark riff for a further three minutes. A Mixmaster Morris-ish take on current fixations with all things electro.
7. Boileroom 7:04
A looped-backwards brassy sample cycles round before exploding into a classic Sasha breakbeat � lots of space and contrast between pounding low notes and trebly rhythm track. High bell notes play against twisted electronic noises further down. A BT-style crescendo around the two minute mark reminds of the days when Sasha used to cane �Embracing The Sunshine�.
8. Bloodlock 7:53
The track that�s most akin to �Xpander�. A floor-shaking bass rumble growls along as more synth arpeggios cascade down. A hi-hat pattern plays left and right in the speakers and a marching pattern plays towards the end, rising in frequency. Very Orbital-ish and something of an updated tribute to the early sound of Sven Vath�s Eye-Q imprint.
9. Requiem 6:08
Like incidental music from Bladerunner, this track betrays Sasha�s love of movie soundtrack dynamics and looks to Vangelis for epic inspiration. Heavy delay cuts up an almost guitar-sound melody that descends into computer game bleeps that in turn fade to echo.
10. Golden Arm 5:45
A cute melody cycles round before the 4/4 bass kicks in with a very �Euro� rhythm pattern. The bass and deep synth are linked in a rising and falling cycle while echoing noises play beneath. The closest thing to a pop song on the album.
11. Wavey Gravy 7:29
�Wavey Gravy� was previewed on Sasha�s boat party at The Miami Winter Music Conference and is the album�s most obvious contender for first single. Like Kevin Beber reworking one of Hybrid�s more symphonic excursions, this seven-minute cut is built on a strong rim-shot rhythm pattern. Evoking images of sunshine falling through leaves, this is another track with a touch of Vangelis about it, with a blissful, swooping synth melody that plays to fade.
nice man! looks great cant wait for this 
Yeah, my expectations are very high now. Interesting album name 
Good to know he's stuck an Xpander-a-like on there for us tranceheads.
I can't wait for this album.
i jus hope i can find it here in Chicago...i'ma pissed if i cant...havin enuf friggin trouble findin Pappa's Resolution...
i cant wait to hear this album and the preview makes no sense to me because i dont understand what it is saying. 
Hmm, I'm looking forward to hearing this !!!
Mmmm... cant wait for the CD, i cant believe it's taken this long to make though 
The reviews alright, but it sounds like the reviewer is trying to show off his dictionary of music descriptions? I mean, "West Coast drum pattern" and "Jan Hammer/Miami Vice-style drum stab"... what the fuck? heheh 
Pointy
Yay! I have been anticipating this for awhile now. I quite like the title. Although it does remind me of Macbeth 
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