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Detromental - Move album flac

Detromental - Move album flac Performer: Detromental
Title: Move
Style: Techno
Released: 2017
Country: UK
MP3 album: 1569 mb
FLAC album: 1447 mb
Rating: 4.6
Other formats: MIDI MMF VQF VOX XM MMF MIDI
Genre: Electronic

Move originally appeared on Detromental - Move, Move De Bass Rewind originally appeared on Detromental - Rewind, Juice Bar. Other Versions (3 of 3) View All. Cat. These tracks have been re-done by the CPU label boss, with the approval of Detromental, the original masters beeing lost. Reply Notify me 3 Helpful.

Move by Detromental, released 18 August 2017 1. Move (Rebuilt) 2. Rewind (Rebuilt) CPU celebrate 50th release with rebuilds of 2 rare bleep techno tracks from 1990. Originally released on white label, ‘Move’ was written by Dean Marriott (aka . amirez) and Lloyd Douglas and recorded in Sheffield in 1990.

Move Tonight, Detrimental Riddim. Overview (current section).

2 years ago 2 years ago. Techno.

Move (Rebuilt), 04:48. Rewind (Rebuilt), 04:48.

Tracklist

Move (Rebuilt)
Rewind (Rebuilt)

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
00110001 Detromental Move ‎(12") Central Processing Unit 00110001 UK 2017
00110001 Detromental Move ‎(2xFile, ALAC) Central Processing Unit 00110001 UK 2017
00110001 Detromental Move ‎(2xFile, MP3, Single, 320) Central Processing Unit 00110001 UK 2017
none Detromental Rewind (Rebuilt – 10” Mix) ‎(10", S/Sided, Ltd) Central Processing Unit none UK 2018


Comments: (7)
Dianantrius
Great record. Hats off, Mr Smith. Love this story :)
wanderpool
Not sure what Dean Marriott had to do with Rewind?
Ubrise
There are few electronic and dance records that have some mythical or legendary yarn worth spinning beyond the turntable platter. The very best of them include Orbital’s ‘Chime’ recorded onto tape and costing less than £1 to produce. Then there is the story of chance when punk new waver Gary Numan turned up to record his latest tracks to find a Minimoog had been left in the studio. The Numanoid picked it up, recorded a bunch of groundbreaking electronic tracks and the rest is history. So it is where history comes crashing together for Sheffield based label CPU Recordings 50th release. Not only is it impressive that CPU has made it to its half century release, but for that milestone it has totally rebuilt two Sheffield Bleep classics from scratch. Flashback to over quarter of a century ago and Sheffield was the hub for an vibrant electronic music scene that was buzzing around the likes of Warp Records, pirate radio and several cutting edge underground nights. In among that scene several bleep techno classics were appearing and none more interesting and mythical than a set of four 12 inches over the course of 12 months by the artist Detromental. All with minimal information on their white labels, all either stamped or handwritten, all feeling and sounding over-worldly whilst very local to South Yorkshire. The tracks ingrained themselves into the mind of CPU Recordings label boss CP Smith for the next 25 years as he tried to discover who was behind the brooding, bubbling basslines and metronomic drum patterns. Eventually piece by piece it was revealed that the tracks had been created by Dean Marriott and Lloyd Douglas with only a small run of them pressed. An attempt to source original sound files for licensing purposes proved unfruitful and after much effort and discussion with Marriott there was only one option left open to Smith. That was to build the tracks from scratch using originally sourced pieces of recording equipment, finding each component sound and piecing it back together. Cover versions are a tricky business at the best of times, they are either too close to the original or too far that they can sound utterly horrendous (see José Feliciano’s destruction of Sting’s ‘Every Breath you Take’ for an example of this). Yet the sheer effort to build this using analogue equipment, no soft synths or resampling of the original on show here, is a testament to Smith’s incredible passion for a golden period in Sheffield’s rich music history. It is also telling of his technical ability as a music producer, something he sadly does not do enough of. The two tracks ‘Rewind’ and ‘Move’ have travelled time, they sit somewhere in 1991 but also comfortably in 2017. With a clean and polished sound they are good enough to have been released by electronic giants Warp then and now. It is indeed their loss, but the connection is moved even closer with the release being treated with the iconic classic purple sleeve complete with binary catalogue number and CPU logo. With the original records going for in excess of £50 on Discogs, it really is a no brainer to track down a copy of these special rebuilds before they too sell out and start to go for similar amounts.
Wilalmaine
12 for sale starting from €30 just a few months after the release date. Sad to see this knowing that there are many people who couldn't manage to get a copy last summer...
Lanadrta
The full story behind the rebuilt can be read on the factmag website:http://www.factmag.com/2017/05/27/how-to-remake-a-bleep-techno-classic-detromental/
Thorgaginn
Great rebuilt of those classic bleep techno tracks. A-side is on the spot!
Renthadral
These tracks have been re-done by the CPU label boss, with the approval of Detromental, the original masters beeing lost.