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Plastikman - Recycled Plastik album flac

Plastikman - Recycled Plastik album flac Performer: Plastikman
Title: Recycled Plastik
Style: Techno, Acid
Released: 1994
Country: US
MP3 album: 1448 mb
FLAC album: 1643 mb
Rating: 4.7
Other formats: VOX TTA AU MOD AAC MIDI VQF
Genre: Electronic

Historically looking, "Recycled Plastik" is quite probably Richie Hawtin's most important release under the Plastikman name. That is mainly due to the inclusion of the acid head nodder Krakpot, and the two tight minimal numbers Elektrostatik and Spastik, neither of which should need an introduction.

EX (also referred to as EX: Live at Guggenheim, NYC) is the sixth studio album by Canadian techno musician Richie Hawtin under his Plastikman moniker, the first studio album to be released under that name in 11 years, the last studio album being 2003's Closer. It was recorded in a single session on 16 November 2013 at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City

Recycled Plastik Tracklist. About Recycled Plastik. Recycled Plastik Q&A.

More albums from Plastikman: Closer by Plastikman. Artifakts (BC) by Plastikman.

Recycled Plastik is a 1994 studio album by Richie Hawtin as Plastikman. It was released through Novamute Records. Richie Hawtin – music.

MACOSX/CD02 - Plastikman - Recycled Plastik (2011)/. CD02 - Plastikman - Recycled Plastik (2011)/08 - Elektrix. MACOSX/CD02 - Plastikman - Recycled Plastik (2011)/. CD02 - Plastikman - Recycled Plastik (2011)/09 - Gak (Remix). CD02 - Plastikman - Recycled Plastik (2011)/10 - Sickness.

Tracklist

Krakpot 11:13
Elektrostatik 9:59
Spaz 7:41
Gak (Remix) 6:52
Naturalistik 4:39
Spastik 9:19

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
NMCD 3019 Plastikman Recycled Plastik ‎(CD, Album) NovaMute NMCD 3019 US 1994
NMCD 3019 Plastikman Recycled Plastik ‎(CD, Album) NovaMute NMCD 3019 Canada 1994
CD NoMu 30 Plastikman Recycled Plastik ‎(CD, Album) NovaMute CD NoMu 30 UK 1994
INT 826.798, CD NoMu 30, CD NOMU 30 Plastikman Recycled Plastik ‎(CD, Album) NovaMute, NovaMute, NovaMute INT 826.798, CD NoMu 30, CD NOMU 30 Germany 1994
MINUS100RECYCLED Plastikman Recycled Plastik (1993 - 2010) ‎(10xFile, MP3, Album, 320) M_nus MINUS100RECYCLED Canada 2011
CDSTUMM348, 5099940400228 Plastikman Recycled Plastik ‎(CD, Album, RE, RM) NovaMute, NovaMute, Mute, Mute, Plus 8 Records, Plus 8 Records CDSTUMM348, 5099940400228 Europe 2012


Comments: (5)
Zinnthi
I have to say I find this less interesting than other Plastikman releases. I imagine it's probably a "you had to be there" kind of album, but the thing I value most about Hawtin's Plastikman project are those winding, twisting acid melodies he crafted so well on Sheet One and Musik. There are very few of those here (the "Gak" remix aside); instead we get 6 mind-bending exercises in percussive repetition. Having only heard it sober I can't speak to its effects while tripping, but for home or even headphone listening I find these tracks bordering on being irritating. That said, even when he's just tweaking his 303 for eleven minutes he's still more cerebral and intriguing than most other acid producers out there. So this is unquestionably a landmark for what it accomplished in 1994 in terms of taking techno to bold new minimalist depths, but in 2012 I find that unfortunately it holds up less well than the rest of his Plastikman discography.
Tygrafym
Historically looking, "Recycled Plastik" is quite probably Richie Hawtin's most important release under the Plastikman name. That is mainly due to the inclusion of the acid head nodder Krakpot, and the two tight minimal numbers Elektrostatik and Spastik, neither of which should need an introduction. The rest I already forgot about, but these three make this mini album an obligatory buy. Simple strucutre, plain textures and impressive percussion work coupled with an undeniable drive, monotonous patterns and subtracted layers are the key terms to describe these stripped down, yet highly enjoyable tracks. Fun stuff, and it used to be hella popular as well!
Cordann
Try to picture a heavily pissed off man sitting in the living room of his fourth floor appartment. He suddenly grabs the two nearest objects within his reach, which just happen to be a Roland TB-808 and a Roland TB-303, and throwing them out of the window out on the street. Five minutes later, coming to realize what he has done, he quickly runs down, picks up all the pieces, no matter the size, goes back to his appartment and starts reassembling the instruments, guided plainly by his memory. Once the restoration is complete, and a few spliffs later, he begins to compose music, only this time aided by 808's sister, the Roland TB-909 ... Basically, the above written paragraph is how I imagined Richie Hawtin back when I thought his name was another way of saying 24 carat gold. Led by the immense success of his debut album under the Plastikman moniker, "Sheet One", Richie Hawtin collected a few of his early Plastikman tracks, added two (back then) newer tunes, and pushed out a 49 minute long "Recycled Plastik" release. Back in the day, for those who refused to hear it the first time around, by 1994 there was no more debate: minimal was the way. A track by track review is out of the question today, as most already know what this one packs, and those who don't hopefully won't waste much time... All you need to know is that on this particular shiny piece of plastic, you can find "Krakpot", "Elektrostatik" and "Spastik". These three tracks, more than any other, perfectly sum up everything Plastikman was about back then. Or, if you disagree, everything I thought he was about; rolling percussion, hi hats, cymbals, snares and drum kicks all stripped down to their core elements, wobbling and hypnotizing aceiiiiiiiid lines and more minimalsim than minimal techno ever needed to hear. Despite making it sound like I was describing a raging, harsh and in-your-face bullet of techno music, quite to the contrary, the greatest aspect of Plastikman's music, if there ever was one, is that his releases pack so much more than unvelied upon initial listens. Minimal, yeah, but simple and not engaing- hell no! I remember how the more I listened to this stuff, the less I became attached to the reiteration of the music, and went deeper, exploring the moods, atmospheres and shifting from one corner of my left speaker to the right one of the other. Despite sounding very aged now, this is the essence of minimalistic sound. To end, going back to what I wrote a few lines up, I would not know what to say today, but some years down the memory lane, and yes, minimal truly was the way to walk.
Dranar
This classic techno mini-album contains the famous Spastik, which is a fairly simplistic track consisting basically of stuttering snare roles over a kick drum. An instant classic when it was released in 1993, this record, probably more than any other, cemented Hawtin's position as a techno innovator.
Hugighma
Essentially a 303 + 808 (909?) piece. The Gak remix gets moving pretty well. The rest sounds like "my first rebirth tracks" imo. Perhaps good material for a DJ to mix into a acid / detroit-ish set.