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White Noise > You
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Winter Park, FL
Posts: 4,026
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(dance/electronica) Erlend Øye - DJ-Kicks
Erlend Øye - DJ-Kicks
Released: 2004 Erlend Øye is a DJ from Norway. He is better known as half of the pop duo The Kings of Convenience. After Kings of Convenience release Quiet is the New Loud, Øye decided to make a career in music. Soon after he began working with Norweigian group Röyksopp, and that eventually spawned a solo career. He began recording his solo material after gaining several indie connections at an electronic music festival in Finland. His first album, titled Unrest, was a collection of ten songs written at ten different times with ten different collaborators. The collaborators included acts like Soviet, Prefuse 73, and Schneider TM. His beats have been compared to greats like Boards of Canada. There is one major difference in the music however. Øye is a DJ who makes great beats, yes, but he is also known for adding his own whispery vocals overtop of the music. This adds a new dimension to the music because his vocals are fantastic. Credits: Alf - Producer Michael Baumann - Producer Davide Bertolini - Engineer Klaus Dahmen - Design Francesco DeBellis - Producer The DFA - Producer James Duncan - Trumpet Fred Falke - Producer Roger Greenawalt - Producer Ali Kepenek - Photography Craig Morrison - Producer, Remixing Keigo Oyamada - Producer Erlend Øye - Producer, Liner Notes, Art Direction Phonique - Mixing Consultant, Technical Consultant Mario Pierro - Producer Tracklist: Jürgen Paape - "So Weit Wie Noch Nie" Erlend Øye - "Sheltered Life/Fine Day" Cornelius - "Drop [Kings of Convenience RMX]" Phoenix - "If I Ever Feel Better" Erlend Øye, Jolly Music - "Radio Jolly/Prego Amore" Alan Braxe, Fred Falke - "Rubicon" Avenue D - "2D2F" The Rapture - "I Need Your Love" Erlend Øye, Uusi Fantasia - "Lattialla Taas/Venus" Erlend Øye, Justus Köhncke - "2 After 909/Intergalactic Autobahn" Erlend Øye - "The Black Keys Work" Jackmate - "Airraid" Erlend Øye, Röyksopp - "Poor Leno [Silicone Soul's Hypno House Dub]/There Is a Light That Never Goes Out" Erlend Øye, Skateboard - "Metal Chix/Always on My Mind" Villalobos - "Dexter" Minizza - "Winning a Battle, Losing the War" Erlend Øye, Morgan Geist - "Lullaby/A Place in My Heart" Øye's 2004 album DJ-Kicks is an album in a long series of DJ Kicks albums. This is a departure from the classic DJ Kicks albums because he is a singing DJ. The tracks on the album are meticulously chosen, and the tracks where he sings are the highlights of the album. Most of the album is based on German techno songs, mainly because that is where Øye currently resides. Among these include amazing songs like Jürgen Paape's "So Weit Wie Noch Nie," Justus Köhncke's "2 After 909," Jackmate's "Airraid," Ricardo Villalobos' "Dexter," Morgan Geist's "Lullaby," and Ada's "Luckycharm." In addition to the songs that he adds vocals to, the remainder of the songs (from artists like the Rapture, Phoenix, and Cornelius) already have vocals. The result is an album of dance music that is more vocally driven than most dance you may have heard. If there is one down side to the album, it is the transitions between songs. It is clear that Erlend hasn't quite mastered DJing yet, and the result are a couple of jarring transitions, most notably between "2D2F" and "I Need Your Love", and also between "If I Ever Feel Better" and "Radio Jolly/Prego Amore". The result is a set that is more broken up than he might have liked. Luckily the songs are so great, they easily make up for the less than smooth transitions. Highlights of the album include the phenomenal Phoenix song "If I Ever Feel Better", Erlend Øye's vocal stylings on "Sheltered Life/Fine Day", "Poor Leno [Silicone Soul's Hypno House Dub]/There Is a Light That Never Goes Out" (yes, he sings the classic Smiths song, and I think his version is wonderful), and the album closer "Lullaby/A Place in My Heart". Many of the songs serve as standard dance filler, but there is only one notably low part of the album, on the song "2D2F" (short for too drunk to fuck). It really doesn't fit the overall laid back mood of the rest of the album, and it's placement right in the middle creates an obvious divide in the record. That cost this when it comes to my final rating, as it would be so much better without that track. Notable Tracks: ***=tops on the album "Sheltered Life/Fine Day" "Drop" "If I Ever Feel Better"*** "I Need Your Love" "2 After 909/Intergalactic Autobahn" "Poor Leno [Silicone Soul's Hypno House Dub]/There Is a Light That Never Goes Out"*** "Dexter" "Lullaby/A Place in My Heart"*** Overall Rating: 3.9/5 Last edited by Scott Herren; 12-06-2004 at 05:24 PM. Reason: spelling |
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