Walking Through

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (86 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 69:20

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Interchill=Quality

gussygoose

Almost anything/everything from Interchill is guaranteed to be very fine stuff indeed. And like Rick Anderson says, ya jus' gotta wait, but hey, it's always worth it.

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Good album, but Elixir is much better

LionelCassin

If you want to check out Kaya Project, check out Elixir. There is something special about that album. "Good Morning London" is one of my top tunes.

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Stunning album

dahudriver

This album will grab your attention from start to finish. Perhaps slightly too uptempo to be classified as a chill-out album, but some tracks will help you relax. It combines excellent rhythyms and percussion, with superb asian-influenced melodies. Each track has its own unique vibe and will have you grooving away. This is a cut above the other (often repetitive) music in this field. It is an excellent album and will not dissapoint you.

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Brillant!

shogun

What an excellent organic, exotic downtempo album! Sebastian Taylor is the creator of this Kaya Project. With many musical talents playing an array of instruments on this album, his impressive skills match the epic proportions of it, in its entirety, blesses the listener with. My favorites are Kanzaman Breaks and Tribal Shift.

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They Say All Media Guide

The most frustrating thing about the Interchill label is its seeming inability to release albums more frequently than about once a year. Those releases are always worth the wait though, and this one is more worthwhile than most. Billed as “a downtempo fusion of cutting-edge beats, organic electronica and diverse sounds and vocals from Hawaii, India, the Middle East and Europe,” Walking Through is basically another solo project by young multi-instrumentalist and producer Seb Taylor, who has also recorded under the names Digitalis and Shakta and performs as half of the duo Angel Tears. This is his first full-length album under the Kaya Project moniker, but he has placed tracks on several compilations prior to this release and is already working on a second Kaya Project album. There’s nothing here that will really take fans of East-West dance fusion by surprise — those familiar with Dhol Foundation, late-period Material or the gentler side of Asian Dub Foundation will know more or less what to expect — but Taylor blends his multicultural elements more felicitously than most, and creates pastiches of startling loveliness and textural complexity. Highlights include the slightly creepy “Kanzaman Breaks” (with its subtle hints of Catherine Wheel-era David Byrne) and the splendid “Tribal Shift” (with its not-so-subtle hints of African Head Charge) , as well as the gentle, almost ambient “Rise Above.” But the album’s climax comes on the fifth track, a stunningly beautiful song called “Twin Soul.” All of the best aspects of Taylor’s work come together on this song, which is sung in Arabic by his partner Natasha Chamberlain. Very strongly recommended. – Rick Anderson

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