Ninety

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (108 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
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Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 39:08

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Simon Reynolds

eMusic Contributor

Simon Reynolds is the author of seven books on music, including Energy Flash: A Journey Through Rave Music and Dance Culture, Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpun...more »

04.22.11
A riveting introduction to New Age house
1989 | Label: ZTT Records / ZTT

808 State's Graham Massey had been in the Manchester industrial outfit Biting Tongues. He hooked up with Martin Price, owner of the city's premier underground dance record store Eastern Bloc, and a teenage DJ duo, Andrew Barker and Darren Partington, who, as the Spinmasters, played hip-hop on Manchester pirate radio. 808's first hit "Pacific State" (here as "Pacific 202") was hailed as "New Age house" on account of its soothing sax sample and chorus of sampled bird-trills — perfect "coming down" music for outdoor raves as the sun rises. Highlights of Ninety, their third album but first for a major label, include the poignant "Ancodia," which turns samples of close-harmony soul into a heavenly host hovering over a dense undergrowth of rainforest rhythms, and "Sunrise," whose tendrils of flute and lambent horizons of synth evoke a Polynesian island at dawn. Overall, 808 State's vibe is Detroit techno meets Weather Report-style jazz fusion.

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I only sampled one song...

conorbendle

'Pacific 202': Breezy but busy dDance music that won't help you dance. Likable, but I think I've heard an even better, stipped down version somewhere (maybe version '101'?). A must for Madchester fans.

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Quality

leeblades

This is the UK version and has the correct track listing, the version with American flags is the US release which does have extra tracks. Loved this album when it came out and love it now, a true classic

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Hmmm...half missing?

Marc42

I saw these guys at a festival in '91 and picked up this album on cassette (!?!) I was going to download this, but I noticed Cubik was missing. After checking the cassette, there are 4 other songs missing too... TrackList- Pacific 202 - Boneyween - Ancodia - Kinky National - Cobra Bora - Cubik - Magical Dream - 808080808 - Revenge Of The Girly Men - Donkey Doctor - Sunrise - State To State I haven't looked though the other albums available here yet- maybe these missing tracks are on other albums? My copy has American flags all over the cover...perhaps the US version had extra tracks.

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Biased review

dk303808909

Arguably the most influential band in early techno, and certainly on myself - this album plays out like the alternative take session to ex:el - and nicely accompanies it. Not until almost over 5 years later were Orbital and Underworld producing work of this caliber!

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They Say All Media Guide

808 State’s debut album release on ZTT Records wasn’t the first major U.K. house/techno release, but arguably, it was the most important at the time, gaining a reputation over the years as a true classic in the field of electronic music. While not remarkably different from its many American precursors, 90 not only established that Britain could do things just as well as the States, it also helped to fully lay the groundwork for the ’90s electronic revolution that continues to play out in the U.K. Arguably, 808 at this point weren’t always pushing edges: “Magical Dream” and “Ancodia” have a decided gentility to their grooves. That said, “Cobra Bora” has an aggro edge, mixing gentler impulses with something more clipped and rough, not to mention a wickedly clever sample of the a cappella opening to Van McCoy’s “The Hustle,” clearly pointing the way to the monstrous groove of Cubik in a year’s time. “Pacific 202,” 90′s classic number, fuses the two strains perfectly, with its soft synth and sax combination riding an insistent bass groove that’s just a little bit more forceful than might be expected. The concluding tracks, such as “808080808,” are closer to being in-your-face danceable, though with interesting tweaks along the way, such as “Donkey Doctor”‘s echoed vocal sample and sudden mid-song break to a softer groove. – Ned Raggett

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