DJ-Kicks

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DJ-Kicks album cover
Album Information
ALBUM ONLY

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 72:49

eMusic Review 0

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Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

09.16.08
A classic stroll through trip-hop's glory days
2008 | Label: !K7 Records

If over a decade after trip-hop (or downtempo, or blunted beats, or whatever the hell you wanted to call it) was in vogue it can seem a little soft, well, that's because it was. It was escapist music in many ways, from its obvious pothead associations (say hello to Morcheeba) to the fact that it represented a retreat from rap's harder realities in favor of beats and samples that floated freely away from urban music's rougher signifiers.

If a lot of trip-hop was cheesy, few practitioners delighted in that aspect of it quite the way Viennese-DJ production team Peter Kruder and Richard Dorfmeister did. And nowhere did they delight in it more audibly than on their 1996 edition of K7's long-standing run of mixes, DJ-Kicks. Including one of their own tracks beyond the series-obligatory all-original closing track, Kruder & Dorfmeister selected a series of tracks so definitive you might be tempted to call this a rough guide to the field, from the Herbalizer's opening "A Mother (For Your Mind)" to future electro-lounge-funk chieftains Thievery Corporation ("Shaolin Satellite") to "Keep on Believing" by Beanfield, one of the artists from the period whose run was short but sativa-sweet.

What's most surprising… read more »

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user avatar

why can't the mp3 generation

music4thesoul

listen to an album as an entity? Whilst I agree that some (most) albums have duff tracks and fav tracks that replay on your mp3 player some albums have to be listened to as a whole and this K&D album is one of those. It is not a pick'n mix album it is a progression, an aural journey that should not be chopped and changed. I think it is right this album should be an entity, downloading it is choice (and the parameters of the download are not emusic's). This 13yo album is a snap-shot of that era and the soft-dub, triphop downbeats of 1996. So the choice is the whole album as that experience or single downloads - I know which I prefer. Great album.

user avatar

Right on..

shevstic

With you all the way Dvoodoo but DRM still sucks!

user avatar

nothing important

TrevoR

This compilation is mixed so there is no point to download tracks separately. You can always skip tracks you don't like. BUT it would be nice to download that kind of albums on a special condition i.e. one full album = 5 downloads (depends on how many tracks compilation contain)

user avatar

Not buying it due to stupid licensing.

RuiSeabra

Hi, Requiring a download manager is why I will never spend any money on this album. I usually download by the album, but I like to download the tracks myself. K&D: less one sale, how do you like that?

user avatar

Stop the nonsense talk!

DonCerati

This album is really suppose to be sold as a whole. I have the physical copy and i will never regret ever buying it. download the album and you'd know what i'm saying!!!...

user avatar

Regardless...

tim.zilla

the original was a great mix album (not sure if it's mixed here) and should be downloaded in full, so in my view and in this instance, this argument is irrelevant. Enjoy.

user avatar

it's the label & licensing agreement...

Dvoodoo

The label wants and needs to sell it as a complete work of art. This a great comp, and it's not solely eMusic's fault that's it's not sold on a per traq basis. It's still cheaper and more convienent here than as an import CD which is how this came to my attention years ago. The reasons are exactly like reviewer andreas sez: otherwise this would not be here at all. This is also not the first album like this here, Steve Miller had one recently as well. Get used to it, or go and make your own art, no one is stopping you from selling your music for whatever u want lamerz. It's not "suckie", you are, if you can't grasp compensating producers for the art they lend your lives. No one makes you try it...

user avatar

Suckie policy

Grillo

This is another example of how they only think of themselves and not the listeners. K&D are cool, too bad.

user avatar

Actually reasonable

andreas.paleit

I suspect that the reason this is full album only is because it is a compilation containing some songs from labels that have no agreement with emusic. For emusic to offer the songs on their own without a deal with these labels would be impossible. This seems a reasonable compromise. Plus it is a mix album so there's not much point in owning tracks that start and finish with other tracks audible.

user avatar

Heart Breaker

Rusty_Ranchero

Full album only? Since when do the bands write emusic policy? This is the first time I've seen this on emusic. I thought you guys prided yourselves in not being like those other download services. What's next? 99 cent tracks? DRMs? I love the emusic service, but seeing something like this makes me nervous... And these bands requiring full album downloads (at least on this website) should be boycotted.

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They Say All Music Guide

Though it’s a close race, Kruder & Dorfmeister make for better DJs than producers, as witnessed by their volume in the DJ-Kicks series. Beginning with downbeat trip-hop including Herbaliser, Statik Sound System, and Thievery Corporation, Kruder & Dorfmeister flow through jazzy drum’n'bass (with Aquasky and JMJ & Flytronix) and techno (with Hardfloor and Showroom Recordings). K&D sound much more relaxed and involved than on their own G-Stoned EP. – John Bush