Politronics

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Politronics album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 68:43

eMusic Features

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Don’t Forget (The Rest of) The Motor City

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

Everybody knows Motown was great, but few realize what an incubator the entire City of Detroit was for soul music in its heyday. For each artist on Berry Gordy’s label there were several more just as good who went with another major, or with a smaller, local indie. Some made their names in r&b, vocal groups or gospel before evolving into soul; others started in soul but had their greatest impact in funk. But even… more »

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eMerging Artists

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

At eMusic, we take pride in being the place you hear about artists first. Whether it's through our eMusic Selects program - which brought you the first releases by Best Coast, Crystal Stilts, Strand of Oaks and more - or our Breaking Artist features, our editorial team is always on the grind to bring you the best new artists first. Our eMerging Artists station is your chance to be first on the Next Big Thing. more »

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Rising Tide of Female Jazz Singers

By Dan Ouellette, eMusic Contributor

While the legendary voices of such jazz icons as Billie, Ella and Sarah still ring true, subsequent generations of female jazz vocalists have taken the music in new directions, especially in the '90s, ranging from Cassandra Wilson's new-standard caress to Diana Krall's classics with a twist. Taking their lead, young singers over the last decade have been swinging the vocal tradition onto a new plateau with a pop sensibility. In the mix are tunes by… more »

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Daptone Radio

By Daptone Records, eMusic Contributor

This mix is not for the faint of heart, so all you groovy geezers take it easy with this one, and let the Daptone crew guide you through a soulful journey of some of our favorite party starters, and late night movers. Get ready, cause we're gonna swing folks. There's a Happening going down in Bushwick, and we here at Daptone Records would like to share it with you. You don't have to be hip, but… more »

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Townfolk Hip-Hop

By Tambi Younes, Label Relations Coordinator

Nirvana and Pearl Jam. This is who you'll hear about when the topic of Seattle's music scene is brought up in a historical context. It makes sense. Alternative music has always been the face of the Seattle scene. But before Kurt and Eddie, there was Ray and Quincy and Jimi. Seattle has soul, and the hip-hop community in the 206 is the living proof. They love their hometown and the music reflects that. "Townfolk Hip-Hop"… more »

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Teenage Graceland

By Wayne Robins, eMusic Contributor

After Elvis went into the Army and before the British Invasion, the years 1958-63 were rock's forgotten years. But they were the years that shaped the musical tastes of baby boomers and of acts from the Beatles and Rolling Stones to Bruce Springsteen and the Ramones. Hear the dance sensations, the one-hit-wonders, the girl groups and doo-wop singers, surfers and rockabilly twangers, the birth of Motown, the evolution of R&B into soul and so much… more »

They Say All Music Guide

It seems that electronic music is the last musical bastion without a consistent outlet for political/social awareness. With the exception of a few political oeuvres from Moby, the Allegorical Power Series on Antiopic Records, and Matthew Herbert’s bold Radio Boy project, few artists have taken the bold move to use independent electronic music as a medium for political messages. With Politronics, the forward-thinking Onitor label hopes to rectify this situation. Consisting of artists who have previously made music with political overtones, Politronics tackles a wide assortment of topics without compromising the quality of the music found inside. And quality is the name of the game here, right from the onset, courtesy of Schneider TM remixing Pulseprogramming’s “Suck or Run.” AGF lends another brilliant contribution with her dissection of dominance and fascism, and Matthew Herbert makes a disturbing appearance under his Radio Boy guise; sampling “Quaker Oats,” and bringing to light experiments the CIA conducted using children as test samples and exposing them to trace radioactive materials laced in food. Scanner, Lawrence, and Thomas Fehlmann (with Gudrun Gut) all make noteworthy contributions, bringing to light various causes they feel strongly about. But the most visceral and seething of these attacks comes from V/Vm, who just launches a full-on attack against everything tangential to the current state of digital media and politics in the U.K.. And while all of these tracks are highly evocative in their own ways, they would fall flat if the music didn’t hold equal weight. Fortunately, every track on Politronics does. Complete with detailed and extremely informative liner notes, this is intelligent dance music with a social conscience, something that is sometimes all too rare and precious. – Rob Theakston

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