Call To Mind

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (31 ratings)
Call To Mind album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 67:59

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

d&b wanna-be my a$$

azntrance

Commix has done it again :D I guess someone *cough* see comment below *cough* should go use ****** (I'll give you a hint : it rhymes with 'dunes' and starts with an i) if eMusic isn't good enough for them. Then again, that very person has downloaded from 225 artists on eMusic, at the time of writing. Hypocrite much?

user avatar

D&B wanna-be

Bp

Some one said something like 'one of the best D& b albums ever'. Another comment was posted in CAPS claiming this was like an audio orgasm for him. It is average at best and very 'eMusic' in that it's nothing to get too excited about. I want eMusic to do well, I really do but if eMusic continues to be the landing site of esoteric and mediocre music then I fear for the worst. The competition out there in the digital music world is fierce.

user avatar

Beautiful

Raggles

Yet another fantastic artist proving that Drum & Bass isn't dead. Well well well worth the download. All Tracks. You will not be disappointed.

user avatar

D'N'B YES YES!!!!

BIZZL

GETTIT!!! GETTIT NOW MO-FOES!!!!!! ALTHOUGH NOT A PATCH ON THE EARLIER STUFF OF MHEADZ & THESE GUYS HAVE A LOT TO LEARN ON THE OVERALL VIBE ON DNB BUT THEY DO BRING A NEW STANCE ON THEY WAY DNB IS SHAPING???? IS THIS THE NEW WAY FORWARD???????

user avatar

Excellent Album

R_P_Wallis

One of the best D n B albums ever made. Well worth downloading. Superb production.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

The official pre-release press sent out to promote Call to Mind focused on Commix’s wide pool of influences, making this debut album sound revolutionary and even a little dangerous. Instead, much of the album sounds quite familiar, and while techno, house, and even hip-hop flavors are all present, this U.K. duo’s talent lies in how subtly and uniquely they work these foreign tones into the mix. Take the spacy “Belleview” which sneaks techno under a Grooverider influenced beat, or “Spectacle” which is classic jungle lightly dusted with Chicago house style. These outside sounds serve to diversify an album which otherwise draws from drum’n'bass history with “Change” recalling classic gritty, gabba jungle, and the title track referencing the new, blissful breed like Blu Mar Ten. If there’s a radical angle to be touted, it’s probably that Call to Mind is that rare jungle album that works just as well on the headphones as it does on the dancefloor. – David Jeffries

more »