Chicago, Detroit, Redruth

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (85 ratings)
Chicago, Detroit, Redruth album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 63:07

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comfycozy

orderedanalog

Its the best Vibert album to date, and I had to give it a 5 just for the musical genius that went into comfycozy.... if you don't buy the whole thing, at LEAST buy that track, it is so awesome.

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Acid Grown Up! (sorta)

vveerrgg

Love this album it's fantastic and a blend of all the mind warping I like in music and has the everyday play-ability that is hard to get in electronic music. Definitely more then well worth the download!

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JaCkOreSPecTiveOfsorTS

tripbrother

breakbeat metal music is the shit. this cd is kinda a history listen. bleep acid house techno that is this groove. so push da bass and crank the volume and love it. live it or leave it baby....

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I think it's this way.

Christianity

Had a frown because I was flaccid on my TURBO. Turned my phasers to 'raspy' before the has-been's lazers went spastic. You get the point...

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Download Immediately!

dlisz1

This album could be a career retrospective or a greatest hits album but all the material is fresh! fresh! fresh! Unlike some other Vibert albums where the music follows a similar path (Yoseph, Stop the Panic) this provides a look into many of the various genres that he has utilized. The end result could have been a disorganized mess...instead, the tracks form a brilliant and cohesive whole. Whether an old hand or newbie, this is a must have. Stop reading - Download now!

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By Michelangelo Matos, eMusic Contributor

Even for those of us who generally dismiss the flower-childish notion that art is too divine to be categorized recognize what a tough break the often dissimilar artists lumped together as IDM have gotten. As with so many genres, from film noir to doo-wop, "intelligent dance music" was named by its fans -- in this case, the tag was codified by a mid-'90s internet listserv that extolled home-listening electronic, the kind of music that was… more »

They Say All Music Guide

The slyly titled Chicago, Detroit, Redruth which links together Luke Vibert’s hometown to the birthplaces of techno and house music is another masterful effort in a career that’s really been nothing but masterful. As the title suggests, things are a bit more old-school, at least on parts of this outing, with more tracks than usual foregoing Vibert’s trademark wacky voice samples, though the anime and educational film voices are still at the heart of some of the songs. Standouts like “Comfycozy,” “Brain Rave,” and “Breakbeat Metal Music” all bask in the glow of Vibert’s whimsical, jazzy approach to electronic music. The opener could be an alien jazzy band briskly jamming in the Mos Eisley Cantina, its menace in line with Vibert’s Plug releases. “Breakbeat Metal Music” is experimental house at is most playful, the vocals consisting purely of a sort of robotic Speak & Spell intoning the virtues of the songtitle’s subject, focusing on the “pleasant pressure (and) serious rhythm” while warning “danger everyone.” When Vibert goes pure techno, the results are just as glorious. The title track bubbles and gurgles in an ominous yet pristine Detroit by way of Redruth way, and the icy clatter is just as invigorating on “Argument Fly,” another bubbly vintage throwback. “Swet” is basically eight minutes of career summation, the “meet George Jetson” musical cue blended into a mad warp of house, techno, IDM, future jazz, and vintage early-1900s radio saying a final “goodbye.” There are even patches of Kerrier District style disco and soul buried in the mixes. Chicago, Detroit, Redruth could be considered a good place to start for a Vibert newcomer, in the way that it looks to the past and future, fusing textures and inspirations that have made their way into his releases under his own name and under his primary aliases Plug and Wagon Christ. – Tim DiGravina

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