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House of Woo

Rate It! Avg: 3.0 (5 ratings)
House of Woo album cover
01
Slave to the Vibe
5:58 $0.99
02
Woo
6:21 $0.99
03
Coins for the Canopy
5:17 $0.99
04
The Figurine (Nod Mix)
4:26 $0.99
05
Inca Tags
4:19 $0.99
06
For Mozy
2:04 $0.99
07
Ice Room Graffiti
4:14 $0.99
08
Peeling An Orange in One Piece
3:08 $0.99
09
Loving the Drift
6:32 $0.99
10
World Taste Sweet (Stuck in the Middle)
4:58 $0.99
11
Kangaroo
4:55 $0.99
12
The Drift (Bonus Track)
4:47 $0.99
13
Shampoo (Bonus Track)
4:51 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 61:50

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eMusic Review 0

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Andy Battaglia

eMusic Contributor

Andy Battaglia writes about music and culture of various other kinds from a home base in New York. His work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Wire, t...more »

02.19.13
Sleek, spacious electronic music
2013 | Label: RVNG INTL. / SC Distribution

Maxmillion Dunbar, a DJ/producer from Washington, D.C., makes sleek, spacious electronic music pitched between the current vogues for the rhythmic action of vintage Chicago house and the heady contemplation of cosmic synthesizer jams. About half of House of Woo plays as certifiable dance music, with upright rhythms that assert themselves with force, while the other half has nary a beat to speak for. Representing the former, “Slave to the Vibe” opens with unbound ’80s keyboard sounds, patiently arrayed in floating fashion, that snap into a formalist grid when the beat kicks in a little more than two minutes in. The way the hi-hat hangs in what sounds like a sweaty expanse of the stratosphere evokes old Chicago house anthems by the likes of Larry Heard (Mr. Fingers, Fingers Inc.), but “Woo” pulls back, quiets down, and drifts into comparatively ambient territory. A few beats still clack and clang, but the background textures creep the fore, and a wandering, thinking-out-loud synth-riff establishes itself in a way that remains present in tracks like “Coins for the Canopy” and “The Figurine (Nod Mix).” The funky dancefloor-filler “Ice Cream Graffiti” goes big and beat-intensive again, but it’s never long before the sound spaces out… read more »

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