METAHUMAN by EPROM

SKU66002
ArtistEPROM
TitleMETAHUMAN
LabelRWINA
Catalog #RWINALP 001
Tag
ReleaseW 27 - 2012
FormatVinyl - UK2LP
 € 16,99 incl. VAT, excl. shipping

Tracks

  1. Honey Badger
  2. Metahuman
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/66002_metahuman/2_metahuman.mp3
  3. Prototype
  4. Can Control
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/66002_metahuman/4_can_control.mp3
  5. Floating Palace
  6. Transparency
  7. Variations
  8. Love Number
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/66002_metahuman/8_love_number.mp3
  9. Sun Death
  10. The Golden Planet
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/66002_metahuman/10_the_golden_planet.mp3
  11. Needle Thrasher
  12. Raytracing

Description

‘Metahuman’ is Eprom’s debut album, borne of futuristic ideals grounding its musical offerings in a space that is far removed from our current reality yet inevitably linked to it. 12 tracks long, ‘Metahuman’ is a bold statement of intent that is aimed squarely at the dancefloor first, though it still functions in other spaces as Eprom balances more restrained moments alongside boisterous musical bravado. Check!The album opens with ‘Honey Badger’, one of Eprom’s most popular dance numbers that has been a centrepiece of his live sets and received support from many fellow floor-wrecking luminaries. Tracks like ‘Prototype’ and ‘Can Control’ meanwhile offer a more subdued but no less potent take on eyes-down goove meditation, using powerful mood-setting atmospheres and chopped up vocal samples from hip hop and Jamaican music. ‘Floating Palace’ re-appropriates hip hop’s swing for space hopping aliens in the year 3030 while ‘Transparency’ is one of the album’s mellower moments. ‘Variations’ hints at pop friendliness in the saturated synth melodies and bouncy swing of its backing rhythms, a feeling subtly carried into ‘Love Number’, fused with another rhythm that clearly tips its hat to hip hop. The energy ramps up again on ‘Sun Death’, ‘The Golden Planet’ and ‘Needle Thrasher’, heading towards the album’s conclusion on a bed of delirious floor-friendly melodies and rhythm. ‘Raytracing’ quietly closes the book by flipping many of the elements Eprom uses throughout into a more delicate lullabye

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