MIDWEST WHIPPERSNAPPERS by PAUL BIRKEN & FREDDY FRESH

SKU67534
ArtistPAUL BIRKEN & FREDDY FRESH
TitleMIDWEST WHIPPERSNAPPERS
LabelEARWIGGLE
Catalog #EAR 003
Tag
ReleaseW 45 - 2012
FormatVinyl - UK12'
 € 9,50 incl. VAT, excl. shipping

Tracks

  1. Paul Birken and Freddy Fresh - The Fate of Thirty Eight
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/67534_midwest_whippersnappers/1_paul_birken_and_freddy_fresh_-_the_fate_of_thirty_eight.mp3
  2. Paul Birken - Acid Youth of Malibu
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/67534_midwest_whippersnappers/2_paul_birken_-_acid_youth_of_malibu.mp3
  3. Paul Birken and Freddy Fresh - Fifty is Shifty
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/67534_midwest_whippersnappers/3_paul_birken_and_freddy_fresh_-_fifty_is_shifty.mp3
  4. Freddy Fresh - Years Back
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/m/67534_midwest_whippersnappers/4_freddy_fresh_-_years_back.mp3

Description

New tracks from two US Midwest Techno legends that has been getting love from new school producers Blawan, Perc, Objekt and 2562!Their contributions date back to the early nineties when Freddy was exploring the possibilities of extreme techno (via labels like Labworks, EXperimental and his own Analog) - an activity that Paul took up a while later after debuting on Woody McBride's renegade Communique label in 1996. Teaming up for the first of two collaborations on this 12", Paul and Freddy open with 'The Fate of Thirty Eight' - a belting slab of analogue techno, where machines shriek and squawk like possessed animals on the loose. 'Acid Sound of Malibu' sees Paul flying solo, laying down a teasing reverb-soaked warehouse cut where suggestive 303 frequency shifts jostle for centre stage, around a series of both bellowing and piercing sound fx. On the B-side the pair team up again on 'Fifty Is Shifty': a distorted and demented electro workout if ever there was one. Closing the EP is Freddy's 'Year Back'. Originally released in 1998, it was squashed onto one side (with 5 other tracks) of his 'Last True Family Man' album on Eye Q. A hidden gem of that LP, it's an epic, spaced-out trip of pulsing electro that now gets the vinyl space it needs, as well as a beefy remastering.

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