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Phoneheads - Peak Position album

Phoneheads - Peak Position album

  • Performer: Phoneheads
  • Genre: Electronic
  • Title: Peak Position
  • Released: 1999
  • Style: Breakbeat, Drum n Bass, Ambient
  • Country: Germany
  • MP3 version size: 1450 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1966 mb
  • Other: MPC MP4 DTS APE FLAC APE DTS
  • Rating: 4.9
  • Votes: 191

Description

Listen free to Phoneheads – Peak Position (Montana, Syrinx and more). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.

Альбом · 1999 · Песен: 10. Доступно с подпиской на Apple Music. Бесплатная пробная подписка.

Peak Position ‎ (CD, Album).

Release group by Phoneheads.

Phoneheads ‎– Peak Position. Label: INFRACom! ‎ – IC 041-2. For their debut, the Phoneheads hit PEAK POSITION, with the jazzstep set at high in "Montana.

Listen to Peak Position in full in the this site app. Play on this site.

Album: Peak Position. Peak Position: Best 2 songs. Phoneheads - Syrinx 06:39. Phoneheads - Laublastig 07:54. Album: Peak Position. Phoneheads: best 2 tracks. Phoneheads - Second Sight Plays, 2002 06:24.

Phoneheads - Orange 15:30. Phoneheads - Black and Blond 06:00. Phoneheads - 72' 06:41. Phoneheads - Comano 05:58. Phoneheads - Sinister 06:28.

Tracklist

Montana 9:01
Syrinx 6:39
Black And Blond 6:00
72´ 6:41
Comano 6:00
Noiß 6:17
Sinister 6:27
Alive 5:27
Laublastig 7:54
Orange Rmx 15:30

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
IC 041-2 Phoneheads Peak Position ‎(CD, Album) INFRACom! IC 041-2 Germany 1999
IC 041-1 Phoneheads Peak Position ‎(2xLP) INFRACom! IC 041-1 Germany 1999

Video

Comments

Vozilkree Vozilkree
For their debut, the Phoneheads hit PEAK POSITION, with the jazzstep set at high in "Montana." "Syrinx" and "72´," however, stay a little more on the rough edge for some more typical d'n'b action, but "Black And Blond" slows down for a touch of funk with a side order of bass. "Comano" is similarly slow, delving into the synthesized double bass for a dreamy jazz club feel, before "Noiß" brings back the breaks for what sounds like an atmospheric car crash, while "Sinister" is the actual crash. The album ends on two remixes they've done for Laub and Jem, with the former a dark piece of ice and the latter, a warm, more typical track. The Phoneheads certainly set themselves up in a nice position.