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Artist description
Giving you music that you might find useful during tasks done in isolation, whether it be driving, walking the streets w/your headphones on, or staring at the walls in a Bartleby-esque manner. I compose with an assortment of keyboards, samplers, a mac, and some relying on what Josh Wink referred to as the "mistake theory". |
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Music Style
trance, techno, drum & bass |
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Musical Influences
Orbital, The Orb, Depeche, Latex Empire, Underworld, Spahn Ranch, Apex Twin, Keoki, Fatboy Slim, New Order |
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Similar Artists
hmmmmm...... |
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Artist History
Formed in '00, 'a purpose served' released in '02. |
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Group Members
Eugene Song |
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Instruments
Z1, Trinity, S5k, MPC2k, Groovesynth, Emu Morpheus & Xtreme Lead, motu2408, G3 mac |
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Albums
a purpose served |
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Press Reviews
(A recent review of Aftermath II by Ryan Tanaka at Gods of Music).....
I get a lot of complaints from artists when I criticize their music for being overly repetitive (which always seems to be the problem in electronic music), always giving me the same answer. "X genre is SUPPOSED to be repetitive!" Sorry but I don't know a single person in the world that finds unvaried repeated 8 bar phrases exciting. Tolerable sometimes...but never good.
Now after listening to this track it makes me want to put it up on display and tell them, "this is how you do it!" This song is based on repetition like electronic music is supposed be, but at the same time provides enough variation and mood changes to keep the listener interested. Some nice build-ups and transitions, along with some pretty subtle sound effects thrown in which gives the track some depth that a lot of electronic tracks lack. House of Ronin has a pretty good skill of keeping the groove going despite switching feelings of the song. The chords have a somewhat longing and dramatic feel, and if you take fancy to it you’ll find this mix enjoyable for sure.
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Location
New York, NY - USA |
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