Planet Funk - The Illogical Consequence
Release: Planet Funk - The Illogical Consequence
- Datum: 03.08.2005
Inhaltsangabe
01. Movement Is Noted 02:03
02. Everyday 04:20
03. Stop Me 03:53
04. Trapped Upon The Ground 03:25
05. Come Alive 04:16
06. Laces 03:24
07. The End 04:34
08. Ultraviolet Days 04:53
09. Tears After The Rainbow 08:05
10. Inhuman Perfection 04:49
11. Peak 03:47
12. Dusk 05:07
13. Out On The Dancefloor 06:35
- Genre: Electronica
- Qualität: 192 kbit/s
ED2K-Links
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HinweiseFew people have the right to say their music is a planetary phenomenon, but the Italian-Anglo collective centred on producer players Sergio Della Monica, Alex Neri, Domenico GG Canu, and Marco Baroni can make that claim with confidence. They are the masters of open frontier funk, in the broadest and most shimmering sense of the f-word
With a history of worldwide monster hits behind them, the team that two years ago stormed the charts with 'Chase The Sun' have taken their eclectic groove evangelism to the next level. The introductory Planet Funk album 'Non Zero Sumness' vividly demonstrates that you really can knock down the studio walls and create an open vision of dance music, emotionally connected right across the horizon, from Miami high life to Ibezan beach bar hedonism, from the social reality of Napoli and London backstreets to the spiritual vibe of Celtic folk
When Sergio, Marco, GG and Alex decided to take their time with a first album, there might have been some justification for scepticism. Traditionally, a dancefloor hit leads to a rushed album cash in. Who knew whether it was worth spending two years in the studio, perfecting the marriage of the digital and human, working with different singers, expanding genres and gradually evolving into a fully functioning live band complete with guitars
But if it was a risk to aim high and hold tight to ideals, then it more than paid off. Last year they emerged into the Italian sunlight and found themselves with five singles in the charts. They also won the Italian music industry award for best dance act, best newcomer and best band. Clearly someone out there appreciated their ambition. "The main reason we started, and went on to spend two years in the studio was that we felt that music needed to move forward, because we felt that everything was changing around us," says Sergio. "The world was changing and you feel the change. People who make music are privileged because you spend your life talking with people and in clubs and on the street, its part of what you do. We feel the change day by day, minute by minute. So at that time we were a little bit tired of our music and we needed to mix up the cards again.
With a history of worldwide monster hits behind them, the team that two years ago stormed the charts with 'Chase The Sun' have taken their eclectic groove evangelism to the next level. The introductory Planet Funk album 'Non Zero Sumness' vividly demonstrates that you really can knock down the studio walls and create an open vision of dance music, emotionally connected right across the horizon, from Miami high life to Ibezan beach bar hedonism, from the social reality of Napoli and London backstreets to the spiritual vibe of Celtic folk
When Sergio, Marco, GG and Alex decided to take their time with a first album, there might have been some justification for scepticism. Traditionally, a dancefloor hit leads to a rushed album cash in. Who knew whether it was worth spending two years in the studio, perfecting the marriage of the digital and human, working with different singers, expanding genres and gradually evolving into a fully functioning live band complete with guitars
But if it was a risk to aim high and hold tight to ideals, then it more than paid off. Last year they emerged into the Italian sunlight and found themselves with five singles in the charts. They also won the Italian music industry award for best dance act, best newcomer and best band. Clearly someone out there appreciated their ambition. "The main reason we started, and went on to spend two years in the studio was that we felt that music needed to move forward, because we felt that everything was changing around us," says Sergio. "The world was changing and you feel the change. People who make music are privileged because you spend your life talking with people and in clubs and on the street, its part of what you do. We feel the change day by day, minute by minute. So at that time we were a little bit tired of our music and we needed to mix up the cards again.