Andrew Weatherall - Live Mix - Williamson Tunnels - Liverpool - May 2017 - 4,5h - Free DL
Andrew Weatherall - The Cosmic Traveller Free DL…
4 Stunden 29 Minuten
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vor 5 Jahren
Andrew Weatherall - The Cosmic Traveller Free DL Here:
https://hypeddit.com/track/75aff9 ... Weatherall added vocal
samples from the US soul group The Emotions, a drum loop from an
Italian bootleg of Edie Brickell's song What I Am, alongside
snatches of other Primal Scream songs, and frontman Bobby Gillespie
singing a line from Robert Johnson's Terraplane Blues. Gillespie
saw Loaded as being part of the Jamaican tradition of dub records,
where songs are deconstructed at the mixing desk, adding new
elements and desecrating existing ones. It propelled the rock band
onto the dance floor, and kick-started their career. "I think it's
time to stop saying 'this is a dance record' and 'this is a rock
record,'" said Gillespie at the time. "If you can play music, you
can do whatever you want. Just use your imagination." The success
of Loaded led to Weatherall being recruited for the whole of
Screamadelica, establishing him as one of the UK's most in-demand
producers. While remixing acts like St Etienne, Beth Orton and My
Bloody Valentine, he also held down a DJ slot on London's Kiss FM
and ran two club nights in London. However, he never became a
household name like his contemporaries Paul Oakenfold and Fatboy
Slim - a career move that was entirely deliberate. "That sort of
carry-on was never for me," he told the Independent in 2016. "It's
a lot of work, once you go up that slippery showbiz pole, and it
would keep me away from what I like, which is making things."
Instead, he carved out a career on the cutting edge of techno, with
projects including Sabres of Paradise and Two Lone Swordsmen.
'Titan of music' In 2017, he explained the lure of the dancefloor
in an interview with Uncut magazine. "It's the enduring appeal of
transcendent experience, which has been with us for 200,000 years.
A room, coloured lights, smoke and music? Over to you, Roman
Catholics. There are ancient Greek rituals involving herbal drugs
to achieve transcendence. "People were having transcendent
experiences in 1940s dancehalls, dancing to a big band; now we do
it with drum machines and electronic technology - it's the same
concept. Humanity hasn't changed for 100,000 years, but our
technology has." Musicians paying tribute to Weatherall included
Ride guitarist and former Oasis bassist Andy Bell, who described
him as "absolute titan of music". BBC 6 Music DJ Gilles Peterson
said it was "hard to put into words" the "influence and impact he
has had has had on UK culture." Hacienda DJ and author Dave Haslam
tweeted he was "one of the greatest, sweetest, funniest guys I've
ever met". And Tim Burgess from The Charlatans wrote he was
"shocked and saddened to hear that cosmic traveller Andrew
Weatherall has left the building".
https://hypeddit.com/track/75aff9 ... Weatherall added vocal
samples from the US soul group The Emotions, a drum loop from an
Italian bootleg of Edie Brickell's song What I Am, alongside
snatches of other Primal Scream songs, and frontman Bobby Gillespie
singing a line from Robert Johnson's Terraplane Blues. Gillespie
saw Loaded as being part of the Jamaican tradition of dub records,
where songs are deconstructed at the mixing desk, adding new
elements and desecrating existing ones. It propelled the rock band
onto the dance floor, and kick-started their career. "I think it's
time to stop saying 'this is a dance record' and 'this is a rock
record,'" said Gillespie at the time. "If you can play music, you
can do whatever you want. Just use your imagination." The success
of Loaded led to Weatherall being recruited for the whole of
Screamadelica, establishing him as one of the UK's most in-demand
producers. While remixing acts like St Etienne, Beth Orton and My
Bloody Valentine, he also held down a DJ slot on London's Kiss FM
and ran two club nights in London. However, he never became a
household name like his contemporaries Paul Oakenfold and Fatboy
Slim - a career move that was entirely deliberate. "That sort of
carry-on was never for me," he told the Independent in 2016. "It's
a lot of work, once you go up that slippery showbiz pole, and it
would keep me away from what I like, which is making things."
Instead, he carved out a career on the cutting edge of techno, with
projects including Sabres of Paradise and Two Lone Swordsmen.
'Titan of music' In 2017, he explained the lure of the dancefloor
in an interview with Uncut magazine. "It's the enduring appeal of
transcendent experience, which has been with us for 200,000 years.
A room, coloured lights, smoke and music? Over to you, Roman
Catholics. There are ancient Greek rituals involving herbal drugs
to achieve transcendence. "People were having transcendent
experiences in 1940s dancehalls, dancing to a big band; now we do
it with drum machines and electronic technology - it's the same
concept. Humanity hasn't changed for 100,000 years, but our
technology has." Musicians paying tribute to Weatherall included
Ride guitarist and former Oasis bassist Andy Bell, who described
him as "absolute titan of music". BBC 6 Music DJ Gilles Peterson
said it was "hard to put into words" the "influence and impact he
has had has had on UK culture." Hacienda DJ and author Dave Haslam
tweeted he was "one of the greatest, sweetest, funniest guys I've
ever met". And Tim Burgess from The Charlatans wrote he was
"shocked and saddened to hear that cosmic traveller Andrew
Weatherall has left the building".
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