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2LP
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DB 138LP
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CD
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DB 138CD
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The Impossibility Of Eroticism In The Suburbs is the debut album from Scottish producer Matthew Aldworth, better known to the underground as Crème De Menthe. This record is dedicated to all the lovers of explicity, BDSM and Electronic Body Music in its revisited existence. "Crack The Burning Whip," "Abduction," "SadomachochistUs" and the already proven hit-single "Plastique" portray the fantasy and the imaginative power of this producer. Lascivious lyrics, metallic drums, and profoundly slithering electropop push Aldworth's subject matter straight to the barrier between acceptance and rejection. Social disobedience combines with dark glitch and throbbing acid bumps, taking the listener on an exhilarating journey exposing the dark underbelly of the 21st century mindset. For a progressive take on power, voyeurism, control, sex, and synthetic clothing, strap yourself in for the Crème de Menthe experience.
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12"
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DB 106EP
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"'From updated electro-beats to out-of-control acid synths to deadpan vocals, all the prerequisites of a club hit are here.' (NME, Jan. 2002). Glasgow based Matthew Aldworth alias Créme De Menthe produced the hit that already was 'NME Dance Single Of The Week.' Now on Disko B worldwide (before it was only available on Glasgow based Oscar.R. label in a 500 piece pressing). Scottsman Matthew Aldworth, who is steaming from Zimbabwe, describes it like that: add some porn to Kraftwerk and mix it with Soundtracks like Zombie Flesh Eaters and you get close towards the sound of `Plastique EP` -- very british and breathtaking. It is sure to make it into the absinthe-soaked record boxes of DJ Gigolos everywhere."
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