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12"
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HEIM 22
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2nd release in Heimelektro's Duftplatten subseries. "Duftplatten means smelling records, and in fact they do! The name of each release and the smell put on the label are the same. That means: this record smells like vanilla ... But, what do we have to expect from a Heimelektro Ulm 'dance'-label? Nobody would expect slamming 4-2-floor here. The question for us was: what could mean dance music for people that have musical interests like we do? On the one hand: why not slamming 4-2-floor? we don't want to start releasing ideological music, there already is existing enough of it! on the other hand: has dance music to be functional? why shouldn't it be possible to make dance music people could listen to at home, too?" Features: Scarcubem ("no one can face this deep endless housey electronica-grooves..."), T-H-D (totally harmonic distortion), and Rober Van Lunteren ("deep melody and super laid back house grooves").
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LP
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HEIM 013LP
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"Heiko Bruchhaus, the 26 year old student of German, is already Heimelektro Ulm's 3rd artist living in Stuttgart. The variety of music happening in Stuttgart's living rooms is really astonishing, considering the electronic house and hip hop monoculture and the absence of any underground in its nightlife. But maybe this is the reason why the music on Dopamin's first release is misplaced alongside modern electro or commercial dance stuff. Heiko tells us that his roots are in classical music (as you can hear in his samples), sophisticated pop music (like Eno, Bowie, Talking Heads), and mid-90s trip hop; but that does not solve the miracle of various old fashioned tracks. The entire album was produced on a very basic Ensoniq EPS (no additional equipment), certainly not a machine that is politically correct with today's electronic artists. The very basic sound work shows through everything, but the strengths of the album are a direct result of these limited opportunities. While many of the actual 'modern' hi-tech electro productions don't show musical inspiration despite their extensive sound work and very complicated beats, Heiko eschews technical gimmicks and concentrates on the song concept. Producing with such basic equipment is certainly much closer to the underground roots of techno than today's electronica mainstream."
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LP
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HEIM 2 LP
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LP version of the Decode CD.
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