![marsha ambrosius far away junglevibe marsha ambrosius far away junglevibe](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/zRwLMC2wP0g/maxresdefault.jpg)
Melodic grace of Reso’s dubbed-out ambience. The glittery synth pop of Little Jinder fades into the Twirls to the swing of Bill Haley & His Comets, and Lime’s own housey summer hit ‘Sex Sax’ steps and Introduce acid to Untold’s future bump, Drop The As with all Drop The Lime mixes, the most unlikelyīeats and artists suddenly make perfect senseĪlongside one another: the raw 303s of Maurice.The Lime’s signature all-in-the-box DJing styleĮncompassed, on the thrilling, adventurous Review: Pigeonholes are gracefully obliterated, and Drop It wouldn't be a proper industrial comp without a bit of Wax Trax! would it? Label staples Ministry appear with their 1982 song "Same Old Madness", a period in the band's history that some consider their finest. Highlights (and there's many) include: Belgian EBM legends Front 242 with "Don't Crash", Philadelphia industrial underdogs Executive Slacks' "So Mote It Be" and the mandatory Cabs track comes in the form of "Low Cool" (the Marcel Dettmann Edit, no less). As part of Amsterdam imprint Dekmantel's Selectors Series, these gems from yesteryear should certainly set the record straight and provide solid reference points for new school retroverts. Fitting that Berghain resident and MDR boss Marcel Dettmann curates a compilation of classics from the sound's heyday: here's someone who actually lived through it. Review: With the renewed attention surrounding industrial and EBM in the last few years (and its influence on techno, again), it's important that someone with credentials gives the new generation a decent history lesson.
![marsha ambrosius far away junglevibe marsha ambrosius far away junglevibe](https://s3.amazonaws.com/rapgenius/MARSHA006.jpg)
![marsha ambrosius far away junglevibe marsha ambrosius far away junglevibe](https://thatgrapejuice.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Marsha-Ambrosius-8h116.jpg)
Oh, and did we mention every tune has been made for this collection? Perhaps the most exciting part of this delightful aural sedative, though, is the inclusion of heads more associated with pounding club adventures, for example Helena Hauff. Then caps it all off by hiring none other than chill legend Mixmaster Morris to put the lot together into one seamless set (available on the DL you get for nothing with the physical compilation).Ī project of huge proportions, there are some very familiar names here to anyone with a penchant for contemplative ambience-creating tunes - Julianna Barwick, Sigur Los, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Suzanne Ciani, to list but a few. Review: Ahead of Our Time, the original label Coldcut ran and now run alongside the ever-fantastic (in fact, never been better than it is right now) Ninja Tune, takes a dash of its sister imprint's artist roster, drafts a fine selection of external talent from the drone and ambient world, and unleashes an epic 29 track journey into the spiritual end of electronic music.