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Shortcut Code: [r17911]
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4.20 / 5 (166 votes)
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Cubic 22 - Night In Motion(Orignal Mix)

Cubic 22 - Night In Motion

Label:
Catalog#:
XLT-20
Format:
Vinyl, 12", 33 ⅓ RPM
Country:
UK
Released:
1991
Genre:
Electronic
Style:
Techno

Tracklist

A1   Night In Motion (Original Mix) 5:14
A2   Night In Motion (Nick's Relocated Remix) 4:18
    Mixed By [Assistant] - Peter Ramson
  Mixed By, Producer [Additional Production] - Nick Halkes
AA1   Night In Motion (Battle Plan Remix) 5:10
    Remix, Producer [Additional Production] - Danny van Wauwe , Nick Halkes , Peter Ramson
AA2   Night In Motion (Drum And Bass Dub) 3:55
    Mixed By - Nick Halkes
  Mixed By [Assistant] - Peter Ramson

Credits

Mastered By - Mike Marsh
Written-By, Producer - Danny van Wauwe , Peter Ramson

Notes

Pressed at Damont Audio Ltd

Side A runout groove reads: "Laurent, Thanks for Your Hospitality - See Ya Soon!" "Mike's-The
Exchange"


Side AA: "Another XL Body Blast" "Damont"

Licensed from Big Time International
Special thanks to Laurent
Made in England
℗ XL-Recordings
© Big Time International
Barcode: 5 012093 502069

Recommendations

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Reviews & Discussion

Rated 5/5
Review by baphomet_irl Nov 25, 2007
This was my first straight electronic piece of vinyl I ever bought. I in fact bought it by accident thinking it was 'CubikOlympic808State'. It did however share something with Cubik which made it 'acceptable' in my mind to 'admit' that I was listening to electronic music (all my friends were into punk and industrial at the time), a guitar like crunchy synth as the main 'chorus'. I'm now more than happy that I got this brilliant 12" as I think it is indeed diverse, ranging from full on whistle inducing hands in the air mayhem, to the really very dark EBM or new-beat ish B sides, which are full of bleeps and menacing fat basslines. The synth solo toward's the end of 'Nick's Relocated Remix' is really something special, it sounds very apocalyptic and atmospheric, I always thought it of it as a soundtrack to Terminator 2's opening battle sequences. Overall a great 12". I still wish I had maybe bought one of the other 12"'s I saw that day (at normal 'just released' price): XLT-17 - Prodigy-What Evil Lurks...
Review by budnik Aug 16, 2007 (edited over 2 years ago)
This is an absolute belter of a track. Its a tale of 2 riffs; one part piano driven house that samples something very familiar although i cant think what it is, then after the "PARTY TIME" sample a full on techno assault with a slamming groove that would and would still have dancefloors in a frenzy today.

Theres a lot to be said for some of these old rave tracks, the production may not be top notch, but the love that went into these tracks is evident - made by the ravers for the ravers.
Review by Alain_Patrick Aug 16, 2007 (edited over 2 years ago)
Cubic 22's "Night In Motion" figures among the most important XL Recordings releases all time and took its place as a true anthem on all the ravers minds from the early nineties to the old schoolers from nowadays.
According to the highest English-rave tradition, you have an absolutely fantastic piano melodies after the violins on the drop - a landmark of that era (on the other side, you don't see much pianos or violin melodies on a single Techno tune this days - the purists won't admit it). The most shameful side of it lies on the fact that Techno and Breakbeats could (at that time, on the early nineties) promenade on the same walkside, and now it seems it just have to be 'straight' Techno or that 'Nu School Breaks').
Amazing experiences were felt by the Brazilian DJ Marky when he watched Carl Cox playing it in England recently - the crowd's reaction got him so deep that he reminded of his old days during his legendary residencies at Sound Factory Penha and Toco - when he changed the minds of a whole generation with "Night In Motion" on his repertories.
The "Party Time!" sample comes from the 'J.R. Funk & The Love Machine - Feel Good, Party Time' Disco classic, from 1980.