Recorded at Colas Studios
Special Thanks to Oxygen Music Crew, Maki, Tony Versus, Michael Francis, Big John & Loud Magazine
1999 Deeper Rekords, NYC (ASCAP) & Madamix Music Publishing (ASCAP)
Review by Mark_AnthonyApr 16, 2007(edited over 2 years ago)
The A1 mix was one of the top anthems during Sound Factory NYC's hayday from 1999 to 2003. Most would argue that SF lost most of its luster by 2002 but that's besides the point. Jonathan Peters was notorious for looping and working the track for 20-30 minutes during peak hour, teasing the build's and relooping the intro to get the crowd riled up.
From a musical standpoint, Deep Kemical is a very unique track, even by today's standards. Its primary a hardhouse track that consists of wooden percussion, loopy vocal snippets, and a very bloopy low-riding synth for the hook. It carries a lot of pounding energy in a big room (approx 133bpm) but I don't feel that it would very relevant today unless you were playing specifically to a New York or New Jersey crowd that would be able to appreciate it and get that nostalgic feeling reminding them of how good Sound Factory used to be.
From a musical standpoint, Deep Kemical is a very unique track, even by today's standards. Its primary a hardhouse track that consists of wooden percussion, loopy vocal snippets, and a very bloopy low-riding synth for the hook. It carries a lot of pounding energy in a big room (approx 133bpm) but I don't feel that it would very relevant today unless you were playing specifically to a New York or New Jersey crowd that would be able to appreciate it and get that nostalgic feeling reminding them of how good Sound Factory used to be.