| Where Are You Going? | ||
| Sky High | ||
| Take My Soul Baby (Remix) | ||
| Treasure Towers | ||
| Seventy Three Jam (Interlude) | ||
| It's No Mystery | ||
| Four Silver Rings | ||
| Black On Blue |
| Title, Format | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human Elements (3xLP) | Good Looking Records | GLRMA005LP | UK | 2003 | |
| Human Elements (2xCD) | Good Looking Records | GLRMA005 | UK | 2003 | |
| Human Elements (CD, Album, Promo) | Good Looking Records | none | UK | 2003 | |
| Human Elements (CD, Album, Promo) | Good Looking Records | GLRMA005P | UK | 2003 |
referencing Human Elements, 2xCD, GLRMA005
referencing Human Elements, 2xCD, GLRMA005
referencing Human Elements, 2xCD, GLRMA005
referencing Human Elements, 2xCD, GLRMA005
"Time" is the single of the album, and maybe the best drum'n bass song in the last years. Taking full advantage of Cleveland Watkiss, the song sounds escapist just from the first seconds, and, though its organic and smooth sounds made it difficult to mix, "Time" made an impact, because it's very difficult not to sing the chorus.
The rest is so-so. Jazzy experiments like "Four silver rings", "Black on blue", or the only one which doesn't sound like elevator music, "Seventy three jam", sound like pure filler. The smooth-jazz tunes, "You're divine" and "It's no mistery" are good, but are so out of place next to the other good d'n'b songs ("Sky High" and the sad "Treasure Towers") that they annoy a little. "Take my soul" ends the album with the best one can do with organic sounds and d'n'b: it is jazzy, it sounds alive, improvised, and makes you dance, another of the better Makoto works in these years. The second disc has some videos and three remixes: the one from John B sounds like John B, the other from Nookie sounds like a variation of the mood from the first disc, and the slow tempo mix of "Time" by the (excellent) Kyoto Jazz Massive crew is just nice. So... there are very good tunes in this "Human Elements" album, very good moments, but there was no need for the slower jazzy tracks: they aren't as good, they break the mood, and you don't need them to sound more expert, classier, or to justify your roots. Bear this in mind for the next time, Makoto.