Wow, just where did this come from? For reasons I will not elaborate upon here, Miss Kittin's & The Hacker's latest joined output, "Two", did not impress me at all as whole, but my god does PPPO shine! The obvious electro influences are toned down, so is Kittin's vocal presence. In return, they offer more striaght up dance floor material, where her impressive voice bursts out with the terms "people pleasure objects power" with huge crescendos of sound building and building as her crazy voice fades out. There is this hypnotic hook throughout with a god sent bass line. There is no way in hell this won't devastate clubs.
Speaking of which, Sandwell District hero Function drops a deep techno killer, with subtle and rolling percussion, with enough punch in the bass department to make subwoofers twitch in agony, as Miss Kittin's haunting voice is layed over pulsating hooks. Unlike the original version, Functions remake is more linear, meaning there are no eruptions of acoustical madness and rabid hisses, but just deep and hypnotic sequences with fantastic arrangement.
If somehow Miss Kittin's vocals just don't do it for you, on the B2 side you have the instrumental version of the original.
In brief: my hypothesis is that if this one does not become a club hit shortly, all music has gone to hell. Mesmerizing, effective and above all, damn good! I actuall enjoyed listening to all three versions of PPPO more than the album this single was taken from.
Speaking of which, Sandwell District hero Function drops a deep techno killer, with subtle and rolling percussion, with enough punch in the bass department to make subwoofers twitch in agony, as Miss Kittin's haunting voice is layed over pulsating hooks. Unlike the original version, Functions remake is more linear, meaning there are no eruptions of acoustical madness and rabid hisses, but just deep and hypnotic sequences with fantastic arrangement.
If somehow Miss Kittin's vocals just don't do it for you, on the B2 side you have the instrumental version of the original.
In brief: my hypothesis is that if this one does not become a club hit shortly, all music has gone to hell. Mesmerizing, effective and above all, damn good! I actuall enjoyed listening to all three versions of PPPO more than the album this single was taken from.