| pt.01 (7:48) | ||||
| 1.1 | Cyrus - | Inversion | ||
| 1.2 | Paperclip People - | The Climax (Basic Reshape) | ||
| Remix - Basic Channel | ||||
| 1.3 | Basic Channel - | Mutism | ||
| 1.4 | Basic Channel - | Radiance III | ||
| pt.02 (4:08) | ||||
| 2.1 | Cyrus - | Presence | ||
| 2.2 | Basic Channel - | Q 1.2 | ||
| 2.3 | Basic Channel - | e2e4 (Basic Reshape) | ||
| 2.4 | Basic Channel - | Radiance I | ||
| 2.5 | Quadrant - | Infinition | ||
| pt.03 (6:17) | ||||
| 3.1 | Quadrant - | Infinition | ||
| 3.2 | Rhythm & Sound - | Music A Fe Rule (Part 2) | ||
| 3.3 | Basic Channel - | Octaedre | ||
| 3.4 | Basic Channel - | Octagon | ||
| pt.04 (6:09) | ||||
| 4.1 | Basic Channel - | Octagon | ||
| 4.2 | Basic Channel - | Phylyps Trak II/I | ||
| 4.3 | Basic Channel - | Q 1.1/IIII | ||
| pt.05 (4:39) | ||||
| 5.1 | Basic Channel - | Phylyps Trak II/I | ||
| 5.2 | Basic Channel - | Q Loop | ||
| pt.06 (6:41) | ||||
| 6.1 | Basic Channel - | Phylyps Trak | ||
| 6.2 | Basic Channel - | Phylyps Rmx | ||
| 6.3 | Cyrus - | Enforcement | ||
| pt.07 (5:20) | ||||
| 7.1 | Cyrus - | Enforcement | ||
| 7.2 | Basic Channel - | Phylyps Trak II/II | ||
| pt.08 (5:13) | ||||
| 8.1 | Basic Channel - | Phylyps Trak II/II | ||
| 8.2 | Paperclip People - | The Climax (Basic Reshape) | ||
| Remix - Basic Channel | ||||
| pt.09 (8:51) | ||||
| 9.1 | Paperclip People - | The Climax (Basic Reshape) | ||
| Remix - Basic Channel | ||||
| 9.2 | Basic Channel - | Octagon | ||
| 9.3 | Cyrus - | Recall | ||
When this came out, i was extremely excited. the basic premise is that Scion (Vanquier and Substance, respectivly, who both released albums on Basic Channels "sister label" Chain Reaction, which released albums by other people with similar visions as the BC crew) took the BC backcatalouge, and using Abelton Live (a music production software developed by a former member of Monolake, another Chain Reaction allumni) literally mashed together most of the BC tracks into a super condensed, solid, 50 minute mix, often mixing 2-3 tracks into a single "song" often altering the pitch and speed along the way. What you end up with is the best possible representation of the energy of the original tracks on CD.
Basic Channel eventually released a follow up to the original BCCD with one focusing more on the dance orientated stuff, but i would argue that this album is better, due to the inventive mixing of Scion. Of course, nothing beats the original vinyl, which can now be easily aquired either in record or purchased in MP3 format, but this album, which has become increasingly hard to come by stands as an excellent tribute/introduction/experiment for this seminal label.