| Rare | ||||
| 1-01 | Stasis - | Point Of No Return | 6:33 | |
| 1-02 | Phenomyna - | Into The Other World | 6:46 | |
| 1-03 | Paul W. Teebrooke - | Thing 1 | 8:13 | |
| 1-04 | Stasis - | Questions For Vanmana | 4:43 | |
| 1-05 | Phenomyna - | Got The Urge | 6:27 | |
| 1-06 | Stasis - | Funky Purple Hotpants From The Planet Disco | 3:56 | |
| 1-07 | Stasis - | Solitude | 7:36 | |
| 1-08 | Paul W. Teebrooke - | A Face At The Window | 6:47 | |
| 1-09 | Phenomyna - | Earth Fall | 8:07 | |
| 1-10 | Stasis - | Funky Purple Hotpants (Reprise) | 1:40 | |
| Unreleased | ||||
| 2-01 | Stasis - | Alone | 8:20 | |
| 2-02 | Stasis - | Most Of The Time | 6:25 | |
| 2-03 | Stasis - | Reminisce | 5:28 | |
| 2-04 | Phenomyna - | Black Rain | 8:22 | |
| 2-05 | Paul W. Teebrooke - | In Between Places | 4:49 | |
| 2-06 | Paul W. Teebrooke - | With Luck There Will Be No Drama | 2:51 | |
| 2-07 | Stasis - | Smooth Emotion | 6:11 | |
| 2-08 | Stasis - | Making A Connection | 2:38 | |
| 2-09 | Phenomyna - | Objectives | 3:03 | |
| 2-10 | Paul W. Teebrooke - | Past Movements | 3:50 | |
This is not simply Starbucks music, rather deeply felt elegiac wanderings; see "Got The Urge" for a song that operates on multiple levels: the wistful squealing melody indulging in a lonely improvisation on keyboard, the clipped bassline continually retracting the development of the groove, the skiddering beats framing perfectly the tension of the song. Too complex for pop music, too subtle for mere dance, "Got The Urge" eschews the easy and leaves behind only a ghost upon completion.
"Earth Fall" similarly delights. The insistent beats morph into melody, crawling along for 5 minutes until the refrain is unleashed in new tempo, forming a track that works at different speeds, and indeed using those rhythmic changes to alter the emotional pace of the song.
None of these are direct works, and are certainly not accessible in the traditional way dance music is viewed. On first listen they may seem incredibly boring, as melodies and hooks are slight and hidden behind quieted rhythms. Given time and attention, they flower and bear fruit.