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Shortcut Code: [r476639]
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4.54 / 5 (56 votes)
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Vex'd - Degenerate

Label:
Catalog#:
ZIQ115CD
Format:
2 x CD, Album, Slipcase
Country:
UK
Released:
10 Jul 2005
Genre:
Electronic
Style:
Dubstep

Tracklist

1-01   Pop Pop V.I.P. 6:55 X
1-02   Thunder 6:36 X
1-03   Angels 6:34 X
1-04   Corridor 6:24 X
1-05   Cold 3:32 X
1-06   Venus 5:38 X
1-07   Gunman 6:08 X
1-08   Crusher Dub 3:09 X
1-09   Fire 6:27 X
1-10   Destruction 0:58 X
1-11   Lion V.I.P. 5:59 X
1-12   Slime 4:51 X
2-01   Canyon 6:03 X
2-02   Pop Pop 6:00 X
2-03   Ghost 5:55 X
2-04   Lion 7:05 X
2-05   Smart Bomb 5:46 X
2-06   End Of Line 6:25 X
    Featuring - Search & Destroy (2)

Notes

The track order listed on the second CD is actually reversed for the tracks Ghost and Lion.
They appear here in the proper order.

Recommendations

▸ show all 4 reviews

Reviews & Discussion

Review by Yage_2097 Nov 30, 2008
In the early days of Planet Mu I thought that this label would only copy IDM sounds of WARP Records, Rephlex or Skam. Unfortunately WARP went "Pop" by nearly releasing Alt.Rock stuff, Schematic and Skam nearly stopped releasing Music and Sublight declared their bankrupt in 2007. But Planet Mu survived by making a good change in the direction of Dubstep and Breakcore, two new styles whitch dominate the electronic music scene now in the second half of the 00's.

And here we have Vex'd 's Degenerate album. Once you put it into your CD player you can't stand still, you HAVE to dance. Enormous beats with the precision of Kraftwerk and the sharpness of Industrial. JUST great. In my opinion one of the best Dubstep albums with Burial and the latest afford of Meat Beat Manifesto ("Autoimmune").

Well, excuse me now. I have to repair my subwoofer.
Review by MangaCorps Feb 15, 2008
This was a groundbreaking release for the dubstep genre in my opinion. Because it was released on Planet Mu (not so into dubstep at the time, as it is now), it reached a wider audience. To be quite honest it was one of the first dubstep releases I heard, and it's still one of the best. I couldn't believe how bass-heavy this music was. Truly innovative stuff.

This record will just eat your subwoofers. Released in 2005, still up there in 2008! Class material
Review by thezovietdada Sep 21, 2006 (edited over 3 years ago)
This album has been one of the first things I press on my ipod for quite some weeks now, it's absolute madness how well done this is. No one has ever made bass this sharp, it feels like some kind of block-blasting sonic weapon. It grooves like the best of the heydey of darkstep (think Ed Rush having a nightmare) but sounds as harsh as any breakcore, or even industrial. The only comparison I can manage is Pan Sonic - specifically the first disc of Kesto, one of the only other artists I know that make analog drones this piercing), but without the icey grooveless minimalism. Thick, burning stuff.
Rated 5/5
Review by johnbushby Jul 19, 2005 (edited over 4 years ago)
Do the Vex'd boys have a license to create this much bass? From the outset with the updated version of the first single Pop Pop VIP this CD rips weakened speaker cones to shreds with relentless crashing overdriven beats and growling sub bass. I looked up the word "degenerate" in a thesaurus and these are some alternatives: debauched, degraded, infamous, low, mean, miscreant, nefarious, corrode, corrupt, devil, fiend, lout, monster, ogre, ruffian, sadist. Imagine those words were music... thats what Vex'd make.