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Artist

  • Felix Da Housecat Discography

    Recent Releases from Felix Da Housecat
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Albums

Metropolis Present Day ? Thee Album !

(4 versions)
Radikal Fear 1995

Kittenz And Thee Glitz

(11 versions)
City Rockers, City Rockers, City Rockers 2001

Devin Dazzle & The Neon Fever

(4 versions)
Emperor Norton 2004

Virgo, Blaktro & The Movie Disco

(5 versions)
Different, [PIAS] Recordings 2007

He Was King

(4 versions)
Nettwerk, Rude Photo, X-Mix Productions 2009

Son Of Analogue

(CD, Album)
Mixmag 2011

DJ Mix, Felix Da Housecat

(CD, Mixed)
Emperor Norton Unknown

Singles & EPs

Temptation

(2 versions)
Djax-Up-Beats 1993

Nu - World !

(12")
Guerilla 1993

Those Were The Dayz

(12")
Freetown Inc 1993

What's Love About

(12")
Freetown Inc 1993

Thee Dawn

(12")
Guerilla 1993

Felix Da Housecat Presents Yesterday Dreamers Featuring Willie Vernarzdale - Reach Out (CD, Maxi)

Radikal Fear 1994

Thee?

(2 versions)
Sex Trax 1994

The Remains Of The Conspiracy E.P.

(2 versions)
Sex Trax 1994

Generator

(2 versions)
Essential Vinyl Recordings 1994

Thee Morning After

(12")
Re-load Records 1994

Metropolis Present Day? Thee Remixes Part I: "Metropolis"

(2 versions)
Radikal Fear 1995

The Chaos Engine

(2 versions)
Touché 1995

Tracks From Metropolis Present Day ? "Thee Album"

(12", Promo)
Radikal Fear 1995

Metropolis Present Day ? Thee Remixes Part II: Submarine

(12")
Radikal Fear 1995

Metropolis Present Day ? Thee Remixes

(CD, Maxi)
Radikal Fear 1995

Smak Dat Ass

(2 versions)
Emotive Records 1996

Qwilo & Felix Da Housecat Featuring Lynn Crouch - Dirty Motha (5 versions)

Manifesto, Manifesto 1997

I'm Fed Up With It !

(12")
Not On Label 1998
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Reviews & Discussion

Review by alant1000 Apr 30, 2004
FELIX DA HOUSECAT is a true example of a success story. He spent ages sending out demos, even turning up in London to personaly visit the label offices. This was during the progressive house scene in the early 90's and eventually he found interest from Guerilla records. His early distinctive sound was similar to the "wild pitch" sound of DJ Pierre, mainly because he did some production with him. Later releases like "in the dark we live" on Bush records brought him into the mainstream techno audience, and attracted a remix work from Dave Clarke who was one of the hottest producers of the mid 90's. His label Clashbackk in the latter part of the 90's brought hard Chicago from sought after Chi-town producers like L.A Williams, but the label remained fairly underground. Towards the late 90's Felix was fairly quiet for a couple of years only to explode back on the scene with the new electro-clash sound. He faced some critisism from hardend fans as this new form of music was seen as fairly commercial and dare I say it "trendy". This may be the case, but still this new scene has brought about a much needed fresh and new strain of dance unlike anything else that has been around, bar some of the nu-wave of the 80's and maybe some of the late 90's releases from labels such as Viewlexx and Clone. It has also made Felix Da Housecat a rich man and he deserves it for his pure dedication and tenacity in the early years.
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