Moesko, May 04, 2007
The great label continued their successful project Global Psychedelic Chillout with the second part. Already the first track is a really special part of the edition, because the artist Vargo's music sounds like Café del Mar, but in Pad's mix, it's a pretty good psychill kick. Grey Area must be a much liked artist by Antaro, he appears in all four Global Psychedelic Chillout Compilation (well, I really like his music, too). Then, a minimal-dubby pearl again by Blake C. Lissa's Sunset is a very interesting track for me, shows that a rainy day can have a beautiful sunset, too. Spacefish provide mellow and deep sounds, but UZ equalizate with his fluent feeling. Bloatsucher's melancholic track follows it, and then, Spiritjack's Slow Burning - the title says everything about it: a very deep treasure. Dienzephalon closes the first disc with a well done sad track Beyond Underground. Now, let's have the second disc, which starts with one of my favorite artists, Ooze. What's Up is a professional intro to a psychill session with rainy, cold and shy, but dinamical soundscape. Yucatan continues with more power, but still the water-like feeling. SBK's track isn't really interesting, but despite its averageness, matches to the compilation pretty well. Necton makes more colorful the album with minimalistic acid beats. OP11's track is sounds like a scuba-diving in penumbra. Alien Mutation is similar to Necton, but more psychedelic, more acid-like. It's interesting to hear an ambient trip by a psytrance group, the famous Etnica. Their Triptonite is fantastic - they are on the top in downtempo, too. Orbient closes the second disc with a classical, but nice ambient track.
This is Spirit Zone's most cold compilation with wonderful "under-the-water"-tracks. In my opinion it's always enjoyable to listen, but the best is in winter, or late autumn. There aren't any bad tracks, even averages sounds wonderful because of the quality of whole compilation.