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Carl Craig - More Songs About Food And Revolutionary Art

Label: Planet E
Catalog#: PE 65232 CD
Format: CD, Album
Country:US
Released:1997
Genre: Electronic
Style: Techno
Credits: Producer - Carl Craig (tracks: 1 to 13, 15 to 16)
Written-By - Carl Craig (tracks: 1 to 11, 15 to 16)
Notes:This is the American release of More Songs About Food And Revolutionary Art with the same songs. This version has track 16 which simply is the closing vocals found on track 15 from the SSR version.
Rating:   4.6/5 (90 votesRate It
Submitted by:nfit

Tracklisting:

1   Es.30 (2:26)
2   Televised Green Smoke (6:15)
3   Goodbye World (3:32)
4   Alien Talk (0:31)
5   Red Lights (7:39)
6   Dreamland (6:05)
7   Butterfly (7:30)
8   Act 2 (0:29)
9   Dominas (7:03)
10   At Les (6:09)
11   Suspiria (4:05)
12   As Time Goes By (Sitting Under A Tree) (5:13)
    Written-By - C. Craig* , S. Gregory*
13   Attitude (2:59)
    Written-By - N. Daniel*
14   Frustration (6:58)
    Producer - Derrick May
  Written-By - C. Craig* , D. May*
15   Food And Art (In The Spirit Of Revolution) (6:23)
16   Untitled (0:34)

User Reviews:

, Nov 14, 2006

When I first heard Televised Green Smoke in '96, '97...I knew I was deprived of something that was lost a long time ago...at this time, for many reasons Detroit techno/electronica was something that was overshadowed by all the hype from the current growing trends of electronic music ...unfortunetly still to this day, many Americans themselves are uneducated about the history and future of the Detroit culture, and how important it is.

In my opinion, I think this album was one of the few major releases that marked the begining of the Detroit Techno revival...although there is hardly any actual blatant "techno" on here, the album still carries the essense of it through the production...this sound was still
new to a lot of people...this was an album that needed to be made.

There's a darkness and sadness that swirls through tracks like "Frustration", "Goodbye World", "Red Lights"...probably among the most visual and emotional tracks I have heard to date...there are also lighter moments to balance it all out: "Dominias", "Dreamland", and "Televised Green Smoke"...the album as a whole made a very important statement at the time...listen all the way towards the hidden track to get the entire picture.

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