Basic Channel – Quadrant Dub
Label: | Basic Channel – BC 06 |
---|---|
Format: | Vinyl, 12", 33 ⅓ RPM |
Country: | Germany |
Released: | |
Genre: | Electronic |
Style: | Dub Techno |
Tracklist
A | Quadrant Dub I | 20:56 | |
B | Quadrant Dub II | 15:36 |
Companies, etc.
- Lacquer Cut At – National Sound Corporation
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Matrix / Runout (Runout Etching Side A): BC 06 NSC
- Matrix / Runout (Runout Etching Side B): BC 06 NSC
Other Versions (5 of 9)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recently Edited | Quadrant Dub (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Mispress) | Basic Channel | BC 06 | Germany | 1994 | ||
Recently Edited | Quadrant Dub (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Multicoloured) | Basic Channel | BC 06 | Germany | 1994 | ||
Quadrant Dub (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Remastered, Clear Marbled) | Basic Channel | BC-06 | Germany | 2003 | |||
Quadrant Dub (2×File, MP3, 320 kbps) | Basic Channel | BC-06 | Germany | 2008 | |||
Quadrant Dub (2×File, FLAC) | Basic Channel | BC-06 | Germany | 2008 |
Recommendations
Reviews
Show All 20 Reviews- Apex of the Basic Channel catalogue, these two shimmering, ethereal tracks still hold up magnificently, decades after their release. The longer, house-ier version (labelled "Dub I" here) ever so slightly surpasses the more experimental "Dub II", but both are unmissable.
- Incredible release by the legends Basic Channel, my personal favorite is the Quadrant Dub II , but both are amazing. buy on sight!
- Edited 2 years agoAre the times right for this? On my copy the 20:56 track is labelled ‘Quadrant Dub I’ and the 15:36 ‘Quadrant Dub II’. Perhaps the labels have been put on the wrong sides, but the matrix inscriptions are no help: I've got ‘BC 06’ and an NSC mark on both sides.
- unbelievable how greatly good these are. blend the b-side in and watch people float carelessly for 20 minutes.
- I got a copy that seems to have Dub I on both sides A and B. I’ve been listening to this on the internet for a while now and Dub II, the feel house version, is definitely not on my pressing... Anyone else have this ?
- For me, this is the most remarkable dub techno record ever made. 15 minutes long ”Dub I” describes the whole dub techno genre in a nutshell. Other side is a deep house version of the same track, which is also excellent work, but it is much more dance floor oriented than ”Dub I”. This record is described as a ”remix” from ”I’m your brother”, but like other ”remixes” by Moritz von Oswald and Mark Ernestus (like Paperclip People remakes), you cannot find the original track from this record at all, except some really silent distorted string noise in the background from the original that most of the people can’t even hear. Everything else is completely rewritten from start to end, and in between. Typical Basic Channel sound also represents their unique use of vocoder in melodical chord sounds generated from beats, noise or whatsever with feedbacked delays, that are presented in this record as well. The result in Dub I is the most hypnotising techno sound you can find in any techno record. Minimalism, functionalism, white noise in the background. Every sound has its own purpose and place. Any needless sounds just do not exist. This is a masterpiece.
Release
Marketplace
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Videos (2)
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