The Power And The Glory (Original Mixes)
Perc proceeds 2011's 'Wicker & Steel' album with a quintessentially English comment on techno and politics with 'The Power And The Glory'. From the track titles - 'Rotting Sound', 'Take Your Body Off' - to the ascetic productions values, the whole thing feel utterly gutted, leaving behind an ironically aware rhetoric that rings true with the producer's glum views on the UK's enervated state of affairs. Drawing parallels in opposition to so much cookie-cutter house in circulation right now, his choice of abrasive, visceral sounds more than just feels right; he's making a political statement against avarice and mindlessness. However, it's not at the expense of fun. Cuts like the welting 'Dumpster' and 'Take Your Body Off' are intrinsically funky, but delivered with a rictus lunatic grin and blackest humour, and the record's most individual moments are by turns the most affective, especially in the turbulent roil of 'Speek' featuring dissected vocal processing by Nik Void ov Factory Floor, and the bleak eldritch ambience of closer 'A Living End'.
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Perc proceeds 2011's 'Wicker & Steel' album with a quintessentially English comment on techno and politics with 'The Power And The Glory'. From the track titles - 'Rotting Sound', 'Take Your Body Off' - to the ascetic productions values, the whole thing feel utterly gutted, leaving behind an ironically aware rhetoric that rings true with the producer's glum views on the UK's enervated state of affairs. Drawing parallels in opposition to so much cookie-cutter house in circulation right now, his choice of abrasive, visceral sounds more than just feels right; he's making a political statement against avarice and mindlessness. However, it's not at the expense of fun. Cuts like the welting 'Dumpster' and 'Take Your Body Off' are intrinsically funky, but delivered with a rictus lunatic grin and blackest humour, and the record's most individual moments are by turns the most affective, especially in the turbulent roil of 'Speek' featuring dissected vocal processing by Nik Void ov Factory Floor, and the bleak eldritch ambience of closer 'A Living End'.
Perc proceeds 2011's 'Wicker & Steel' album with a quintessentially English comment on techno and politics with 'The Power And The Glory'. From the track titles - 'Rotting Sound', 'Take Your Body Off' - to the ascetic productions values, the whole thing feel utterly gutted, leaving behind an ironically aware rhetoric that rings true with the producer's glum views on the UK's enervated state of affairs. Drawing parallels in opposition to so much cookie-cutter house in circulation right now, his choice of abrasive, visceral sounds more than just feels right; he's making a political statement against avarice and mindlessness. However, it's not at the expense of fun. Cuts like the welting 'Dumpster' and 'Take Your Body Off' are intrinsically funky, but delivered with a rictus lunatic grin and blackest humour, and the record's most individual moments are by turns the most affective, especially in the turbulent roil of 'Speek' featuring dissected vocal processing by Nik Void ov Factory Floor, and the bleak eldritch ambience of closer 'A Living End'.
Out of Stock
Perc proceeds 2011's 'Wicker & Steel' album with a quintessentially English comment on techno and politics with 'The Power And The Glory'. From the track titles - 'Rotting Sound', 'Take Your Body Off' - to the ascetic productions values, the whole thing feel utterly gutted, leaving behind an ironically aware rhetoric that rings true with the producer's glum views on the UK's enervated state of affairs. Drawing parallels in opposition to so much cookie-cutter house in circulation right now, his choice of abrasive, visceral sounds more than just feels right; he's making a political statement against avarice and mindlessness. However, it's not at the expense of fun. Cuts like the welting 'Dumpster' and 'Take Your Body Off' are intrinsically funky, but delivered with a rictus lunatic grin and blackest humour, and the record's most individual moments are by turns the most affective, especially in the turbulent roil of 'Speek' featuring dissected vocal processing by Nik Void ov Factory Floor, and the bleak eldritch ambience of closer 'A Living End'.
Out of Stock
Perc proceeds 2011's 'Wicker & Steel' album with a quintessentially English comment on techno and politics with 'The Power And The Glory'. From the track titles - 'Rotting Sound', 'Take Your Body Off' - to the ascetic productions values, the whole thing feel utterly gutted, leaving behind an ironically aware rhetoric that rings true with the producer's glum views on the UK's enervated state of affairs. Drawing parallels in opposition to so much cookie-cutter house in circulation right now, his choice of abrasive, visceral sounds more than just feels right; he's making a political statement against avarice and mindlessness. However, it's not at the expense of fun. Cuts like the welting 'Dumpster' and 'Take Your Body Off' are intrinsically funky, but delivered with a rictus lunatic grin and blackest humour, and the record's most individual moments are by turns the most affective, especially in the turbulent roil of 'Speek' featuring dissected vocal processing by Nik Void ov Factory Floor, and the bleak eldritch ambience of closer 'A Living End'.