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Skam レコード& CD

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114/14(ページ1/1)の商品
Break Before Make
Cat: SKALD 035. Rel: 19 Sep 19
 
Electro
Day Tuner
And!
Guess What
Work It
Now What
Start Again (part 4)
Blanket Ban
Filandank
Wtfwtfwtf
You Heard Me The First Time
The Middle Middle
Hiaea
OD
The Beginning
Review: Barely six weeks after dropping her debut single on River Rapid, Henrietta Smith-Rolla pops up on Skam with a surprise debut album. As first full length excursions go, "Break Before Make" is undeniably impressive. Beginning with the spooky, minor key electronics and angular IDM rhythms of "Day Turner", the 14 track set sees Smith-Rolla successfully turn her hand to bittersweet synth-wave ("And!"), dystopian pitched-down electronica ("Guess What"), spacey electro ("Work It", "Wtfwtfwtf"), clandestine electronic soundscapes (the panicked shuffle of "Blanket Ban") and grandiose sci-fi soundtrack fare ("The Middle Middle"). Throughout, the Manchester-based producer consistently delivers otherworldly musical melancholia with a panache not associated with a producer of her relative inexperience.
Read more
Played by: MUSAR Recordings
out of stock $14.01
Break Before Make
Break Before Make (limited heavyweight red vinyl 2xLP)
Cat: SKALP 035. Rel: 17 Sep 19
 
Techno
Day Tuner (2:27)
And! (3:54)
Guess What (7:08)
Work It (4:53)
Now What (5:15)
Start Again Part Four (4:23)
Blanket Ban (5:07)
Filandank (4:02)
Wtfwtfwtf (3:37)
You Heard Me The First Time (3:30)
The Middle Middle (4:16)
Hiaea (6:46)
OD (2:33)
The Beginning (2:49)
Review: Barely six weeks after dropping her debut single on River Rapid, Henrietta Smith-Rolla pops up on Skam with a surprise debut album. As first full length excursions go, "Break Before Make" is undeniably impressive. Beginning with the spooky, minor key electronics and angular IDM rhythms of "Day Turner", the 14 track set sees Smith-Rolla successfully turn her hand to bittersweet synth-wave ("And!"), dystopian pitched-down electronica ("Guess What"), spacey electro ("Work It", "Wtfwtfwtf"), clandestine electronic soundscapes (the panicked shuffle of "Blanket Ban") and grandiose sci-fi soundtrack fare ("The Middle Middle"). Throughout, the Manchester-based producer consistently delivers otherworldly musical melancholia with a panache not associated with a producer of her relative inexperience.
Read more
out of stock $24.65
Hi Scores
Hi Scores (12" + insert)
Cat: SKA 008LP. Rel: 24 Apr 19
 
Experimental/Electronic
Hi Scores (4:58)
Turquoise Hexagon Sun (5:08)
Nlogax (6:51)
June 9th (5:19)
Seeya Later (3:57)
Everything You Do Is A Balloon (7:01)
Review: Boom! Finally another reissue of Boards Of Canada's seminal Hi Scores LP from 1996! Along with the likes of Aphex Twin, LFO and Squarepusher, these guys have helped to define how we see electronic music today and this particular LP is arguably their most complete when it comes to the dancefloor. The title track is a twisted, floaty bindle of breaks and beats, but it doesn't end there. Tracks like "Nlogax" are inherently Detroitian in nature thanks to the bleepy drum machines inside, and all we can say is that if you haven't laid hands on this album yet, you shouldn't miss the opportunity to cop it now. It's still so relevant and contemporary, it hurts.
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out of stock $10.90
Hi Scores
Cat: SKA 008CD. Rel: 20 Sep 99
 
Experimental/Electronic
Hi Scores
Turquoise Hexagon Sun
Nlogax
June 9th
Seeya Later
Everything You Do Is A Balloon
Review: Boom! Finally another reissue of Boards Of Canada's seminal Hi Scores LP from 1996! Along with the likes of Aphex Twin, LFO and Squarepusher, these guys have helped to define how we see electronic music today and this particular LP is arguably their most complete when it comes to the dancefloor. The title track is a twisted, floaty bindle of breaks and beats, but it doesn't end there. Tracks like "Nlogax" are inherently Detroitian in nature thanks to the bleepy drum machines inside, and all we can say is that if you haven't laid hands on this album yet, you shouldn't miss the opportunity to cop it now. It's still so relevant and contemporary, it hurts.
Read more
out of stock $8.29
Refuge Of A Twisted Soul
Cat: SKALP 031. Rel: 18 Jun 15
 
Deep Dubstep
Blood Soldiers (3:12)
Sect (3:09)
Hopper (2:17)
Cam (2:49)
7 Cycles (3:43)
Blackboard Jungle (3:35)
Ferm (2:51)
GBA (2:53)
Era (3:54)
T15 (3:38)
ONEFIVEOOOH (4:29)
Review: UK techno veterans Mark Broom and James Ruskin first joined forces under The Fear Ratio alias back in 2011, delivering the inventive - and hugely enjoyable - IDM-meets-techno full-length, Light Box. Several years on the pair realign as The Fear Ratio for a second album, issued somewhat surprisingly through Skam, which gleefully explores similar sonic territory, whilst throwing a few more influences - most notably experimental hip-hop and vintage electro - into the pot for good measure. The result is a hugely entertaining album that naturally doffs a cap to Skam Records' dystopian roots, as well as the heavyweight soundsystem throb of dubstep, the hypnotism of dub techno, and the crackling electronic wizardry of Autechre.
Read more
Played by: Exium, Mark Broom
out of stock $29.84
Refuge Of A Twisted Soul
Cat: SKALD 031. Rel: 18 Jun 15
 
Deep Dubstep
Blood Soldiers
Sect
Hopper
Cam
7 Cycles
Blackboard Jungle
Ferm
GBA
Era
T15
Onefiveoooh
Review: UK techno veterans Mark Broom and James Ruskin first joined forces under The Fear Ratio alias back in 2011, delivering the inventive - and hugely enjoyable - IDM-meets-techno full-length, Light Box. Here they join forces once more for a follow-up that gleefully explores similar sonic territory, whilst throwing a few more influences - most notably experimental hip-hop and vintage electro - into the pot for good measure. The result is a hugely entertaining album that naturally doffs a cap to Skam Records' dystopian roots, as well as the heavyweight soundsystem throb of dubstep, the hypnotism of dub techno, and the crackling electronic wizardry of Autechre.
Read more
out of stock $11.41
Live EP
Live EP (12" + insert)
Cat: SKA 035. Rel: 07 Mar 18
 
Techno
GBA (live) (6:13)
Onefiveoooh (live) (6:36)
Intl (Test mix) (2:33)
Era (live) (8:31)
Review: Mark Broom and James Ruskin re-ignite as The Fear Ratio, with their third appearance on British IDM imprint Skam. Under this alias, the pair of techno figureheads explore styles outside of their usual techno trajectory - pushing their sonic repertoire into the realms of extreme electronics and UK derived splintered beat explorations. Featuring exclusive versions of tracks taken from their last album Refuge of A Twisted Soul, and made in preparation for their live sets. The industrial strength breaks of "GBA" can match anything by fellow brethren British Murder Boys, "Onefiveoooh" is as much hyperware as it is completely contorted, while the deep and atmospheric slow burner "Era" allows you a moment to come up for air.
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Played by: Billy Nasty, M50
out of stock $8.57
They Can't Be Saved
Cat: SKALP 036. Rel: 17 Mar 20
 
Experimental/Electronic
Sender (3:17)
Exile (3:49)
Grey Code (4:13)
Small World (4:43)
The Invisible Girl (3:34)
The Curse (5:21)
LM3 (4:50)
Captive (2:41)
Game Plan (3:24)
The Final Vision (5:32)
BY3 (3:23)
A406 (4:44)
Review: James Ruskin and Mark Broom return with a third installment of their wayward electronica project, The Fear Ratio. Far from the bruising techno they normally throw down, "They Can't Be Saved" is an introspective trip into the knotted realms of hip-hop influenced machine music produced down to the nth degree. The beats crunch hard and the atmospheres come shrouded in mystery, slotting in perfectly on the legendary Manchester label Skam. Both a wonderful revival of leftfield electronica and a vital, fresh approach, this third album is another triumphant one. Slap this one on and revel in the sound of two hugely accomplished producers cutting loose and having fun in the studio.
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 in stock $19.20
They Can't Be Saved
Cat: SKALD 036. Rel: 29 Apr 20
 
Experimental/Electronic
Sender
Exile
Grey Code
Small World
The Invisible Girl
The Curse
LM3
Captive
Game Plan
The Final Vision
BY3
A406
Review: As solo artists, James Ruskin and Mark Broom are celebrated for the uncompromising nature of their techno tracks. Yet when they come together as The Fear Ratio, the resulting off-kilter electronic music is much more akin to the angular, electro-influenced IDM work of fellow Skam associates Autechre, Gescom and Freeform. "They Can't Be Saved", their first full-length for five years, continues in this vein, delivering a distorted, mind-altering fusion of clanking, left-of-centre drum machine rhythms, otherworldly aural textures, alien electronics, ghostly chords and cybernetic melodies that more often that not skittishly race across the soundscape. Its impressive stuff all told and should appeal to all of those who appreciate the more skewed and unearthly end of the electronic spectrum.
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out of stock $10.90
1995
1995 (gatefold 2xLP)
Cat: SKALP 032. Rel: 28 Apr 16
 
Experimental/Electronic
FZ Requiem (1:35)
Knight Love (3:36)
Lake Windermere (3:57)
Vermilion (5:14)
Saint Bees (3:12)
Mancunian Way (3:51)
Momentum (SH101DR55 mix) (3:03)
Nima (2:57)
British Rail (2:18)
Lunar Jetman (4:35)
ZX82 (4:22)
Shockwave Rider (4:43)
Starglider (1:39)
Sabre Wulf (4:38)
Univac (6:32)
Review: The reborn Skam comes through with an essential archival undertaking of one of the artists that helped establish them in the mid-'90s experimental electronic firmament. Dylan 'Jega' Nathan was highly lauded for his technically proficient, DSP-rich output on Skam and Planet Mu before sinking into the shadows to wide lamentation. Last seen on the latter label with the expansive album Variance back in 2009, Dylan pops his head back above the parapet with 1995, a double LP offering of early demos from the Skam archives. 1995 is made up of fifteen live, straight-to-tape jams from, oddly enough, 1995, mastered and collated together as a fine document of the flair Nathan possessed even in more technologically modest days.
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out of stock $17.39
Lego Feet
Lego Feet (2xLP)
Cat: SKA 001LP. Rel: 13 Jul 12
 
Electro
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Review: Autechre have had a long period of hiatus but this year saw the legendary pair reignite their chimerical touch on electronic music thanks to their ne alias Lego Feet, demonstrating the pair's previously unknown electro sensibility. Made up of 4 parts, the first takes a Chicago spin on things, with that muffled rave bassline prowling hastily over the freeflowing synths below it. "Part 2" sounds something like Autechre and Drexciya combined, but "Part 3" is where we enter videogame mode, flushing in a serious dose of Mario Bros melodies. "Part 4" differs greatly once again, working that drum machine to its full potential.
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out of stock $15.56
Lego Feet
Cat: SKAM 001CD. Rel: 02 Dec 11
 
Electro
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Review: This is something of a treat for fans of British electronica. Originally released as the first ever Skam 12" in 1991, Lego Feet's eponymous debut was the first glimpse IDM fans had of Sean Booth and Rob Brown, the duo who would later go on to greater success under the Autechre moniker. With original 12" copies changing hands for several hundred pounds online, this expanded 20th anniversary CD issue is a welcome reminder of the original's raw power and glistening finesse. With the album presented as a near seamless musical journey - in parts clanking and industrial, at other times shimmering with melodic intent - Lego Feet is far more grandiose and ambitious than anything Booth and Brown have recorded since. A thrilling blast from the past.
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out of stock $11.93
Experiment Four
Cat: SKALD 029. Rel: 01 Mar 12
 
Electro
Spectre
Taper
Thought Peephole
Pod
W4l23z
Arabic Acid
Fuck Buddies
Lectric Landlady
Miss Heroin
Lows
Punchinello
Projection
010
Detach
Dr Eamprie Stess
Math
-20
Mors Janue Vitae
Review: It's been a while since mysterious noisenik Mr 716X dropped an album on longtime home Skam; in fact, he most recent full-length dropped way back in 2007. Those who've been missing his intense, brain-melting fusions of ragging acid, break core, jungle, techno and concrete-hard IDM are in for a treat, though, as Experiment Four is as breathlessly uncompromising as ever. While there are brief moments of fluid positivity - see the bubbling "Pod", Squarepusher-ish circuit board jazz of "W4l23z" and chiming, Aphex-ish "Arabic Acid" - for the most part Mr 716X keeps it consciously off-beat and challenging. Yet for all the clattering, titanium-coated beats and overloaded computer freakery on show, there's a strange beauty throughout - not least on the frankly bonkers "Lectric Landlady".
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out of stock $9.33
Persistence Of Vision
Persistence Of Vision (limited gatefold heavyweight vinyl 2xLP + insert)
Cat: SKALP 030. Rel: 21 Aug 14
 
Electro
Enter The Devil
Son't Look In The Closet
Gas Human No 1
Mutant Nights
Camera Eyes
Red Ocean Apocalypse
Dead To Morrow
Tracking The Moon Beast
Frozen
Body Magic
Farewell Africa
Do You Understand?
Lect City
Jealousy
Angels Never Sleep
Review: Ever since the label's formation in 1991, Skam has strived to support innovative artists based around its home in NW England. VHS Head - AKA Ade Blacow - fits into this category rather well; not only does he hail from Blackpool, but he also sources the majority of his sounds from old VHS tapes. This second album follows some four years after the VHS Head debut set Trademark Ribbons of Gold arrived and is a thoroughly enjoyable listen, delivering a quirky but attractive blend of cut-up electronic funk, bespoke IDM rhythms, vintage synth melodies and wayward electronics. If Dam Funk, Funkineven, Autechre and Boards of Canada got down in the studio together, it would probably sound like this.
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out of stock $17.91
114/14(ページ1/1)の商品
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