FabricLive.23

Last updated
FabricLive.23
FabricLive.23.png
Compilation album by
ReleasedAugust 2005
Recorded2005
Genre Electronic music
Length71:50
Label Fabric
Producer Death in Vegas
Death in Vegas chronology
Satan's Circus
(2004)
FabricLive.23
(2005)
Trans-Love Energies
(2011)
FabricLive chronology
FabricLive.22
(2005)
FabricLive.23
(2005)
FabricLive.24
(2005)

FabricLive.23 is a DJ mix compilation album by Death in Vegas, as part of the FabricLive Mix Series.

Contents

Reception

FabricLive.23 was well-received by Allmusic writer David Jeffries, who gave it three and a half stars out of five, calling it "a satisfying mix that's more headphones than dancefloor...step two in Death in Vegas' thrilling rebirth as a heady mavericks". [1] Andrew McLachlan, reviewing the album for PopMatters, also viewed it positively, calling it "a great record...a record for Death in Vegas fans but also for electronica fans". [2]

Track listing

  1. Solvent - Science With Synthesizers - Ghostly International
  2. Death in Vegas - Zugaga - Drone
  3. Slacknoise Vs Plexus - Ana Tak 2 - Minus Inc.
  4. Death in Vegas - Heil Xanax - Drone
  5. Alex Smoke - Lost In Sound - Soma Recordings
  6. Mossa - Cheap Therapy - Mo's Ferry Productions
  7. Cybotron - Alleys Of Your Mind - Tresor
  8. Solvent - Think Like Us (Ectomorph Mix) - Ghostly International
  9. Alex Cortex - Phlogiston - PAL
  10. Dinky - Acid In My Fridge - Cocoon Recordings
  11. Mathew Jonson - Marionette - Wagon Repair
  12. Alex Smoke - Neds - Vakant
  13. Wighnomy Brothers - Pele Bloss - Freude-am-Tanzen Recordings
  14. Death in Vegas - Reigen (Acid Mix) - Drone
  15. Analog Fingerprints - Accent - Pigna Records
  16. Blue Ketchuppp - Don't Trust Your Computer - Bee Records
  17. Death in Vegas - Natja (Scorpio Rising Mix) - SonyBMG
  18. Mathew Jonson - Typerope - Itiswhatitis Recordings
  19. John Dahlbäck - Jenna - Morris Audio

Related Research Articles

Death in Vegas Band

Death in Vegas are an English electronic music group, for which Richard Fearless serves as frontman. Influenced by a wide range of musical genres including psychedelic rock, electronica, krautrock, dub and industrial, the band's sound is constantly changing, moving between live rock sounds, electronica and minimal techno. The band was formed in 1994 by Fearless and Steve Hellier and signed to Concrete Records under the name of Dead Elvis. Owing to an Irish record label of the same name, Dead Elvis became the title of their first album instead.

K. T. Oslin American singer-songwriter

K. T. Oslin was an American country music singer–songwriter. Oslin had several years of major commercial success in the late 1980s after signing a record deal at age 45. She had four number one hits and placed additional singles on the Billboard country chart during that timespan; in addition, she won three Grammy Awards and is an inductee of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.

<i>Rush in Rio</i> 2003 live album by Rush

Rush in Rio is a three-disc live album by Canadian band Rush, released on October 21, 2003. The album is also available as a two DVD set. With the exception of the last two tracks on the third disc, the album was recorded at Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on the final night of the Vapor Trails Tour. The other two tracks were taken from previous shows on the same tour. "Between Sun & Moon" was recorded at the Cricket Wireless Pavilion, Phoenix, Arizona, on September 27, 2002, and "Vital Signs" was recorded at the Colisée Pepsi, Quebec City, Quebec, on October 19, 2002.

Esmerine

Esmerine is a Canadian modern chamber music group that incorporates genres such as post rock, drone music, post punk, and Turkish folk. Founded in Montreal in 2000 by Bruce Cawdron (drums) and Beckie Foon (cello), current members also include percussionist Jamie Thompson and multi-instrumentalist Brian Sanderson. The band has released six albums. Dalmak, was awarded Instrumental Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2014. Their 2015 album Lost Voices is nominated for Instrumental Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2016.

<i>9.0: Live</i> 2005 live album by Slipknot

9.0: Live is the first live album by American heavy metal band Slipknot. The band recorded the two-disc album during a 2004–05 world tour that promoted their third studio album Vol. 3: . Released by Roadrunner Records on November 1, 2005, 9.0: Live features tracks from Slipknot's first three studio albums: Slipknot, Iowa, and Vol. 3: . Many of the included tracks are rarely played live; "Skin Ticket" from the album Iowa was its first live performance. 9.0: Live peaked in the top twenty in album sales for Austria and the United States, and was certified gold in the United States. Critical reception was generally positive, with Adrien Begrand of PopMatters calling it a "very worthy live album".

Plump DJs are an English dance music duo consisting of Lee Rous and Andy Gardner, considered to be early pioneers of the breakbeat genre in late 1990s. Throughout the 2000s, they have been very prolific creatively, releasing many celebrated underground singles, albums compilations. Also remixing the records of well-known dance music mega stars such as Deadmau5, Mark Ronson, Fatboy Slim, Orbital and the Stanton Warriors. They cemented their international status through their 10-year residency at London's famous superclub Fabric, in a career that has taken the duo to the largest stages on all four corners of this earth to perform.

Fabric discography

From November 2001 to November 2018, the London nightclub fabric ran a monthly mix compilation series. Mixed by a variety of emerging and established DJs, the two series were entitled fabric and FABRICLIVE respectively. The compilation mixes were released independently by fabric on an alternating monthly basis.

<i>Fabric 19</i> 2004 compilation album by Andrew Weatherall

Fabric 19 is a DJ mix compilation album by Andrew Weatherall, as part of the Fabric Mix Series. It was released on 15 November 2004.

<i>Fabric 22</i> 2005 compilation album by Adam Beyer

Fabric 22 is a DJ mix compilation album by Adam Beyer, as part of the Fabric Mix Series.

<i>Satans Circus</i> 2004 studio album by Death in Vegas

Satan's Circus is the fourth studio album by Death in Vegas, released on 11 October 2004 on Drone Records in the United Kingdom and on 24 May 2005 on Sanctuary Records in the United States. Contrary to previous releases, this album features no guest vocalists. This album is the first release through Death in Vegas's own label, Drone Records. It peaked at #79 on the French Albums Chart.

<i>Here Come the Lies</i> 2002 studio album by The Drones

Here Come the Lies is the debut album released by Perth band The Drones.

<i>FabricLive.45</i> 2009 mix album by A-Trak

FabricLive.45 is a 2009 album by A-Trak. The album was released as part of the FabricLive Mix Series.

Psychedelic Horseshit is an American band from Columbus, Ohio, that plays a microgenre of lo-fi noise pop that they christened "shitgaze".

<i>FabricLive.48</i> 2009 compilation album by Filthy Dukes

FabricLive.48 is a 2009 album by Filthy Dukes. The album was released as part of the FabricLive Mix Series.

Neighbors Know My Name 2010 single by Trey Songz

"Neighbors Know My Name" is a song by American R&B singer Trey Songz. It was written by Songz with Patrick Hayes and Troy Taylor, who produced the song with John "$K" McGee. It was released to rhythmic and urban airplay as the fifth and final single from his third studio album, Ready on February 16, 2010. The song, described as being hook-heavy and having a powerful bassline, received generally positive reviews from critics. The song reached forty-three on the Billboard Hot 100 and four on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, becoming Songz's third consecutive top five R&B hit.

Imagine Dragons American pop rock band

Imagine Dragons is an American pop rock band from Las Vegas, Nevada, consisting of lead singer Dan Reynolds, lead guitarist Wayne Sermon, bassist Ben McKee, and drummer Daniel Platzman. The band first gained exposure with the release of their single "It's Time", followed by their award-winning debut studio album Night Visions (2012), which resulted in the chart-topping singles "Radioactive" and "Demons". Rolling Stone named "Radioactive", which holds the record for most weeks charted on the Billboard Hot 100, the "biggest rock hit of the year". MTV called them "the year's biggest breakout band", and Billboard named them their "Breakthrough Band of 2013" and "Biggest Band of 2017". and placed them at the top of their "Year in Rock" rankings for 2013, 2017, and 2018. Imagine Dragons topped the Billboard Year-End "Top Artists – Duo/Group" category in 2018.

<i>House of Yes: Live from House of Blues</i> 2000 live album by Yes

House of Yes: Live from House of Blues is a double live album by the English progressive rock band Yes, released on 25 September 2000 by Eagle Records in the United Kingdom and by Beyond Music in the United States. It is a recording of the band's performance at the House of Blues at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas on 31 October 1999 during their world tour supporting their eighteenth studio album The Ladder. By the time of the album's release, guitarist Billy Sherwood and keyboardist Igor Khoroshev were already out of the band, reducing Yes to a four-piece.

Southern Girls 1977 single by Cheap Trick

"Southern Girls" is a song written by Rick Nielsen and Tom Petersson that was first released by Cheap Trick on their 1977 album In Color, produced by Tom Werman. It was also released as a single. It has been covered by a number of artists, including Bangs, Everclear and Gilby Clarke.

<i>Fanatic</i> (album) 2012 studio album by Heart

Fanatic is the fifteenth studio album by American rock band Heart, released October 2, 2012 through Legacy Recordings. The album was recorded in hotel rooms and studios up and down the West Coast, with Grammy-winning producer Ben Mink, who had previously produced Red Velvet Car (2010), back at the helm.

<i>Smoke in the Shadows</i> 2004 studio album by Lydia Lunch

Smoke in the Shadows is the fifth album by American singer-songwriter Lydia Lunch, released in November 2004 by record labels Atavistic and Breakin Beats.

References

  1. Jeffries, David "Fabriclive.23 Review", Allmusic. Retrieved 6 February 2021
  2. McLachlan, Andrew (2005) "Death in Vegas: FabricLive 23", PopMatters, 8 September 2005. Retrieved 6 February 2021