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Earl Zinger - Put Your Phazers On Stun Throw Your Health Food Skyward - Studio !K7 - Future Jazz

Earl Zinger - Put Your Phazers On Stun Throw Your Health Food Skyward - Studio !K7 - Future Jazz
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Track Listing

A1 Intro
A2 On My Way Home
A3 Song 2Wo
A4 Intro
A5 Battle Of The Mic
A6 Escape From Ibiza
B1 Last Of The Great Bassline Hunters
B2 Ringa Dinga Zinga
B3 Go Ground
B4 Egyptian In The Red
B5 ...
B6 Galaxy
C1 Metropolis
C2 Story Of The Heaviest Bassline Ever
C3 Learning To Fly
D1 Did They Write On You
D2 Saturday Morning Rush
D3 Got To Get To Ibiza

one corner of sleeve has been nibbled!!!!!


Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Sleeve Condition » Poor (P)
Artist Earl Zinger
Title Put Your Phazers On Stun Throw Your Health Food Skyward
Label Studio !K7
Catalogue !K7117 LP
Format Vinyl Double Album
Released 2001
Genre Future Jazz

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Other Titles by Earl Zinger

Escape From IbizaPut Your Phazers On Stun Throw Your Health Food SkywardPut Your Phazers On Stun Throw Your Healthfood SkywardSpeaker Stack Commandments


Some Other Artists in the Future Jazz Genre

JhelisaSpiderNew Sector MovementsBOC ProductionsNitin SawhneyJames HardwayMr. GoneJoseph MalikWorking WeekK2Routes In JazzD*Note & Krazy Cool D-ZineSunshipTyphornsTrüby TrioTutto MattoChungkingBrand New Heavies, TheTafuriTaxi DriverLenny DennisSpacerGroove CollisionIlyaAkashaKarmaD*NoteTikiGK DeepDJ TraxRed SnapperFishbelly BlackPhillip BentSantessaPerceptionBygraves, TheJoseph AnthonyOutsideUteVibraphonic

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Some Other Artists on the Studio !K7 Label

TerranovaGhost CauldronAnniePrincess SuperstarFive DeezHot ChipSwayzakRae & Christian & Bobby WomackKhaoTrüby TrioSpacekPeace OrchestraChris De Luca & PeabirdMike LaddBenjamin DiamondToscaCarl CraigK. HandNicoletteOut HudKevin SaundersonRae & ChristianMatthew HerbertUrsula RuckerChicken LipsWamdue KidsPlaygroupVoom:VoomFunkstörungStacey PullenTigaQuiet VillageGlimmers, TheSmith & MightyReclooseErlend ØyeLaurent GarnierNick HolderFour TetKaos

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Information on the Future Jazz Genre

Future jazz ranges from combining live instrumentation with beats of jazz house (exemplified by the French St Germain, the German Jazzanova and Fila Brazillia from the UK) to more band-based improvised jazz with electronic elements (such as that of the The Cinematic Orchestra from the UK, the Belgian PhusionCulture, Mexican duo Kobol, and the Norwegian style pioneered by Bugge Wesseltoft, Jaga Jazzist, Nils Petter Molvær, and others).

Future jazz typically ventures farther into the electronic territory than does its close cousin, acid jazz (or groove jazz), which is generally closer to earthier funk, soul, and rhythm and blues, although releases from noted groove & smooth jazz artists such as the Groove Collective, and Pamela Williams blur the distinction between the styles. Nu jazz can be very experimental in nature and can vary widely in sound and concept. The sound, unlike its cousin Acid Jazz, departs from its blues roots and instead explores electronic sounds and ethereal jazz sensualities. Nu Jazz “is the music itself and not the individual dexterity of the musicians.” Often, Nu Jazz blends elements of traditional Jazz texture with that of modern electronic music and free improvisation, thus, the music can truly evolve into a multitude of sounds and can vary greatly from artist to artist. The style can include broken rhythms, atonal harmonies, and improvised melody. Matthew Shipp and others demonstrate styles coined as “jazztronica” or "electro-jazz".


Nu jazz emerged from the use of electronic instruments in production in the 1970s work of such luminaries as Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, and Ornette Coleman. Hancock's early 1980s work with Bill Laswell, in particular, such as the album Future Shock, anticipated the style in its incorporation of electro and hip-hop rhythms. Beginning in the late '80s, many hip-hop musicians worked in the jazz rap style -- among them, Gang Starr, The Roots, A Tribe Called Quest, and Nas. Also in the 1980s, many house musicians took inspiration from jazz, particularly post-bop and jazz funk.
In the mid-'90s and early 2000s, musicians from the downtempo scene, St Germain, DJ takemura, Perry Hemus and Jazzanova among them, began to delve more deeply into jazz. In the same period, intelligent dance music producers -- most famously Squarepusher and Spring Heel Jack, and later London Elektricity and Landslide -- took a similar interest. Techno musicians, such as Laurent Garnier, Carl Craig and his Innerzone Orchestra project, have also touched on nu jazz. Some figures from the digital hardcore and breakcore scenes, notably Alec Empire, Nic Endo, and Venetian Snares, have explored a harder, noiser variant on the style. A decade later, some dubstep producers, such as Boxcutter, also explored electronic jazz.

While still embracing the traditional forms of Jazz, pianist Bugge Wesseltoft and trumpeter Nils Petter Molvær are known for their improvisational nu jazz style. The Cinematic Orchestra is also known for incorporating a traditional jazz band while fusing electronic elements into their music production St. Germain, a purveyor of nu jazz music, has sold 1.5 million copies of his Tourist album, thus making it the top-selling jazz album in the United States.

Data from the Discogs music database. Submit a Release.