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Various - Crew Cuts Lesson 2 - Island Records - Electro

Various - Crew Cuts Lesson 2 - Island Records - Electro
Price £6.00

Track Listing

Moving Uptown
A1 Jocelyn Brown Somebody Else\'s Guy
A2 Tony Baxter Get Up Offa That Thing
A3 The Horne Section Lady Shine (Shine On)
Sweating Downtown
B1 Run-DMC Rock Box
B2 Beatmaster Lipservice
B3 Special Request (2) Take It To The Max


Media Condition » Near Mint (NM or M-)
Sleeve Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Artist Various
Title Crew Cuts Lesson 2
Label Island Records
Catalogue IMA 14
Format Vinyl Compilation
Released 1984
Genre Electro

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Other Titles by Various

True Faith The First PhaseLazy DJsFierce Dance Cuts No. 1Serious Beats 1Vox Populi: First Choice Sampler 1993 Volume 1Betta Breaks & Beats Volume 1March 88 PreviewsRegrooves Volume TwoSoul DazeThe Guitar Dance EPThere's A Movement Underground Points In Time 00720 Flash Back Greats Of The SixtiesA Perfecto SummerAction Trax 2


Some Other Artists in the Electro Genre

Paul HardcastleMantronixTotal ContrastKraftwerkWhodiniInfadelsMalcolm McLaren & The McLarenettesLovebug StarskiMasqueradeThe Kartoon KrewShannonTriscoBreekout Krew, TheEarnest HonestStrafeDSMS.I. FuturesNewcleusVarious Whodini / Kool Moe Dee / DJ Jazzy Jeff /Steady BJohn Jellybean BenitezMatthew EDerek BFreeezHerbie HancockBreak MachineThemrocDC AllstarsMirwaisLes Rythmes DigitalesWhite Stripes, TheBiddu OrchestraNeville BrothersJaniceBasic SoundMidnight StarWhoa!MesakHarold FaltermeyerBrooklyn, Bronx&Queens Band, TheRob Dougan

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Some Other Artists on the Island Records Label

Robert PalmerThe ChristiansAmazuluGibson BrothersU2Steve WinwoodCat StevensDark GlobeAnimal NightlifeSugababesSparksThe ChieftainsHinda HicksApache IndianChristians, TheKid Creole And The CoconutsApache Indian & Tim DogAnd Why Not?Angie GilesBourgeois TaggDavid JosephStereo MC'sDJ Luck & MC NeatFrou FrouSheep On DrugsTyler JamesBon GarçonJulian CopeCustom BlueBryan FerryBernadette WashingtonRonny JordanSoul II SoulElckaWill PowersTrouble FunkFreeHi-TensionallSTARS*DJ Shadow

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Information on the Electro Genre

Electro (electro-funk, dance or electro-boogie) is a genre of electronic music directly influenced by the use of TR-808 and funk records. Records in the genre typically have electronic sounds and some vocals are delivered in a deadpan, mechanical manner, often through a vocoder or other electronic distortion.

From its origins, the definition of the electro sound is the use of drum machines as the rhythmic base of a track; however as the style has evolved, and with the advent of computer usage in electronic music, the use of drum machines has become less and less practical and widespread. Electro drum patterns tend to be electronic emulations of breakbeats, with kick drums, and usually a snare or clap accenting the downbeat. The difference between electro drumbeats and breakbeats (or breaks) is that electro tends to be more mechanical, while breakbeats tend to have more of a human-like feel, like that of a live drummer. The definition however is somewhat ambiguous in nature due to the various use of the term.


Staccato, percussive drumbeats tend to dominate electro; with beats once mostly provided by the Roland TR-808 drum machine, the advent of computers in electronic music has outdated this old school method and are now used by the majority of electro producers the world over. The TR-808, created in 1980, has an immediately recognizable sound, and through the use of samples remains somewhat popular in electro and other genres to the present day. Other electro instrumentation is generally all-electronic, favoring analog synthesis, bass lines, sequenced or arpeggiated synthetic riffs, and atonal sound effects all created with synthesizers. Heavy use of effects such as reverbs, delays, chorus or phasers along with eerie synthetic ensemble strings or pad sounds emphasize the common science fiction or futuristic theme of the lyrics and/or music. Most electro is instrumental, but a common element is vocals processed through a vocoder. Additionally, speech synthesis may be used to create robotic or mechanical lyrical content. Some earlier electro features rapping, but that lyrical style has become less popular in the genre from the 1990s onward.


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