B-STOCK: Creasing to corner of outer sleeve but otherwise in excellent condition
Ben J'ammin M - "Evolvic" (8:15)
Uncle 22 - "Pain" (4:37)
Point Zero - "Coastal" (6:05)
Escape - "Escape" (The Optical mix) (4:44)
Ike - "Euphoria" (5:02)
Minimal Man - "Outside The Window (Track 1232)" (6:49)
Mad Musician - "Jazz Out" (5:29)
Savel - "Sunflower" (5:47)
Review: ***B-STOCK: Creasing to corner of outer sleeve but otherwise in excellent condition***
The third in Switzerland's best and truest retro dance throwback series; here the Mental Groove Classic series returns with a treasure trove of rare and hard to find tracks plucked from the personal collection of label founder Olivier Ducret, a pivotal figure in Switzerland's acid house and rave-era party scene. Only the best, brightest and most effulgent of house, techno, bleep and analog jams are heard on this series, bringing that heady, yet much sought-after, cross-section of dreaminess and rawness to our wanting ears. From the dreamy breathalizings and Himalayan hollerings of Uncle 22's 'Pain', to the deep ficus-bathed melodic blossomings of Point Zero's 'Coastal', it's clear that the ability to portray wateriness and fluidity in the otherwise (stereotypically) arid drum machine and sequencer form was something extant; a superpower shared collectively in the Swiss psyche of the time.
B-STOCK: Sleeve damaged but otherwise in excellent condition
100hZ - "Catching Spyders (In This Place)" (6:06)
Airtight - "Housewerk FXTC" (5:41)
Detroit Diesel - "Dreams For Santiago" (7:24)
Techno Grooves - "Hiawa" (4:13)
The Moody Boys - "Jammin'" (Ital mix) (5:21)
Shaka - "Pussyfooter" (6:24)
Fortune & Fame - "Is This Your Life" (5:14)
Nagai Eri - "Delta" (5:28)
Review: ***B-STOCK: Sleeve damaged but otherwise in excellent condition***
The Mental Groove Classics is a new series of reissues documenting the sweats and oversights of Olivier Ducret, a pivotal figure in Switzerland's acid house and rave-era party scene. Ducret's Mental Groove label collected and discographized many of the 90s' brightest and yet roughest gems of the time; as both Volume 1 and this follow-up demonstrate, there is an unabashed rawness shared by the likes of Airtight's 'Housewerks FXTC' and Techno Grooves' 'Hiawa' here, the kind of rawness in sound that the various music-makers of today may only emulate, yet may never truly fully replicate, if not for the simple fact of overproduction and/or the all-too-easiness of overindulgence and possibility enabled by digital audio tech. To contrast, this one's simple, drum-machinic grooves mesh rather effortlessly with a transcendent trance, one which reaches a dubby apogee on The Moody Boys' C-sider 'Jammin', not long before a wonky French touch leaves a lasting tactile impression on Nagai Eri's D2, 'Delta'.
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