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Dubber Side Of The Moon
Barnes and Noble
Dubber Side Of The Moon
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Dubber Side Of The Moon
Current price: $12.99
Size: CD
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A highly desirable set of beatmakers and dub masters are handling the remixes here, but the reason
Dubber Side of the Moon
works so well could very well be the seven years that have passed since the source material was released. Everyone from dub legend
Mad Professor
to dubstep upstart
Kalbata
digs deep into these tracks, as if they picked up the
Easy Star All-Stars
' original
Pink Floyd
tribute,
Dub Side of the Moon
, back in 2003 and have kept it in the play stack ever since.
Dubmatrix
might have even gone to see the group live as his opening mix uplifts with the horns and then chills with the bass, reflecting the on-stage sound of
Easy Star
. Fans of avant-dub will appreciate
Adrian Sherwood
and his funhouse mirror mix of
"Brain Damage,"
which recalls the madness of his label
On-U Sound
during its golden age.
The Alchemist
turns
"Money"
into a dubstepping monster while
Dreadzone
show admirable restraint, giving "Us and Them" a proper touch of wistfulness in a mix that seems to drift in space. Best in show goes to
Border Crossing
's
"Step It Pon the Rastaman Scene"
which is
"Any Colour You Like"
dubbed into a wobbly nightmare. ~ David Jeffries
Dubber Side of the Moon
works so well could very well be the seven years that have passed since the source material was released. Everyone from dub legend
Mad Professor
to dubstep upstart
Kalbata
digs deep into these tracks, as if they picked up the
Easy Star All-Stars
' original
Pink Floyd
tribute,
Dub Side of the Moon
, back in 2003 and have kept it in the play stack ever since.
Dubmatrix
might have even gone to see the group live as his opening mix uplifts with the horns and then chills with the bass, reflecting the on-stage sound of
Easy Star
. Fans of avant-dub will appreciate
Adrian Sherwood
and his funhouse mirror mix of
"Brain Damage,"
which recalls the madness of his label
On-U Sound
during its golden age.
The Alchemist
turns
"Money"
into a dubstepping monster while
Dreadzone
show admirable restraint, giving "Us and Them" a proper touch of wistfulness in a mix that seems to drift in space. Best in show goes to
Border Crossing
's
"Step It Pon the Rastaman Scene"
which is
"Any Colour You Like"
dubbed into a wobbly nightmare. ~ David Jeffries