Home
These Re-Imagined Machines
Barnes and Noble
These Re-Imagined Machines
Current price: $10.99


Barnes and Noble
These Re-Imagined Machines
Current price: $10.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
As fervently fan-aimed as they come,
These Re-Imagined Machines
remixes
BT
's already big double-album
These Hopeful Machines
across its own two CDs, with big names likes
Armin van Buuren
,
Chicane
, and
Ferry Corsten
lending a hand. That's progressive trance royalty as far as the message boards are concerned, but the final ace up this collection's sleeve is the continuous mix each disc features, dividing
's original album into two distinct sets suitable for the club.
Breakfast
's remix of
"The Unbreakable"
deserves special mention as it turns the cut into a grand, primetime floor-filler, but
Grayarea
's take on the very same track runs a close second with its seamless transition from slamming electro to blissful trance.
Josh Gabriel
does the most "re-imagining" with his glittery shrinking of the precious
"Every Other Day,"
while
van Buuren
wins by playing it safe, delivering a quintessential progressive trance remix of the same cut, from the echoing vocals to the big dropout followed by a slow rebuild. No reason to choose this over the original, but a worthwhile alternative for those looking to skip the glitchy bits and slow bpms. ~ David Jeffries
These Re-Imagined Machines
remixes
BT
's already big double-album
These Hopeful Machines
across its own two CDs, with big names likes
Armin van Buuren
,
Chicane
, and
Ferry Corsten
lending a hand. That's progressive trance royalty as far as the message boards are concerned, but the final ace up this collection's sleeve is the continuous mix each disc features, dividing
's original album into two distinct sets suitable for the club.
Breakfast
's remix of
"The Unbreakable"
deserves special mention as it turns the cut into a grand, primetime floor-filler, but
Grayarea
's take on the very same track runs a close second with its seamless transition from slamming electro to blissful trance.
Josh Gabriel
does the most "re-imagining" with his glittery shrinking of the precious
"Every Other Day,"
while
van Buuren
wins by playing it safe, delivering a quintessential progressive trance remix of the same cut, from the echoing vocals to the big dropout followed by a slow rebuild. No reason to choose this over the original, but a worthwhile alternative for those looking to skip the glitchy bits and slow bpms. ~ David Jeffries