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These Re Imagined Machines
Artist: Bt
UPC: 00067003092722
Label: Nettwerk America/Ada
Genre: Electronica
    OUR PRICE: $15.11  
Product Type: Compact Disc
Released: May 2011
Qty:
Additional Information
Rating:
Weight: 0.20 lbs
Info:
Track Listing
1 DISC 1:
2 Nocturne de Lumiere [Cedric Gervais Remix], Le - (remix)
3 Rose of Jericho [Adam K & Soha Remix] - (remix)
4 Always [Funkagenda Mix] - (remix)
5 Love Can Kill You [Moonbeam Remix] - (remix)
6 Emergency [Marcus Schossow Remix] - (remix)
7 Every Other Way [Josh Gabriel Remix] - (remix)
8 Suddenly [Ferry Corsten Remix] - (remix)
9 Forget Me [Mr Sam Remix] - (remix)
10 Unbreakable [Grayarea Mix], The - (remix)
11 DISC 2:
12 Emergency [Lost Stories Remix vs. Dragon Jontron, Manufactured Susperstars Remix] - (remix)
13 Rose of Jericho [Sultan & Ned Shepard Remix] - (remix)
14 Million Stars [Digital Stories Remix], A - (remix)
15 Light in Things [Tydi Remix] - (remix)
16 Always [Chicane Remix] - (remix)
17 Unbreakable [Breakfast Remix], The - (remix)
18 Forget Me [Michael Cassette Mix] - (remix)
19 Every Other Way [Armin Van Buuren Remix] - (remix)
Release Date : 05/31/2011
General Description : Performer
Muze Genre-sub class : Electronic
Number of Discs : 2
Running Time : 136 minutes 59 seconds
Performance Recorded :
Misc Note : Illustrator: Gavin Taylor. 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 BT'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