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| | Moby | | | Music Artist : | | Moby | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Instinct Records | | Release Date : | | 1992-07-20 | | Store Price : | | $11.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $11.98 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Drop a Beat 2. Everything 3. Yeah 4. Electricity 5. Next Is the E 6. Mercy 7. Go 8. Help Me to Believe 9. Have You Seen My Baby 10. Ah-Ah 11. Slight Return 12. Stream
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Where were you in 92? Submitted on: 2009-07-06 |
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| A total halucinatory throwback to 1992, memories of the Limelight, NASA, Mother and druggy hazy trips to London to see a friend studying overseas. This is a CLASSIC record, probably one of Moby's most unique releases. Unlike his other projects, MOBY is straight up rave style techno with alot of acid and disco undertones. This is a good chance to hear alot of the original recordings before they were remixed. Probably not a great place to start if you are not familiar with Moby, but for fans, a must have document of his beginning. Totally recomended. |
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Where it all began... Submitted on: 2005-08-01 |
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| For those who only discovered Moby in the past few years, due to the phenomenal success of "Play" and the media expuse he's gotten since, it might come as a surprise that Moby used to make honest-to-goodness dancefloor-ready techno! This record chronicles his early 90's sound and is worth obtaining simply for his first hit, the classic "Go", still heard at clubs today! The album is a mesmerizing blend of beats and hooks, and is guaranteed to get you moving or driving fast! "Next is the E" was a modest club hit, and has an insanely fast beat and wild vocal screams. "Have you seen my baby?" features a scary-serious male asking the question while Moby's blippy keyboards build and swell. And as a precursor to the experimentation with disparate genres that would characterize his later career, Moby includes blues guitar on "Everything" and cuts of downtempo ambience on "Slight Return" and "Stream". This LP was truly ahead of its time and is a great summary of both the state of early 90's US dance and Moby's role in shaping the scene. |
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by far one of moby's worst. Submitted on: 2004-12-11 |
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| i am a moby collector, and i have 25 cds and records, and this is the one i put in once and never listened to again. if you want some of moby's early music, buy early underground. it's a collection of tracks released on singles and remix singles. it's a much better collection. it's easy to see why only two of these songs were released as singles. it's absolutely nerve-wracking. it sounds like a boiler room exploding from the beginning to the end. the only two songs that are halfway decent on here are stream and go. and i'm not a fan of go. not recommended unless you're an absolute moby maniac and you have to have all his CDs. |
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Moby's Debut CD: The Anti-Aspirin Submitted on: 2004-07-02 |
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| The first Moby album I ever purchased was Play, and I found it incredible. I then bought 18, Animal Rights, and Everything Is Wrong, and liked them all. So when I popped Moby's debut album into my CD player, I was shocked. Moby's later work defies and rises above traditional techno, to create beautiful, sometimes soothing, sometimes energizing music. This CD, on the other hand, sounds like your worst nightmare out of the 80's. It's nothing but endless repetitive electronic beats paired with annoying sound effects. Only the last song on the album, "Stream", shows any promise at all. So obviously, my recommendation would be to steer clear of this album. Unless, for some reason, you think it's been too long since your last headache. |
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GO! Submitted on: 2004-04-02 |
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| This was Moby's FIRST Cd and it's very diffrent from the radio friendly "play" and "18" but still very pleasant. This album is more of a rave/house album then the elecro-pop he later made. "Go" and "Drop a beat" became big Euro hits and Moby became a big name on the charts already in 91-92. It's a great album, most are obviosly instrumental with fast beats and catchy addictive melodies, Dancable like few other Moby albums. Songs like "Yeah" and "Next is the E" are also great, simular to the other two but so are the rest also, we can clearly see that this was a album from 1992 when the rave music was huge and Moby wanted to create his sound, later on he got a more solid and personal sound though. A CLASSIC album anyway. Worth the money. |
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