Search - Dr Israel :: Inna City Pressure

Inna City Pressure
Dr Israel
Inna City Pressure
Genres: Dance & Electronic, International Music, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #1

ROIR is proud to re-introduce one of the landmark albums of the last decade?remixed & remastered, w/ two bonus tracks (?Junglist? & ?Jacob?s Ladder?) plus a new version of ?Revolution?. Inna City Pressure was orig...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Dr Israel
Title: Inna City Pressure
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Mutant Sound System
Release Date: 11/17/1998
Genres: Dance & Electronic, International Music, Pop
Styles: Ambient, Drum & Bass, Electronica, Techno, Reggae, Dance Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 611948004328

Synopsis

Product Description
ROIR is proud to re-introduce one of the landmark albums of the last decade?remixed & remastered, w/ two bonus tracks (?Junglist? & ?Jacob?s Ladder?) plus a new version of ?Revolution?. Inna City Pressure was originally released by Dr. Israel in late 1998, at a time when the scene he was associated with (NYC?s ?illbient? collective which included DJ Spooky, WE, Sub Dub, Spectre, Techno Animal, Badawi) was garnering major press attention. Of all the albums to emerge from that scene, this undoubtedly was and is the most important and, I would dare say, the best. Doc?s music is a fusion of world musics in the best possible sense. Dub/reggae, jungle/drum n bass, hip-hop, rock, punk & metal are all part of a completely organic whole, achieved with urgency, acumen, charisma and purpose. In fact, the album is so strong it should return some import to the terms ?World Music? and ?Fusion??two terms whose meanings have been diluted, hyped and bastardized to the point of inconsequence. Doc?s ability to represent and reprocess his influences (Black Uhuru, Black Sabbath, Bad Brains, Run DMC, Roni Size) into compelling new forms is astounding. And what ties these styles of music together so organically? The answer is simple: Doc understands that what he loves about all music is BIG BASS and BIG DRUMS. He also understands how to implement that knowledge. It?s why Black Sabbath can be reimagined as a pot-smoking rasta chanting over drum ?n? bass beats. And why Doc is such a special musical mind. The rerelease of Inna City Pressure will be followed by a new Dr. Israel album entitled Dr. Israel presents Dreadtone International: Patterns of War, out October 18th, 2005. Patterns? is his first album in over 3 years and marks the continuation of a great & lengthy relationship with ROIR (those are Doc?s dreadlocks on the cover of ROIR?s first ever CD release?Dub Revolution: UK Roots). This new album by Doc and the young Brooklyn collective Dreadtone International is a new-school-meets-old-school marriage of roots, dub, trip-hop, rock, and R&B. Teaming up with vocalists Lady K and Chemda, along with an assortment of Brooklyn?s finest dub players, the good Dr. has created possibly his most accessible effort to date?an entirely new dub sound. Think Massive Attack vs. Fugees. Heavy heavy bass lines, thundering beats, beautiful melodies, pristinely produced vocals, and conscious lyrics paint an over-all soundscape which is as powerful as it is unique.

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CD Reviews

Incredible!
J. Dysert | 09/09/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Since the first day I heard this CD, I've listened to it daily ever since. It's totally addicting - get it, you won't be sorry or bored with it after awhile."
There IS a Doctor In The House
Elliot Malach | Galveston, Tx | 05/26/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I first heard Dr. Israel doing Brain Damage on Dub Side of the Moon, the reggae version of the Pink Floyd album. After listening to him, I had to get his CD. This one is outstanding. It has a very complex beat that I have yet to tire of listening to, and I've had the CD for a few years. This is timeless music."
One of my favorite releases this year...
object | Los Angeles, CA | 01/03/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"An absolutely necessary album for anyone who enjoys uptempo reggae, ragga jungle or dub. The lyrics are sincere and well-spoken, the rhythms are solid. Good for breakdancing practice AND listening to on a rainy day. The album is replete with fresh new breaks, no stale amen breaks here. Just a fantastic album that never got the attention it deserved."