Search - Orbital :: Back to Mine

Back to Mine
Orbital
Back to Mine
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (19) - Disc #1

The Back to Mine series has already provided some memorable compilations from a diverse collection of dance luminaries, including Morcheeba, MJ Cole, Groove Armada, and Talvin Singh. Now, famous brothers-in-rhythm Paul and...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Orbital
Title: Back to Mine
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Razor & Tie
Release Date: 6/25/2002
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
Styles: Ambient, Techno, Dance Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 793018551823

Synopsis

Amazon.com
The Back to Mine series has already provided some memorable compilations from a diverse collection of dance luminaries, including Morcheeba, MJ Cole, Groove Armada, and Talvin Singh. Now, famous brothers-in-rhythm Paul and Phil Hartnoll, a.k.a. Orbital, offer up a selection of tunes that lie close to their hearts and get their heads bopping. Their effort is indulgently deep and impressively broad, and it's certainly one of the series' most eclectic offerings yet. Starting with John Barry and His Orchestra's "The Knack," we are taken through a weird and wonderful selection of tastes and styles, leaping from soundtrack to ska, rave to reggae, industrial to psychedelic, punk to pop. The intensely wide range of sounds means that the CD doesn't flow quite as mellifluously as it might, but with songs by Lee Scratch Perry ("Justice to the People"), the Tornadoes ("Love and Fury"), PJ Harvey ("Kamikaze"), the Selecter ("Celebrate the Bullet"), Jethro Tull ("Living in the Past"), and Plaid ("New Bass Hippo"), it's still an enjoyable, sprawling, and educational album that manages to pull together a disparate but relevant bunch of pre, post, and present dance tunes. --Paul Sullivan

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CD Reviews

Phil and Paul Hartnoll: Iron DJs
FlangeMechanism | 02/01/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"What's with all the slagging on this album? I mean I'm not going to give it five stars, or claim it's one of the best in my collection, but I like it a helluva lot better than 2.5 stars. It was one of my most-played albums the summer it came out, and I still like it to this day.



Yeah, it's eclectic. It's eclectic to the point where it looks like the Hartnolls were participating in a musical version of Iron Chef: "Create a chillout DJ mix. DIFFICULTY LEVEL: must include one drum 'n' bass track, one PJ Harvey rocker, and no less than five reggae/ska songs. AND Jethro Tull."



And yet, they pulled it off, with flying colors.



Oh, and this album also alerted me to the existence of the Moving Shadow label, for which I owe it an eternal debt of gratitude.



I dunno. My other two most-played albums that summer were Carte Blanche 3 and Oasis's Heathen Chemistry, so when weighing my recommendation be sure to factor in the fact that I have terrible taste in music."