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| Involver 2 | 
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| Artist: Sasha Label: Global Underground Category: Music
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $13.48 You Save: $6.50 (33%)
New (32) Used (6) from $13.48
Avg. Customer Rating: 22 reviews Sales Rank: 6404
Format: Limited Edition Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 828272130238 EAN: 0828272130238 ASIN: B001DSNGBS
Release Date: September 9, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new. Shipped from the UK by Airmail direct to 5 airports in the United States. Delivery takes approximately 5 working days from posting - we're frequently faster than a lot of US based sellers.
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| Tracks:
Disc 1
| • | Intro - Sasha, Coe, A. | | • | You Are the Worst Thing in the World - Sasha, Eustis | | • | Flesh - Sasha, | | • | Eclipse - Sasha, Coe, A. | | • | Lowlife - Sasha, Coe, A. | | • | Midnight - Sasha, Coe, A. | | • | Arcadia - Sasha, Ring, Sascha | | • | That You Might - Sasha, Gross, David | | • | Destroy Everything You Touch - Sasha, | | • | Couleurs - Sasha, Gonzalez, Anthony | | • | The Eraser - Sasha, Yorke, Thom | | • | Little Piggys - Sasha, Coe, A. | | • | Sometimes I Realise - Sasha, Engineers |
Disc 2
| • | The Eraser - Sasha, Yorke, Thom | | • | Flavor - Sasha, Wielemans, A. | | • | Burma - Sasha, | | • | Gas Tank - Sasha, Gross, David | | • | Midnight - Sasha, Coe, A. | | • | Eclipse - Sasha, Coe, A. |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description Limited Edition Two CD set. 13 tracks. Unlike dance mixes that are simply compilation CDs consisting of hits blended together in a continuous flow, DJ Sasha's Involver is a mix that features both the artist's own music and exclusive tracks from other electronic artists. The resultant vibe is more like a traditional single-artist album than a collection of unrelated songs. In addition to the usual mixer and turntable techniques that form the basis of dance DJs' stock-in-trade, Sasha employs cutting-edge computer manipulation and a wide array of vintage synthesizers to blur the line between fully produced recordings and live improvisatory disc-spinning. Using his trademark trance aesthetic as a starting point, Sasha establishes a spare, cool-as-ice feel with a distinctly European flavor. He maintains this throughout, slowly building the tracks with the care of a painter, and ultimately delivering an album equally suited for the club or a post-party headphone session. Rolling Stone - 3 1/2 stars out of 5 - "One satisfying set....This is Sasha's most substantial work in years." CMJ - "Stylistically, he veers far off the progressive path, offering moody textures, fractured breaks and crunching guitars..."
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| Customer Reviews: Read 17 more reviews...
More of the same, rich with atmosphere September 12, 2008 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
If you liked the first Involver, you'll also like this. Sasha's studio intricacy belies the end result, which is seamless to listen to from start from finish. However, numerous edits have reformed, rearranged, twisted, and warped the original tracks, with steady 4/4 beats grounding most of the mix -- which is to say there's less breakbeat action here than on the first Involver, but definitely no shortage of magical "floaty" feel here.
Invol2ver (clever name!) isn't a radical style shift: many of the most beloved changes have to do with tiny details. It begins and ends on a lush, ambient note -- the rush of traffic and heavily-processed sounds begin the voyage, and a similar lifting with a rapidly accelerating crescendo and a hi-hat-into-white-noise accompanies the end, after the beats + bass have faded out to infinity.
Male and female vocals drift in and out, often accompanied by echo, flange, and other effects used to gel them deeper into the entire sonic tapestry. Invol2ver begins slowly and gradually speeds up over the course of 73-something minutes. Although the pace tends towards more mellow, atmospheric grooves -- even those which suit peak-time dancefloor well -- there's plenty of little eclectic bits to like.
Take for example, the 80s-esque snare that breaks in at 49:49 and is repeated several times afterward. There are lots of clever edits to vocals and other elements which go beyond the usual crossfades, which add to the overall sonic "signature". These gated, chopped snippets tempered by reverb are a skillful way to "stitch the quilt", so to speak.
Newcomers will be hard-pressed to name which tracks are which, while veteran trainspotters will be rewarded by how individual pieces have been reshaped to fit the entire "quilt", and quite masterfully at that.
Throughout it all, there's a techy minimal influence which serves as instrumental meat for the vocal melodies, such as the repetitive bassline that hosts the aforementioned tricky edits as part of Home Video's "That You Might". These kind of vibes wouldn't be alien in a Richie Hawtin set, and showcase Sasha's ongoing excellence as a diverse dance music ambassador regardless of silly genre labels. If there's one important thing we can learn from this sonic stew, that's it.
There are some unsettling yet very danceable moments too, like the timestretched, stuttered (but done noticeably differently from, say, the way BT developed his trademark "stutter edit") declarations spread across Ladytron's "Destroy Everything You Touch". It's a bit gothy in its pessimism, yet the head-nodding beat gives the whole affair a surprisingly hopeful-in-the-middle-of-dystopia feel.
Overall, this is a masterful mix album. It may grow more on me yet, but isn't one of my consumate faves because of the lack of really catchy standout tracks -- arguably, this may balance the mix out better, but compared to say, Steve Porter's Porterhouse where the hooks are laden and the variety is exciting, the progressions here take longer to unfold.
On a sidenote, I would've loved to have illuminance like Sasha's own EmFire imprint singles especially remixed -- or at least, riffs to make cameo appearances. The likes of "Coma" and "Who Killed Sparky?" have a great amount of melodic riffing AND deft variation which made them both powerful on the surface and underneath, and if more of that influence had been present here (e.g., like the Bach-esque arpeggiation @ 30:00 in), Invol2ver would've been all the better for it.
P.S. This review is for the regular single-CD edition. I haven't heard the bonus tracks on CD2 yet.
An icon's return to form October 5, 2008 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
Now, I wouldn't consider myself a hardcore trance/ electronic fan, but I've been following Sasha since the late nineties. It began with the Northern Exposure series and continued on to Airdrawndagger. I thought Sasha had reached his peak. Surely, he couldn't top Airdrawndagger and then he hit us with Involver. Sasha gave us an eclectic sample of electronic music that was true to the scene, but accessible to the casual listener. That was one of his strengths; that was why I followed him.
Sasha proceeded to release Fundacion NYC and the EmFire collection. Suffice it to say that those were two of the worst albums I have ever purchased and that I almost lost total respect for Sasha as an artist and DJ. I thought Sasha pulled a DJ Shadow and was calling it a career, not by retiring, but by creating such a ridiculously wacky album. And not just one wacky album like DJ Shadow's "Outsider", but TWO wacky albums in succession.
Honestly, Sasha was off my radar. I didn't care if he ever released anything again. I had his previous work and that's what i wanted to remember him by. And then a funny thing happened. I was browsing music at a local record store today while my friends were looking at vinyl LPs. I discovered Invol2ver and immediately experienced an entire range of emotion: happiness, apprehension, grief, and skepticism. Would my fandom of Sasha be rekindled? Is this truly another Involver or just another way to trick me out of $20 (I bought the limited edition).
So I went ahead and purchased the album and immediately put it in my CD player. The music started playing and happiness and relief washed over me, and in that order. Sasha is back and I'm elated for him. With this release, he has solidified himself in my pantheon of respected artists. For all the impact he's had on the electronic music world for who knows how long... I'm glad he could come back after all these years and hit us with maybe, just maybe... one last home-run. I've been waiting for you, old friend. Thanks for not letting me down (again).
More of the same, rich with atmosphere September 12, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
If you liked the first Involver, you'll also like this. Sasha's studio intricacy belies the end result, which is seamless to listen to from start from finish. However, numerous edits have reformed, rearranged, twisted, and warped the original tracks, with steady 4/4 beats grounding most of the mix -- which is to say there's less breakbeat action here than on the first Involver, but definitely no shortage of magical "floaty" feel here.
Invol2ver (clever name!) isn't a radical style shift: many of the most beloved changes have to do with tiny details. It begins and ends on a lush, ambient note -- the rush of traffic and heavily-processed sounds begin the voyage, and a similar lifting with a rapidly accelerating crescendo and a hi-hat-into-white-noise accompanies the end, after the beats + bass have faded out to infinity.
Male and female vocals drift in and out, often accompanied by echo, flange, and other effects used to gel them deeper into the entire sonic tapestry. Invol2ver begins slowly and gradually speeds up over the course of 73-something minutes. Although the pace tends towards more mellow, atmospheric grooves -- even those which suit peak-time dancefloor well -- there's plenty of little eclectic bits to like.
Take for example, the 80s-esque snare that breaks in at 49:49 and is repeated several times afterward. There are lots of clever edits to vocals and other elements which go beyond the usual crossfades, which add to the overall sonic "signature". These gated, chopped snippets tempered by reverb are a skillful way to "stitch the quilt", so to speak.
Newcomers will be hard-pressed to name which tracks are which, while veteran trainspotters will be rewarded by how individual pieces have been reshaped to fit the entire "quilt", and quite masterfully at that.
Throughout it all, there's a techy minimal influence which serves as instrumental meat for the vocal melodies, such as the repetitive bassline that hosts the aforementioned tricky edits as part of Home Video's "That You Might". These kind of vibes wouldn't be alien in a Richie Hawtin set, and showcase Sasha's ongoing excellence as a diverse dance music ambassador regardless of silly genre labels. If there's one important thing we can learn from this sonic stew, that's it.
There are some unsettling yet very danceable moments too, like the timestretched, stuttered (but done noticeably differently from, say, the way BT developed his trademark "stutter edit") declarations spread across Ladytron's "Destroy Everything You Touch". It's a bit gothy in its pessimism, yet the head-nodding beat gives the whole affair a surprisingly hopeful-in-the-middle-of-dystopia feel.
Overall, this is a masterful mix album. It may grow more on me yet, but isn't one of my consumate faves because of the lack of really catchy standout tracks -- arguably, this may balance the mix out better, but compared to say, Steve Porter's Porterhouse where the hooks are laden and the variety is exciting, the progressions here take longer to unfold.
On a sidenote, I would've loved to have illuminance like Sasha's own EmFire imprint singles especially remixed -- or at least, riffs to make cameo appearances. The likes of "Coma" and "Who Killed Sparky?" have a great amount of melodic riffing AND deft variation which made them both powerful on the surface and underneath, and if more of that influence had been present here (e.g., like the Bach-esque arpeggiation @ 30:00 in), Invol2ver would've been all the better for it.
P.S. The Amazon Editorial Review shown above is for the 1st Involver, not this volume.
Disappointed!?! September 19, 2008 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
I've always argued that Sasha and John Digweed are the cream of the crop. And they usually are. But these other reviewers are crazy. This Involver 2 was a letdown. It was just average. The first 2 tracks from Involver 1 blow away this whole disc by themselves.
GET THIS ALBUM!! September 9, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I've been waitin for this cd for 4 years now and it was worth the wait. It starts off a lot like the first with the beat around 124bpm or so and picks up through the cd. This is every bit as good as the first and may be some what better. Its deep thick bass lines and moody melodies is what u would expect from Sasha (and the help from Charlie May). If you r a fan of Sasha or just good forward thinking progressive then you should pick this cd up right away.
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