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Smalhans

Lindstrom

Platten-Daten

Interpret
Lindstrom
Titel
Smalhans
Label
Smalltown Supersound
Artikel-Nr.
STS223LP
EAN
600116082312
Release-Date
30.01.2012
Musicstyle
Nu Disco
Konfiguration
LP 1x
Lagerbestand
Nicht auf Lager, Lieferzeit 3-10 Tage (soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
21,90 € *
Norwegian cuisine is very characteristic. Traditionally a Norwegian dish does not contain much... mehr
Produktinformationen "Smalhans"
Norwegian cuisine is very characteristic. Traditionally a Norwegian dish does not contain much spices, so the taste of the food is very much straight from nature. Some Norwegian food could be considered a bit hardcore for some, but also enviromentally friendly, as it is built on old traditions of using the resources in your immediate surroundings…' That's Hans-Peter Lindstrøm, Norway's finest disher-up of cosmic techno, who's whipped up a pumping new album with tracks titled like a tasting menu of his homeland's underrated cuisine, from soup to nuts. Well, not quite: it's more like 'Raakost' (raw vegetables) to 'Vafler' (waffles) - with lashings of 'Lammelaar' (dried salted lamb meat), 'Vossakorv' ('a sheep-sausage made in Voss'), and 'Eggedosis' ('what you get when you mix eggs and sugar with a blender. Kids love it… At least, I did when I was younger!'). Yum! Smalhans was recorded immediately after Lindstrøm's last, more experimental album Six Cups Of Rebel in July 2011, and its unashamedly 4/4 techno rhythms and bubbling, nutritious analogue synth sounds - mixed by friend and collaborator Todd Terje - are set to inject a vitamin kick to dancefloors everywhere. Lindstrøm's gorgeous arpeggiations and chord changes can sound mathematical at times (check the clockwork mechanism of 'Faarikal'), but it's all born of his intuitive approach to his gear. 'The process is definitely intuitive. I try all sorts of combination of chords and changes, and just know when something interesting happens. I find myself getting lost in the details. Weighing the ingredients, trying to find the right balance. A little more of this, a little less of that. Making the same dish over and over again, hoping it gets even better. Trying out new recipes and ingredients. Eating it up, and starting again the next day. Just like spending time in the studio…' Lindstrøm spends a lot of time in that studio, preferring a normal working day and quiet nights at home with his family.
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