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Bt - 10 Years in the Life
List Price: $24.98Our Price: $5.90You Save: $19.08 (76%)Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Category: Music CD See more CD details
CD DetailsArtist: Bt Edition: Music CD CD Release Date: 2002-09-10 Music Label: Sire / London/Rhino Soundtracks: Music CD 1- The Moment Of Truth (Original Radio Version) - BT
- Relativity (Transeau's Excursion) - BT
- Embracing The Sunshine (Embracing The Future Mix) - BT
- Loving You More (7 Inch Edit) - BT
- Blue Skies (Radio Edit) - BT
- Flaming June (BT & PVD Edit) - BT
- Love, Peace And Grease (BT's Puma Fila 7 Inch Mix) - BT
- Remember (Single Mix) - BT
- The Raod To Lostwithiel - BT
- Lullaby For Gaia - BT
- Believer - BT
- Dreaming (Libra Mix) - BT
- Giving Up The Ghost - BT
- Never Gonna Come Back Down (Single Edit) - BT
- The Revolution - BT
Music CD 2- Tripping The Light Fantastic - BT
- Dreams (BT's Circadian Dream) - BT
- Running Around Town (BT's Shelter Mix) - BT
- Not Over Yet (BT's Peyote Dub)
- Nanita/A Spanish Lullaby (BT's Voltaire Organica Mix)
- Stranded (BT vs. DD Mix [Deep Dish Edit])
- The Promethean Groove (Edit)
- Anomaly/Calling Your Name (Brat Edit)
- Quark (Coolaid Mix)
- Drowned World/Substitute for Love (BT & Sasha's Bucklodge Ashram Mix)
- Bad Girl (BT's Spoken Progenitor Mix)
- Keep Hope Alive (BT's Creatine Method Mix)
- Shineaway
Music reviews of 10 Years in the LifeMusic Review: VERY dated and uninspiring mix Rating: 2 Stars
As a big BT fan, I picked this up looking forward mostly to the second disc. BT's "Rare & Remixed" mix CD is easily the best mix CD I've ever heard, and really brings forth his abilities as an artist and remixer. This, however, just falls flat on its face.
Disc One:
This is where you begin to understand that BT started in the very early 90s, and this sort of sound coming from this guy sounds very weird. The first three tracks, "The Moment of Truth", "Relativity", and "Embracing the Sunshine" all sound straight out of the early 90s, which handicaps them to begin with. They are very clunky and formulaic. If you're a huge BT fan, there may be some points of interest in these 3, but other than that, you sort of cringe when hearing them.
"Loving You More", "Blue Skies", "Believer", and "Remember" show off his work that really got him noticed, but even they sound a bit dated too. A good intro to people unaware of BT's work, but otherwise, BT fans will have heard these anyway.
"Love, Peace, and Grease" is a good little groove, but some things need tightening, and it just doesn't FEEL right. Also, the abrupt cut at the end really could've been easily fixed...
The edit of "Flaming June" is good to have in, probably his most famous trance piece. However, since this style of dance music has been COMPLETELY overplayed, "Flaming June" doesn't seem all that special, other than a nice melody overtop of a standard beat. Not BT's fault, but the wind is out of the sails on this one by now.
"The Road to Lostwithiel" is a juvenile attempt at drum 'n bass, and is overly boring and repetitive. An interesting direction, but it grows old VERY fast. Repeat same criticism of "Lullaby for Gaia"...
"Dreaming (Libra Mix)" is ok, but you really can't outdo the album version. It's a good mix, but then it DRAGS ON for FAR too long without changing anything. Album version is far stronger...
"Giving Up the Ghost" is a good tune actually, and really gets the feet moving, although it too is pretty long. It has a better groove though, so it doesn't pale so quickly.
"Never Gonna Come Back Down" is a pretty decent and catchy tune, a good one for anyone yet-to-be-introduced to BT's work. For big BT fans, you'll pretty much skip this one, it sounds basically the exact same on the album version.
"The Revolution" provides a decent end, with good slick production, nice beats, and a decent pace too. All in all, the only things worth your money on disc one are "The Revolution", "Giving Up the Ghost", and "Love, Peace, and Grease". The others you've either already own or are unbelievably bad. For unintroduced BT fans, tracks like "Flaming June", "Blue Skies" and "Dreaming" will serve as good jumping points to find his artist albums, but that's about it.
Disc Two:
A continuous mix of rarities and remixes done by BT...
"Tripping The Light Fantastic" is a great trance tune, works really well as a starter, and keeps the energy going. "Dreams (BT's Circadian Dream)" is ok, but feels a bit dated, same with Billie Ray Martin's "Running Around Town (BT's Shelter Mix)". They keep the groove going, but feel kind of, well...old!
Then it all falls apart. Grace's famous "Not Over Yet" is remixed here, and it is GODAWFUL. I highly recommend the version on "Rare & Remixed", called "Not Over Yet (BT's Spirit of Grace Mix), but this version is just bland and boring. A way-too-simple groove underlies Grace's lyrics and sucks all of the momentum and life out of the song. I could hardly believe that BT did this mix, and that in the liner notes, he called this mix his favourite!
"Nanita (A Spanish Lullaby)" and "Stranded" fail to provide any kind of catchiness or to at least keep the energy level up, I was really surprised at how weak these tunes were.
"The Promethean Groove" is easily one of the most annoying tunes I've heard in a LONG time. The high pitched squelches just turned me right off, and they sounded very unoriginal to boot. Even if you're a fan of that sort of thing (i.e. Aphex Twin), it really isn't done well either, and it totally sticks out like a sore thumb in this mix. We're literally going from nice pop vocals and boring grooves to ear-piercing and EXTREMELY repetitive tones.
A decent tune follows up at least, with "Anomaly: Calling Your Name", although songs like this have since been totally ripped off, so it sounds a bit stale at this point.
"Quark" starts off quite well, but gets into a VERY annoying old school sounding melody halfway through that pretty much ruins everything.
Then we get on to the biggie. The one that could save the whole disc. Madonna's "Drowned World/Substitute for Love" remix by BT and Sasha. Surely these two guys would turn this into something wonderful. Well, they don't, and its a HUGE disappointment. It's just a really uninteresting little bassline and beat with the occasional Madonna vocal overtop. It is ridiculously boring, UNBELIEVABLY repetitive, and it sucks any last bits of energy out of the mix. I can't believe they made this mix, especially after knowing what BT is capable of (see: Mike Oldfield's "Let There Be Light", Sarah McLachlan's "Hold On", The Doors' "Break On Through", for instance). HUGE let down.
"Bad Girl" is half decent, although you're still getting over what the hell just happened to that Madonna tune.
BT doesn't fall flat on his face quite as badly with his remix of The Crystal Method's "Keep Hope Alive", easily one of the biggest electronica songs of the 1990s, and considered a classic by many. He makes a fairly decent groove that changes JUST enough over the VERY LONG length of the song to keep it from getting boring. Good elevation and surges make it a decent mix.
Then it falls apart AGAIN, with "Shineaway". The vocals are HORRIBLE, the guy sounds like he ran into the studio, didn't warm up, took one take, and got the hell out because he had bigger fish to fry. What a tremendously BAD ending that leaves an awful taste in your mouth. Should have finished with "Keep Hope Alive"...
Overall, a VERY disappointing album, despite having 28 songs on it! Only about 5 or 6 are decent, and NONE of them are truly great. I HIGHLY suggest buying "Rare & Remixed" instead.
More 10 Years in the Life free music reviews: 1 2 3 4
Description of 10 Years in the LifeAudio CD
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