Product Details
Music.Detected_

Music.Detected_
Deep Forest

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Track Listing

  1. India - Deep Forest
  2. Endangered Species - Deep Forest
  3. Soul Elevator - Deep Forest
  4. Computer Machine - Deep Forest
  5. Yuki Song - Deep Forest, , Beverly Jo Scott
  6. Beauty in Your Eyes - Deep Forest
  7. Elemental - Deep Forest,
  8. Far East - Deep Forest,
  9. Deep Blue Sea - Anggun, Deep Forest
  10. Will You Be Ready - Anggun, Deep Forest, Chitose Hajime, Angela McCluskey
  11. In the Evening - Deep Forest, , Angela McCluskey
  12. Dignity - Deep Forest, Beverly Jo Scott
  13. Endangered Species [Galleon Remix Radio Edit][*] - Deep Forest

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #163645 in Music
  • Released on: 2007-02-19
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Details
Their eighth album, originally released 2002.


Customer Reviews

Interesting change of direction for Deep Forest 4
This is certainly not an album that many people have heard of (much less the band Deep Forest!). I've owned it for a number of years and enjoyed it quite a bit, and I was very surprised to see how few reviews exist for MUSIC DETECTED.

I've been a fan of Deep Forest for many years, and have enjoyed listening as their style shifted from the electro influenced chill (infused with the overlay of indigenous language) of Deep Forest to the African centric rhythm and beats of Comparsa. In Music Detected, there is an Asian quality to some of the tracks, and especially the vocals.

This album is a romp through music styles with dance beats commingling with classical lyric construction. It is joyful, melancholy, teeming with the energy that Deep Forest has always been able to capture in their music. The songs might be dissimilar to their previous offering in their use of heavy beats and English lyrics, but they still convey the same power and authenticity of their older albums.

Stand out tracks include:

Soul Elevator
Computer Machine
Beauty In Your Eyes
Will You Be Ready

A fun, interesting, and surprisingly danceable album, MUSIC DETECTED makes me hungry for a new Deep Forest album to settle in to. Perhaps soon.

a couple gems surrounded by muzak2
Let me state at the outset that Deep Forest's first album made a huge, positive impact on me. As strange as this may sound, it really inspired me in high school to develop a wider appreciation for the music of foreign cultures and, by association, foreign cultures themselves. In fact, I've played that album for friends of mine from all walks of life, from blue collar to academic, and without exception, all have seemed to really enjoy it. Somehow, Deep Forest managed with that first album to connect with people in an intellectual and visceral way.

Deep Forest's second album, while a bit different and maybe not as tight, grew on me over time. Every album since, though, has been progressively worse--thus, "Music Detected" is so far the worst of the bunch.

Frankly, all you have to do is listen to the laughably awful muzak that is "Computer Machine" (sadly indicative of most of this album) and you'll understand why Deep Forest's "Music Detected" is one of the WORST new age-y albums ever. And at a time when the rare good stuff is buried under a vapid avalanche of John Tesh and Yanni, that's sayin' something.

I hate to be the first one to point out that the emperor has no clothes, but a cold wind is blowing through said emperor's legs, the shadow is burned on the wall, and Deep Forest is what it is--an extremely mediocre studio group of sound-mixers who got lucky on their first couple albums, and have been suffering from a musical identity crisis ever since.

"Music Detected" swings wildly from new age to muzak to hard rock sprinkled with arbitrary foreign yodeling without even the simple, ambient quality present even in, say, Enigma's weaker songs. The ONLY exceptions are "Yuki's Song" and "Will You Be Ready", which show a bit more care and depth and are actually decent. At least compared to the rest of the muzak. Perhaps two decent songs on an album would be enough to pass, were this anyone else, but I guess I'm still holding out a fading hope that Deep Forest is capable of more than this.

The best recording of Deep Forest5
For as a DJ, this one is a very dance-able CD. Some nice pieces of trance with an oriental flavour. Perfect!