Product Details
26 Mixes for Cash

26 Mixes for Cash
Aphex Twin

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Time to Find Me [AFX Fast Mix] - Seefeel
  2. Raising the Titanic [Big Drum Mix] - Gavin Bryars
  3. Journey [Aphex Twin Care Mix] - The Gentle People
  4. Triachus [Aphex Twin Mix] - Kinesthesia
  5. Heroes [Aphex Twin Remix] - Philip Glass,
  6. In the Glitter, Pt. 2 [Aphex Twin Mix]
  7. Zeros and Ones [Aphex Twin Reconstruction #2] - Jesus Jones,
  8. Ziggy [Aphex Twin Mix #1] - Nav Katze
  9. Your Head My Voice [Voix Revirement][Mix] - Saint Etienne
  10. Change [Aphex Twin #2] - Nav Katze
  11. Femme N'Est Pas un Homme [Aphex Twin Mix] - The Beatniks
  12. Beauty of Being Numb (Section B) [Mix] - Nine Inch Nails
  13. Let My Fish Loose [Aphex Twin Remix] - Nobukazu Takemura

Disc 2:

  1. Krieger [Aphex Twin Baldhu Mix] - Die Fantastischen Vier
  2. Deep in Velvet [Aphex Twin Turnips Mix] - Phillip Boa & the Voodooclub
  3. Falling Free [Aphex Twin Remix] - Curve
  4. We Have Arrived [Aphex Twin QQT Mix] - Mescalinum United
  5. At the Heart of It All [Mix] - Nine Inch Nails
  6. Flow Coma [Remix by AFX] - AFX
  7. Windowlicker [Acid Edit] - Aphex Twin
  8. Normal [Helston Flora Remix by Afx] - Baby Ford
  9. SAW2 Cd1 Trk2 [Original Mix] - Aphex Twin
  10. Mindstream [The Aphex Twin Remix] - Meat Beat Manifesto
  11. You Can't Hide Your Love [Hidden Love Mix] - DMX Krew
  12. Spotlight [Aphex Twin Remix] - Wagon Christ
  13. Debase (Soft Palate) [Mix] - The Mike Flowers Pops,

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #126827 in Music
  • Brand: Aphex
  • Released on: 2003-03-25
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Dimensions: .24 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
A 26 track compilation on 2 CDs of Aphex Twin's blinding remixes (plus two previously unreleased Aphex tunes). Encompassing 10 years of always evolving, unpredictable Aphex Twin sounds, from acid trax and raved-up bangers to strangely commercial pop and his inimitably delicate, ambient empathies. Gatefold digipak. Warp. 2003.

Amazon.com
It's hard to imagine Aphex Twin having a more appropriately named label (Warp); fitting also that 26 Mixes for Cash should have such an honest title. Having passed off a random gabba track as a Lemonheads remix and not bothering to hear the Nine Inch Nails originals before handing over his mixes, Aphex Twin has historically proved a little wayward in his methods. Not so much remixing as recycling, Richard D James's method is not unlike flinging tracks into a garbage crusher just long enough so only the bare bones of melody and structure survive. Covering a decade's work, this stunning eclectic mix effortlessly flicks from cinematic ambience (Nine Inch Nails--"At the Heart of It All") and industrial pandemonium (Mescalinum United's "We Have Arrived") to squelching acid trance (his own previously unreleased acid edit of "Windowlicker"). The disparate range of artists remixed is as remarkable as the music, with Mike Flowers Pops and Wagon Christ making unlikely bedfellows. Improbable yet inspired highlights come in the form of his haunting interpretation of David Bowie's "Heroes" symphony conducted by Philip Glass and the breathtakingly ethereal transformation of Curve's "Falling Free." --Christopher Barrett

From URB Magazine
26 Mixes for Cash is right. Among the canon of rare releases commanding collectable prices, deleted and highly limited productions by IDM inspiration/innovator Richard D. "Aphex Twin" James are the stuff of fanaticism that High Fidelity skewers. Not that all Aphex is worth spades, but 26 Mixes well merits your doss. The collection showcases two sides of the singular Twin. Disc one — featuring remixes of artists including Seefeel, David Bowie & Philip Glass, Jesus Jones, Saint Etienne and Nobukazu Takemura, among others — showcases James’ symphonic ambiance. While the perception of anyone most familiar with AT tracks including "Ventolin" and "Come To Daddy" would be for James to apply driving sheets of static, he instead directs gentle drifts to whisper down thin, steely corridors. The second disc, meanwhile, features more of the clanging pipes, chirping couplers and deconstructed, zigzagging penny-in-tin-pan rhythms he most often applied characteristically. Remixes of Curve, NIN, Baby Ford and Meat Beat Manifesto — as well as previously unreleased Aphex tracks "Windowlicker (Acid Edit)" and "SAW2 CD1 TRK2 (Original mix)" — more directly connect to the early-’90s, post-industrial/electro dance floor. 26 Mixes offers an alternate overview of an artist’s development considered groundbreaking, though finally not bank breaking; pristine sounds well worth filthy lucre.

Tony Ware


Customer Reviews

An instant classic 13 years in the making5
Like house demigod (and fellow curmudgeon) Armand Van Helden, no examination of Aphex Twin's body of work is complete without considering his extensive remix work. This double CD compiles not all, but most of the best of that work. Obsessive Aphex completists like myself will lament the absence of this elusive jewel or that (or perhaps sigh with relief that the extravagant price they paid for it wasn't for naught), but I give this compilation a perfect 5 stars anyway because the album itself makes up such a stunning single piece.

You simply won't find a better testimonial to Richard James' musical genius, or the dizzying pace of its evolution, wrapped up in one package. It flows with inner logic and authority, taking the listener on a voyage of imagination from ambient to acid-tech to industrial to drill 'n' bass and back again. Not since Selected Ambient Works Volume II has Richard realized such a musical journey so completely, which is an even greater feat since it's a compilation of material dating back to 1990.

If you're not an Aphex fan, this album could well make one out of you. If you are an Aphex fan, meet your next desert island album.

In a word. Gorgeous.5
I'm one who always thought that some of the most moving and memorable moments in the venerable history of Aphex Twin were the more mellower tracks or albums. After hearing this album I feel it should've been titled "Selected Ambient Works Vol.3". There's alot of beautiful songs that seem to just take you away for a while from the everyday life. Drukqs was good but I wanted to hear some more songs like "Petiatl Cx Htdui" and "Avril 10th" on it. There was perhaps a bit too much drum n bass or bleep n blip on it. It seemed like it wasn't coherent, like Syd Barrett doing electronic music on acid. Don't get me wrong alot of it was exciting and eccentric but you long to hear some of his old beautiful songs again. "26 Mixes For Cash" has tracks that sound like actual songs. I can honestly call this an album of new material all his own because none of these songs sound in ANY way like the songs they were supposed to be originally from. I don't think that Trent Reznor himself could distinguish which two of his songs are on this album, maybe a couple of sound effects could give it away if you're a NIN fan. Anyway it's easy listening and it won't drill your ears like his previous album did, not that its a bad thing. =)

Classic Richard D. James........5
Pretty great collection of remixes- and this shows that he is indeed a master remixer. I wouldn't recommend this record to someone brand new to Aphex Twin- I'd probably suggest starting out w/ 'I Care Because You Do', 'Selected Ambient Works 85-92', or 'Richard D. James Album'- but for the experienced fan, this is a must-purchase.