Uproot
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Reef - Baby Kites, Nokea
- Elders - Clouds
- Bang Soundboy - Istari Lasterfahrer
- Cassava - Nokea
- Winter Buds - Atki2
- Homboys - Maga Bo, Max Normal
- Too Much - Clouds
- Mass Dampers - Ekstrak
- Afghanistan - Frescoe
- I Gave You All My Love [Matt Shadetek's I Gave You All My Dub Remix][Mi - Iron Shirt
- Capilano Bridge - Jenny Jones
- Plays John Cassavettes, Pt. 2 - Ekkehard Ehlers
- Radios et Announceurs - Stalker
- Ignadjossi - Jhonel, Ghislain Poirier
- Hungry Ghost [Instrumental] - Filastine
- Braille Diving - Scuba
- Mirage/Brooklyn Anthem - Quest
- Naked/Erhu Solo [Acapella] - 77Klash, Jah Dan, Team Shadetek
- Strategy Decay/3Akel [Acapella] - Timeblind
- Uranium [Acapella] - Bigg, Maga Bo
- Drunken Monkey [Ambient Remix] - Lloop, Professor Shehab
- Save from the Flames All That Yet Remains - Dead Leaf Echo
- Second-Hand Science - We
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #86491 in Music
- Released on: 2008-10-07
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .18 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Uproot, Rupture's first release since returning to Brooklyn after seven years in Spain, offers his most intimate work to date. Rupture is not a DJ to rest on previous highs, but who constantly looks for new ones. He proved that he can DJ fast & dense with his influential Gold Teeth Thief & Minesweeper Suite mixes - now it's time for the sensual slow dance of a (relatively) smooth turntablist-experience that deepens on repeat listens. Uproot downshifts into languorous long-blends and gorgeous moments of ambient warmth. This is surely his most 'listenable' mix to date, blended seamlessly with elements from UK dubstep and Brooklyn dancehall to Berlin abstraction, not to mention Brazil (Maga Bo), Finland (Clouds), Australia (Dead Leaf) and more. Taking the twin lessons of bass and space taught by 70s Jamaican dub visionaries, Uproot explores a wealth of new material - almost half of it previously unreleased - in a mix that is deep, contemplative, and contagious. Cosmopolitan bass never sounded so good.
Customer Reviews
ooooohh... so good... if you like...
DJ /Rupture. I do. so I'm kind of biased (I freakin' pre-ordered it for chrissakes). have you heard/bought/tried to copy a friend's copy of any of his last mixes? yeah? then you'll definitely like this one. he dials back the aggro/digital hardcore beats and makes one that you go back to immediately as opposed to putting it on when you're trying to clear your head. if you've done that with his past mixes, you might have very well already bought this one. there's no real way I can go into specifics here without giving away the good surprises - you're going to have to trust me on this one.
he gives kickass recommendations for music as well - this one I bought on his recommendation, Analog Africa 3 or something, ranks up there with the Orchestra Baobab CDs I have.
the Pitchfork review pretty much nailed it as well - I can't think of too many DJs with his scope of knowledge either. there's one part that I'm not sure if he wanted to make it sound like it was going to side 2 or not, but his methods of sonic disruption seem to have evolved as well.
now that Diplo is using /Rupture's older tricks, it's reassuring to see that there's more up his sleeve. on the off chance that Jace himself is reading this, thank you for doing what you're doing.
Brooklyn Global
Here's the review from 365 MAg: "Turntablist, musician and producer DJ Rupture is set to release a new mix album Uproot in October. Famously performing live sets with three turntables, with acapellas breaks and noise on each separate one. His latest offering is his first release in seven years having recently returned to his hometown Brooklyn after as many years living in Spain.
This new mix album finds Rupture in fine form, seamlessly combining elements of Dubstep, Dancehall, Berlin Abstraction and Crunk. It builds upon the fast and dense music of previous works such as Gold Teeth and Minesweeper Suite, but with more contemplation and a reflection generated..
Uproot sees Rupture working with a host of DJs from all around the world. Which include Australian Dead Leaf, British Dubstep DJ Shackleton and Germans Ekkehard Ehlers to name but a few.
It is definitely his most gripping and listenable album to date and Rupture commissioned a string quartet for this latest outing. It has clear influences from seventies Jamaican dub and combines these elements, especially within the bass-lines, with warm ambiance and smooth Turntablism."
Global Not World
From Pitchfork: "While Uproot feels every bit as purposeful as those earlier mixes, it achieves that goal though different means. Musically, it's far more subdued and spacious; the lacerating swathes of digital noise have been subbed out for tracks that favor lonely, clattering rhythms, yawning sub-basslines, and displaced vocals. Like a lot of his contemporaries, Rupture has clearly gravitated towards dubstep over the past few years, and Uproot shows his selection skills in that space are as impeccable as they are elsewhere. From the cavernous glissandos in Frescoe's "Afghanistan" to the twerky, demodulated keys in Filastine's "Hungry Ghost (Instrumental)" to the haunted illbient fog of Moving Ninja's "Uranium", Clayton's selections are generous and far-reaching, and build a pretty compelling case for dubstep as the most creatively robust genre in electronic music right now."




