Roberto Carlos - AmigaRoberto Carlos - Amiga Dalparan, Jang Yeong-gyu - a bittersweet lifeDalparan, Jang Yeong-gyu - a bittersweet life Jimmy Dorsey Orch. - Jay-Dee's Boogie Woogie / June NightJimmy Dorsey Orch. - Jay-Dee's Boogie Woogie / June Night Tzabar Group, Dov Seltzer - Israel DancesTzabar Group, Dov Seltzer - Israel Dances Radiotrance - Полёт НормальныйRadiotrance - Полёт Нормальный Dental Work / Otomo Hava - SplitDental Work / Otomo Hava - Split Los Diablos Rojos - Matando A Los Chivos / El Pescador Y La SirenaLos Diablos Rojos - Matando A Los Chivos / El Pescador Y La Sirena Connie Francis - Sings Bacharach, Kaempfert, Last & ManciniConnie Francis - Sings Bacharach, Kaempfert, Last & Mancini
» » Eat Static - Epsylon
Eat Static - Epsylon download free
Title:

Eat Static - Epsylon download free

Performer:
Album:
Epsylon
Country:
Released:
Style:
Trance, Goa Trance, Drum n Bass
MP3 archive size:
1276 mb
FLAC archive size:
1914 mb
WMA archive size:
1176 mb
Other formats:
WAV VOX ASF VQF MIDI MPC FLAC
Rating:
4.5
Votes:
468
Download links

Tracklist Hide Credits

1 Epsylon
Written-By – Hinton*, Pepler*, Everitt*
9:41
2 Dionysiac
Written-By – Hinton*, Pepler*, Everitt*
8:23
3 Peeow!
Written-By – Pepler*
8:09
4 Undulattice (Uforic Remix)
Written-By – Pepler*, Everitt*
10:16
5 Lost In Time
Engineer – Ed WynneMixed By, Producer – Matt Austin
7:52
6 Gulf Breeze (Zetan Mix) 7:09
7 The Brain 9:24

Companies, etc.

  • Licensed To – Mammoth Records
  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Planet Dog Records
  • Copyright (c) – Planet Dog Records
  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – The Ultimate Recording Co. Ltd.
  • Copyright (c) – The Ultimate Recording Co. Ltd.
  • Published By – Ultimate Publishing
  • Recorded At – The Mill, Somerset
  • Mixed At – Butterfly Studios
  • Produced At – Butterfly Studios
  • Glass Mastered At – Specialty Records Corporation
  • Pressed By – Specialty Records Corporation

Credits

  • Mixed By, Producer, Written-By – Eat Static
  • Performer – Eat Static (tracks: 1 to 4, 6, 7)

Notes

This EP comes with 3 bonus tracks, being all from Lost In Time.

© & ℗ 1995 Planet Dog Records/The Ultimate Recording Co Ltd under license to Mammoth.
Track 5 recorded at the Mill, Somerset and mixed and produced at Butterfly Studio.
All tracks Ultimate Publishing (ASCAP)

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (text): 0 35498-0117-2 6
  • Barcode (string): 035498011726
  • Matrix / Runout: [SRC logo] 3 MR2 117-2 RE-1 SRC**01 M1S1
  • Rights Society: ASCAP

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
BARK 009CDS Eat Static Epsylon EP ‎(CD, EP) Planet Dog BARK 009CDS UK 1995
BARK 581 023-1 Eat Static Epsylon EP ‎(2x12", EP) Planet Dog BARK 581 023-1 UK 1995
MR0117-1 Eat Static Epsylon ‎(2x12", EP) Mammoth Records MR0117-1 US 1995
BARK 009T Eat Static Epsylon EP ‎(2x12", EP) Planet Dog BARK 009T UK 1995
none, bark009mcs Eat Static Epsylon EP ‎(Cass, EP) Ultimate, Planet Dog none, bark009mcs UK 1995


  • Eat Static have been among my favorite electronic acts for some time. This collection brings together the Epsylon ep and the lost in time EP, and forms a perfect bridge between their first two albums and Science of the Gods. I have Eat Static in the same hallowed company as the Orb on my playlists, and rightfully so. Although they have been more rooted in techno and psy, they simply have too many elements going on in their music to be pigeonholed into an easy "one size fits all" category. In many respects, this is just a general endorsement of the band overall, as all the records I wanted to review were reviewed well enough already I think, but clearly Epsylon and Dionysic are the two standouts here, the former being a good representation of how commanding they can be in straight ahead techno, and the latter being one of their earliest forays into drum and bass, a style that would pop up on almost every subsequent release in some form or another, and a style that they command amazingly well, on par with pretty much anything Metalheadz has released, and that’s no small feat! This album and Science of the Gods were also the two records that received a big mainstream push, falling as they do in the midst of the mainstreams' short lived love affair with "electronica." However, that said, Eat Statics entire discography is just as worthy, and they are a rare act whose quality has never really waned, even if their popularity (along with many other acts at the time that were touted as the next big thing, only to be dropped by the mainstream as soon as the next easy trend came along) waned.