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French producer Danton Eeprom has been first making waves in Berlin's raunchy Mitte clubs with enigmatic stage performances and raving neo-electro productions. Sometimes integrating guitars and singing into his tracks, sometimes toning it down to stripped Chicago-influenced house productions, Eeprom's work is tied together by a unique way of arranging and mixing, which has gained him a sizeable fan-base all over the world.
82 Releases, 80 Artists
Stiletos Rising
Track released on Infiné
Infiné in_stock Infiné Stiletos Rising
crosses
12 February 2010
00:05:46
13.28 MB
MP3 (320 kbit/s)
0,99 €
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satyros, 1 year ago via zero-inch.com
satyros, 1 year ago via zero-inch.com
Enigmatic French producer Danton Eeprom made waves with his debut album 'Yes Is More' on Infiné early this year, defying pigeonholing and getting much well-deserved hype. We love this track for its lo-slung, sultry disco-funk feel that bears a winning sleazy grin.
The Editor, 1 year ago via zero-inch.com
This Track is featured in Edition #037:
Our favourites of 2010 - for free until the year ends
Say hello, wave good-bye... As the year draws to a close we look back on our favourite tracks of 2010. more...
The Editor, 1 year ago via zero-inch.com
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Bentais, 2 years ago via zero-inch.com
The Album Yes Is More was reviewed:
It's not uncommon for techno producers to try and spice up an album with a bit of pop. The full-length format demands a bit more versatility then a 12" after all, and so a few plucked guitar chords are added here and there and some vocals strewn on top. More often then not, the results fail to convince.

Not so with 'Yes Is More', the debut album by French producer Dantom Eeprom. Pop is neither an afterthought nor an ideology here - the album's 12 tracks are rock songs, techno tracks or electronica experiments, without ever feeling contrived or inconsistent.

The album's first track, 'Thanks For Nothing' confidently sets the tone - new-wavish, almost rockabilly-like in mood and instrumentation. 'Give Me Pain', the albums single, follows this up with an even broader scope: an accordion prelude meets Jamie Lidell-like vocals, bleepy synth lines and a Motown-style breakdown. Further highlights are the minimalist, gender-bending collaboration with Chloé, 'The Feminine Man', as well as the Sister Sledge hit 'Lost In Music', performed together with Au Revoir Simone singer Erika Forster.

There are a few moments when the album's 'anything goes' approach threatens to miss its mark, as with the synth-driven power ballad 'Vivid Love', but at most times Eeprom masters his stylistic universality with aplomb - no small feat for an album this ambitious.
The Editor, 2 years ago via zero-inch.com
gl03, 2 years ago via zero-inch.com
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