Chris Fortier As Long As The Movement Exists (EQGCCD018) PROMO CD 2007 dh
By dimy4. Sunday, June 3, 2007 1:52:01 PM
01.Sunday Is A Travel Day 05:17
02.Don't Hide What You Believe 05:28
03.Portion Control 03:39
04.Fattback 06:15
05.Under Your Nose 05:33
06.Waste Not, Want Not 05:12
07.Believe 05:11
08.Fantastic Diversion 06:10
09.Quote Unquote 05:23
10.Dub 05:10
11.Belt Seat Fasten 05:02
12.Deviated Septum 04:44
13.Stay Tuned 04:40
14.Deep Throbmostess 05:33
15.As Long As The Moment Exists 04:36
77:53 min 112,2 MB
artist : Chris Fortier
title . As Long As The Movement Exists
type : Album
year . 2007
genre : Electronic
subgenre . Electronic
label : EQ
cat . EQGCCD018
URL : http://www.stomp.com.au/dept/eq/
.
ripnfo
.
grabber : Eac
encoder . Lame 3.97
quality : VBRkbps / 44.1Khz / Joint-Stereo
source . CDDA
Former progressive house producer Chris Fortier reveals a new
direction on his debut album. 'As Long As The Moment Exists' arrives
on June 11th.
Chris Fortier was one of America's prog figureheads in the late
nineties and early noughties, releasing mix albums and 12"s on labels
such as Bedrock and his own label Fade. But two years ago, Fortier
surprised fans by revealing a new musical agenda on his mix CD
'Balance 007', bringing together Ren Breitbarth, D.Diggler and Mathew
Jonson for a more techno-oriented take on dance music. As a producer,
recently Fortier has been releasing tech house under the stealth
alias 40oz, handing in rerubs of everyone from !!! to Alexkid to
Alexi Delano. Look out for further surprises next month when he drops
his first longplayer.
'As Long As The Moment Exists' was produced by Fortier over the
course of 2006 and melds ambient electronica, 303 acid and dubby tech
house. Is the album another "coming of age" release in the same vein
as 'Balance 007'? "For sure, but I feel that way about every piece of
music I create or any mixed album I do," Fortier told RA. "Like any
artist album, it is a personal look into that artist so it is a
reflection of all the influences and new directions I am going in as
well as where I have been."
The longplayer also breaks a five year production drought for Fortier
who got caught up in the wheelings and dealings of the music biz
after moving to New York. "That was a disappointing realization that
after five years, I had barely made five tracks so I made a conscious
decision to strip away all the other things I was involved in and
concentrate fully on me and my music, to get back to being creative.
I really wanted to work on something that was more expansive in
scope, something with more substance, and not just something
specifically for DJing."







