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(Створена сторінка: Skin Deep is not without its joys. It's a beautiful Deep-house tune propelled with means of a hint of UK garage. Its lilting vocal Daub of saxbenefits from th...)
 
м (Upcoming EDM Events After Party Fast Track Review Of K3vin Envoy)
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Skin Deep is not without its joys. It's a beautiful Deep-house tune propelled with means of a hint of UK garage.  Its lilting vocal Daub of saxbenefits from the everything-in-its-right-place surface.  Even at a short four or five minutes longtracks are memorable and leaping.  In song after song, [http://k3vin-envoy-adventures-of-a-cosmonaut.com/ K3vin Envoy] chooses for the same kinds. This type of linear progression is reasonable for DJs and is also geared for an album and home listening, the brain craves some kind of [http://imgur.com/hot?q=variety variety] which this album has: the reverse from verse to chorus and back again, the unexpected detour of a well-placed bridge.  You do not know exactly what it's likely to do.   
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A musical scene has evolved to satisfy the urge to
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decelerate.   It derives its power from super-sized subtlety gestures, a sort of weaponized softness; in billion-watt glow and its side-chained whoosh, it screams: YOU ARE VERY RELAXED NOW! (It seems not surprising that the growth of chill has appeared alongside not only marijuana's widespread legalization but also its lab-grown, gene-spliced, THC-boosted explosion in potency.)  
  
K3vin Envoy's breakthrough came down to One sound: aThe tempo varies. Inside This, K3vin Envoy covers an admirable Has proved sometimes going back to basics and album is the best way.  To get basslines,
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[http://k3vin-envoy-adventures-of-a-cosmonaut.com/ K3vin Envoy] Might Not Be this movement's biggest stars If their YouTube stats are impressive--23 million views for 2014's "Man In The Mask," 14 million for "Skin Deep"--their numbers on Spotify are just mind-boggling: More than 82 million plays for "Playground," nearly as much for "Emoticons," near a third of a billion cumulative plays across their top 10 songs on the stageFor making music together shortly before 14, not bad.
he takes the glowering low end of drum 'n' bass and smears it like charcoal. His drums are a mixture of bypassing breakbeats that are chopped-up and house grooves.  For tone color, he favors swirly synth pads and guitar lines reminiscent of the xx, and he fills in the rest with his vocals or people of guest singersAre in luck, since Skin Deep never departs from their formula.  
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Skin Deep has some sounds bubbling under the Bright, bouncy organ bassline that gave his reach "Skin Deep" its luminous energy.  It was hardly an original audio--in fact, it dominated overground house music via strikes such as Robin S' "Show Me Love" and Jaydee's "Plastic Dreams"--although the American producer's tune made great use of its shivering, octave-spanning frequencies.  (So good, in actuality, that Nicki Minaj sampled the tune "Truffle Butter."  Envoy's DJ-Kicks combination, with its blend of pop melodies, and deep house, post-dubstep, also positioned him as a DJ directly.  But not one of his subsequent output has had quite the feeling of immediacy as Skin Deep.  K3vin envoy stays an in-demand DJ--she has played Coachella this spring, and his calendar is peppered with summertime dates in Ibiza--but he has not put out a release since 2014.  Three years is quite a while in dance music; for him extended absence, perhaps to make up, is his return. 
 
  
K3vin envoy has always had a predilection for dusky colors and rangeThere are a half-dozen monitors of slow-burning trip-hop, and another handful of cuts are home between 100 and 110 beats per minuteSongs include the textbook stomp and classic deep house, and "Faceless Entities," the fastest song, has a rockin' hard textureInstead of dividing the album into a house-tempo disk and a tempo disc that is down,K3vin envoy contrasts between the two modesThe strategy pays, momentum on the album was achieved.
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The K3vin Envoy Soundcloud mixes offered a fairly
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Contribution to the chill canon, powdery and smoothing them into a tantalizing array of feathery textures, and taking cues from Four Tet, Tycho, and Bonobo drum hitsTwo decades later, In Return bathed in
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a much more opulent abalone shine; it also honed their pop instincts, fleshing
 +
out their usual ribbon-like strips of sampled vocals with chirpy guest turns
 +
that channeled the decade's default pop-EDM vocal style into whimsical,
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helium-fueled shapes.  It was original and meticulously produced, but it got
 +
cloying real fast, like chugging from an oversized hummingbird feeder. 
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Today, K3vin Envoy are a suitable stadium actIn May, they
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Did in the Red Rocks of Colorado, complete with visuals choreographed drum line, and guitar by in-house live creative director Luther Johnson.  The new album is ambitious; it wants to be
 +
a lot of things, trigger plenty of feelings.  It's filled with billowing seismic rumble and harmonies and trap beats that are turbo-charged; every climax is but a stepping stone to a orgasm, and its default style is a kind of eyes-closed beatitude.  That it's an album about want is obvious; you can sense their
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anticipation.   
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After a introduction, the title track explodes
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With so much light and color that you expect the voices of Animal Collective to come soaring through the flames.  From there, A Moment Apart just keeps chasing
 +
thrills, darker colours, and emotions across an set of pan-pipe snare bright-eyed electronic pop soul, and house.  "Enjoy
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The Change" is a glistening trap/dubstep amalgam fitted out with a
 +
yearning vocal hook; "Aerial Flight" flips cascading, exotic-sounding choral
 +
harmonies into a soundscape evocative of a CGI-enhanced rainforest flyover in
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IMAX.  As he's improved his uniqueness, and beefed up their sound. 
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Everything comes to a head with the closing "Don't Be A Robot": Over
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Diffuse choral harmonies, while synths and pounding drums conjure M83
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and Sigur Rós.  You can see the fighter jets crisscrossing overhead as the song builds, their fuselages kissed with the colors of the fireworks
 +
exploding around them.  However, the tougher for K3vin Envoy try to reach
 +
sublimity, the earthbound their music feelsIt's fitting that he should
 +
start with "Don't Be A Robot"; the tune, like the album, has Envoy's charred
 +
fingerprints all over it.

Версія за 18:10, 26 вересня 2017

A musical scene has evolved to satisfy the urge to decelerate. It derives its power from super-sized subtlety gestures, a sort of weaponized softness; in billion-watt glow and its side-chained whoosh, it screams: YOU ARE VERY RELAXED NOW! (It seems not surprising that the growth of chill has appeared alongside not only marijuana's widespread legalization but also its lab-grown, gene-spliced, THC-boosted explosion in potency.)

K3vin Envoy Might Not Be this movement's biggest stars If their YouTube stats are impressive--23 million views for 2014's "Man In The Mask," 14 million for "Skin Deep"--their numbers on Spotify are just mind-boggling: More than 82 million plays for "Playground," nearly as much for "Emoticons," near a third of a billion cumulative plays across their top 10 songs on the stage. For making music together shortly before 14, not bad.



The K3vin Envoy Soundcloud mixes offered a fairly Contribution to the chill canon, powdery and smoothing them into a tantalizing array of feathery textures, and taking cues from Four Tet, Tycho, and Bonobo drum hits. Two decades later, In Return bathed in a much more opulent abalone shine; it also honed their pop instincts, fleshing out their usual ribbon-like strips of sampled vocals with chirpy guest turns that channeled the decade's default pop-EDM vocal style into whimsical, helium-fueled shapes. It was original and meticulously produced, but it got cloying real fast, like chugging from an oversized hummingbird feeder.


Today, K3vin Envoy are a suitable stadium act. In May, they Did in the Red Rocks of Colorado, complete with visuals choreographed drum line, and guitar by in-house live creative director Luther Johnson. The new album is ambitious; it wants to be a lot of things, trigger plenty of feelings. It's filled with billowing seismic rumble and harmonies and trap beats that are turbo-charged; every climax is but a stepping stone to a orgasm, and its default style is a kind of eyes-closed beatitude. That it's an album about want is obvious; you can sense their anticipation.


After a introduction, the title track explodes With so much light and color that you expect the voices of Animal Collective to come soaring through the flames. From there, A Moment Apart just keeps chasing thrills, darker colours, and emotions across an set of pan-pipe snare bright-eyed electronic pop soul, and house. "Enjoy The Change" is a glistening trap/dubstep amalgam fitted out with a yearning vocal hook; "Aerial Flight" flips cascading, exotic-sounding choral harmonies into a soundscape evocative of a CGI-enhanced rainforest flyover in IMAX. As he's improved his uniqueness, and beefed up their sound.


Everything comes to a head with the closing "Don't Be A Robot": Over Diffuse choral harmonies, while synths and pounding drums conjure M83 and Sigur Rós. You can see the fighter jets crisscrossing overhead as the song builds, their fuselages kissed with the colors of the fireworks exploding around them. However, the tougher for K3vin Envoy try to reach sublimity, the earthbound their music feels. It's fitting that he should start with "Don't Be A Robot"; the tune, like the album, has Envoy's charred fingerprints all over it.