Touch & Go - Big Beat Boogie (2000)
Artist: Touch & Go
Title: Big Beat Boogie
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: V2 Records
Genre: Acid Jazz, Big Beat
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 79:25
Total Size: 496 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Big Beat Boogie
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: V2 Records
Genre: Acid Jazz, Big Beat
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 79:25
Total Size: 496 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01 Would You...?
02 Straight To...Number One
03 Tango In Harlem
04 Big Beat
05 Ecoute, Repete
06 So Hot
07 Mein Freund Harvey (Sugar Dabby)
08 Are You Talking About Me?
09 Would You...? [Trailermen Go To Rio Edit]
10 Life's Beach
11 Thanks For Coming
12 Straight To...Number One [Dreamcatcher's Mix]
13 Danceteria Bongo Bongo
14 Jazz Essetial (feat. Jazz Con Bazz)
15 Mary Mary Shackles
16 Extasy (What a Wonderful World) (feat. P. Ondria)
17 Blowing (feat. Ever C)
18 Straight To...Number One [Go Latino Mix]
19 Le Flic Et La Fille (feat. Arling and Cameron)
20 Straight to #1 [The Cool Fish Mix]
Featuring the European hit single "Would You...?," "I Find You Very Attractive" (quotation marks included in the title) is for the most part lyrically built around the kind of catch phrases that people use as pickup lines at clubs and parties. So it comes as little surprise that these are matched to the kind of music you'd expect to hear at clubs and parties where such pickup lines form the backbone of conversation, and where bouncers are on hand to make sure that no one with the wrong haircut or shirt intrudes on the fun. This is a more curious and eclectic brew than many such discs, though, mixing sexy female spoken and sung vocals; jack-in-the-box samples, echoes, and effects; perky brass with vaguely Latin and swing jazz overtones; smoky cocktail lounge passages; the odd bit that wouldn't sound out of place on dub records; and more conventional modern dance percussion. When Caribbean accents are introduced in the brass, guitar, and rhythm, it's more akin to postmodern music to sip piña coladas to on beach cruises. It's clever, and the riffs are modestly catchy. There's also the nagging feeling that the music is aimed toward listeners who desperately aspire to nouveau riche chicness, but want to feel somewhat hip about doing so. The CD concludes with the Trailermen Go to Rio edit of "Would You..." and the Dreamcatcher's Mix of one of the disc's other tracks, "Straight to...Number One."