Dj Hidden - The Later After Remastered (2020)
Artist: Dj Hidden
Title: The Later After Remastered
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Not On (Dj Hidden Self-Released)
Genre: Drum & Bass
Quality: lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 01:13:59
Total Size: 496 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: The Later After Remastered
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Not On (Dj Hidden Self-Released)
Genre: Drum & Bass
Quality: lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 01:13:59
Total Size: 496 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Death Seer (Remastered Version) (08:05)
2. Ghost Breath (Remastered Version) (05:34)
3. Here Lies The Confusion (Remastered Version) (04:07)
4. As She Laughed (Remastered Version) (06:09)
5. The Ignorance (Remastered Version) (05:58)
6. I've Always Missed You (Remastered Version) (03:34)
7. Chrono (Remastered Version) (05:18)
8. The Later After (Remastered Version) (06:22)
9. Unturned Stones (Remastered Version) (06:17)
10. Backwards Reversal (Remastered Version) (04:40)
11. Scry 7734-5335-34 (Remastered Version) (06:50)
12. Straightjacket (Remastered Version) (06:20)
13. The Eight Veil (Remastered Version) (04:45)
In 2007, DJ Hidden released his first album entitled "The Later After" on the now defunct label Ad Noiseam. This is the remastered edition of this album: all tracks have been revisited and perfected as much as possible.
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"This is what the scientists at CERN found when they started the Large Hadron Collider in 2008. In predictable Lovecraftian style they opened a gateway to a dimension of pure eeeeeeeevil and let out a massive amount of dark forces that was somehow (don’t ask me about details, I only heard this from my uncle who worked there as a janitor) concentrated into an exclusive first copy of The Later After before the singularity transported the album one year back in time to it’s release. At this point MacGyver miraculously showed up and managed to turn the machinery off. In the chaos that ensued the scientists finally concluded that they had witnessed a wild card scenario only RYM reviewers could have foreseen, but at least it was more satisfying than the “destruction of the universe” scenarios everyone had been fearing up until then."