Search - Craig Richards, Lee Burridge :: Tyrant 2: No Shoes / No Cake

Tyrant 2: No Shoes / No Cake
Craig Richards, Lee Burridge
Tyrant 2: No Shoes / No Cake
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (32) - Disc #1

Welcome to the world of echo. Welcome to the world of Tyrant. What is Tyrant? Tyrant is Craig Richards (visual artist, player of records) and Lee Burridge (dapper don, disc jockey). It's a soundsystem that doesn't actually...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Craig Richards, Lee Burridge
Title: Tyrant 2: No Shoes / No Cake
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Fabric
Release Date: 6/3/2002
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
Styles: House, Dance Pop
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 802560000625

Synopsis

Album Description
Welcome to the world of echo. Welcome to the world of Tyrant. What is Tyrant? Tyrant is Craig Richards (visual artist, player of records) and Lee Burridge (dapper don, disc jockey). It's a soundsystem that doesn't actually own a sound system. It's a night that moves where the mood takes it. It's whatever you want it to be. What's the plan? Well, what usually happens with affairs like this is each DJ gets a CD each, but Burridge and Richards - being the awkward bastards they are - eschew all of that in favour of combining heads for both CDs. The resultant signature sound, which sounds like neither of them yet somehow sounds like both, is as good a manifesto as any Situationist could muster. Flitting idly and nimbly between house and breaks, deep and dub, cool-out and peak-hour, Tyrant take us where - if James T. Kirk will forgive us - no man has gone before. This is house, Jim, but not as we know it.Although their heart is in house, Tyrant's music is as much influenced by dub as it is Chicago and is nearer to King Tubby than King Unique. It¹s got that wobble of uncertainty that makes you wonder whether you've taken drugs. (In fact you haven't. The music's supposed to sound that way.) Do you want to know the difference between those DJs who feel it and those wouldn't know what it was even if it came round to their house and ran off with their girlfriend? It's to do with basslines. Listen to the myriad of crap house records and it's like sitting on a particularly bad fairground ride. They shouldn't sit on the beat, but ride and slide off it. It's what gives movement and funk to music and it's what makes girls wiggle their hips. It's sexy. The tracks you're listening to here are so full of it, we've had to use two CDs to fit it all on. There's "it"-ness for you. We're not going to fill you with dreary biographical details, because you probably already know that Craig plays weekly at Fabric in London and Lee plays all over the place (though he cut his chops in Hong Kong) as befits a DJ of his calibre. Together they are Tyrant, the soundsystem that doesn't own a sound system. Tyrant the sound system without much hair. Welcome to their world.
 

CD Reviews

A great compilation
06/03/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I've been a fan of most of these DJ's (Lee is the bomb) for quite some time now. This CD doesn't disappoint...its still worth the wait if you don't live by a cool enough record shop that carries the CD. Some of these mixes I have not even heard before and I consider myself a elctronic music elitist. I really like it a lot...buy this. Its the real deal."
Smooth with no Shoes
06/03/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"While I don't pretend to understand the title, this second mix CD from the tyrant boys is the best thing i've heard all year. Craig Richards and Lee Burridge are doing well enough for themselves in the UK, and I'm glad they've found the time to put together another Tyrant CD.
Even better yet, it's a double CD. Twice the lovin'. Grooving house and breakbeats, with a lean towards the progressive without stepping through that door. While the selection of tracks is great, the mixing is mint. Smooth as Smooth can be."
Just to answer your question...
Jim Galligan | Denver, Co United States | 04/14/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Lee and Craig did a rare thing and teamed up on both disks. Unlike the unsaul arangement of one mixing the first disk, and the other doing the chore on the second, they mixed each disk together working on track selection and final mixing/mastering."