Search - Various Artists :: Compost 100

Compost 100
Various Artists
Compost 100
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, Jazz, Special Interest, Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #2

Compilation featuring the best artists and music from the German label Compost. All of the tracks and remixes are exclusively produced for this anniversary compilation celebrating the label's 100th release.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Various Artists
Title: Compost 100
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Compost
Release Date: 5/15/2001
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, Jazz, Special Interest, Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop
Styles: Ambient, Drum & Bass, Electronica, Trance, Big Beat, Trip-Hop, House, Techno, Goth & Industrial, Acid Jazz, Avant Garde & Free Jazz, Experimental Music, Dance Pop, Pop Rap
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 667548502825

Synopsis

Album Details
Compilation featuring the best artists and music from the German label Compost. All of the tracks and remixes are exclusively produced for this anniversary compilation celebrating the label's 100th release.
 

CD Reviews

A beguiling, smooth two hours from Compost
Richard Diaz | 07/01/2001
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Through sheer quality of artists and future thinking of attitude, Compost Records climbed the perch to where it stands today, on the commencement of its 100th release; at the forefront of eclectic, organic, stylish music. Just a name check of the roster reads like a catalog of top talent able to fuse elements of jazz, Brazilian beats, drum and bass, soul, atmosphere and spirit. So bundling up twenty exclusive tracks to celebrate should has pretty much given carte blanche to slap highest scores on this two-disc set.The drum brush get-downs of Kyoto Jazz Massive "Crossbreed" and Minus 8 "Come Along" certainly aim on point, while Les Gammas "Outra Vida" delectably melds warm keys, studio polish, and heart. Elsewhere, Beanfield's "Reaction" certainly gets one, and Wei Chi's "Never Let Me Down" doesn't. Yet there's no denying the amount of filler packed in, and a couple of clunkers (the mish-mash jam of Ben Mono "Moments"). Still, the beguiling smoothness of two hours of Compost music has its effect; a vibe so amenable that we'll forgive them for not going the greatest hits route. 3.5 stars"
A great introduction and celebration
B. Lane | New York, New York USA | 07/19/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"For eight years Compost records has made music that proves that "new" and "electronic" isn't just soulless, thumping club fodder. This is music with intelligence, passion and heat.With this compilation for their 100th release Compost brings it's best artists and styles together to really shine.Minus 8, Truby Trio and Fauna Flash are the usual stand-outs."
A Brilliant Primer for the 'Compost' Labels output.....
fetish_2000 | U.K. | 02/25/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This...being a two-disk compilation, which celebrates the various artists featured on the label, is a trawl through some

of the more music enthusiast-orientated end of the market. Focusing less on the more mainstream end of music, and aimed at those that prefer to dig a 'little deeper' to discover their music. Foolishly, I assumed that this was going to be a compilation of Nu-Jazz/Broken beat/Acid Jazz end of the market, along the lines of something like "Jazzanova" (my fault, seeing as I've had had no prior experience with this label), and although there is a fair smattering of those genres dotted across the 2-CD's, its actually a broad selection of electronic music, that touches upon: Dance, Jazz-house, Downtempo, Drum 'N' Bass, Trip-Hop, Electronica. It's a fairly comprehensive package, and those that are prepared for the stylistic jumps in much will find a great deal here (most of the material is either New or Unreleased cuts), to sink their teeth into.



Disc 1:



Truby Trio's "Galicia" (Zero DB Remix), is a beautifully twitchy, sort of electronica fused with a samba rhythm, its like having the central elements of samba music, fed through a sampler, and overlayed with throbbing bass, and keyboard, with a weird start/stop dynamic that works in spite of itself, think dancefloor orientated Brazilian beats and you're half-way there, in imagining this remarkable opening track.



"Kyoto Jazz Massive" manage to impress with all of the few tracks, I've heard from them. Theirs is a unique style of Acid-Jazz / Jazz-house which is almost certainly a highlight here, the use of shimmering keyboards, mixed successfully with a nod to '70s fusion, and intergrated with broken beats , continually impresses, and their track contribution..."Crossbreed", is merely a continuation of their excellence.



From here on in, the genres touched upon begin to move into the various genres / Sub-genres of electronic music, and although moving from relatively upbeat on one song, to gleefully downtempo on the next, this is a truly excellent showcase for the labels diversity within the electronic field. So whether it the sophisticated take on intelligent Drum 'n Bass as provided by "Karl Berger's" Sublime "Discipline 100", which is all intricately programmed Drum Breaks, with luscious & Jazz-referencing instrumentation over the top, that isn't a million miles away from the style of D'n'B that "LTJ Bukem" has

managed to corner the market with, but with more of a nod to the 'Nu-Jazz' movement.



The latter end of the Disk nudges its way towards funky-beaks / Broken Beat, with "Beanfield's - Close the Gap Pt 1-3", being a particularly noteworthy standout, partly for its combination of not only excellent use of frenetic, syncopated beat structures that jitter & stutter, like accessible experimental electronica, but also never forgetting that music in this genre needn't be a difficult listen, and can be as head-noddingly agreeable, as most of the finest electronic music can be.



Disk 2:



Heads, into the more experimental side of things, with a stronger emphasis on electronica, Broken Beat & leftfield rhythms. The first track off this disc, is "Minus 8's" sophisticated Jazz-house track "Come Along", which is a superbly created upbeat Latin/Salsa influenced number, Latin in feel and jazzy in composition, with exuberant Mediterranean percussion and sensual vibes, this is the sort of fantastically fused elements of House music & Latin music, that the band "Nuyorican Soul" do so well.



A truly surprising change of pace comes in the form of "Twice's" downtempo broken beat effort "ISM", this has more in cutting edge rhythms, than it does with anything Jazz related. Starting off with with a minimal broken beat & slight echo, that gradually unfolds and opens out into something altogether different, by intergrating simple piano/synth lead harmonies, into a glistening fusion of melody & beats....Think prime-era instrumental 'Stevie Wonder', and you'll be pretty close to imagine, what this sublime effort sounds like.



Pushing the boat out into even more experimental territory is "Fauna Flash's" Jaw-dropping "Ten", this is probably more in debt to ambient-Techno than the stylisation of Jazz. Stark, dense and minimal sounds create a brooding sense of spacious sounds, with very little actually musically going on, but its the use of sound, that makes it so compelling to listen to, this is detached & hypnotic, and not unlike the sort of Ambient-Techno/Electronica that IDM (Intelligent Dance Music) specialist "Autechre" would make, and feels so different from everything else on this compilation, that I actually had to walk over to the CD Player to check to see it was the same CD (and give the track another play).



Possibly in an effort to make sure all bases are suitably covered, things that a turn towards a more Funk/Worldbeat aesthetic, with "Supersempft's" afrobeat "Wewa", which for all intents and purposes, sounds like a lost "Fela Kuti" track. The use of African rhythm sections and percussion is to be saluted, and yet the spacey free jazz-like encounter of sax, lively percussion and African chants are as confidently realised as one could reasonably expect (possibly even surpassing expectations), and surely the man himself (Afro-beat overlord "Fela Kuti"), would surely approve of the remarkably accurate reinterpretation of his sound.



This complation, manages to completely do everything that it sets out to do (provide a broad summary of the labels output), and actually manages to surpass it's agenda, as there's so much amazingly composed & arranged music here, that spans a (very) wide variety of genres, that it would be hard not to listen to this album (for instance "Amalgamation of Soundz" inspired Drum 'n'Bass / 70's Spy thriller soundtrack song "Guilty as Charged"), and not want to find out more about these artists on the label. Obviously having a broad ear for music is going to be beneficial to any listener, as the leaping from genre to genre, will leave those expecting a continual style of music frustrated. On one side note, I have to make a comment about a couple of reviews that mention that there is a fair amount of 'filler tracks' on the album....I have to say that I could only possibly think of one track on the album, that could have reasonably have been considered 'filler', and even then its a nice track, but maybe because (in my eyes) there is such a high proportion of fantastic tracks on here, that anything less than stellar, would have possibly stood out. Regardless of my views on that subject, this is a tremendous effort for the 'Compost' label, and is the most perfect of introductions to the labels remarkable output."