playlist artwork#12 this weekRed Rat

by Djet

Tracks

1 5:44 142 listens
2 5:01 77 listens
3 4:48 42 listens
4 4:30 28 listens
5 5:32 24 listens
6 4:16 21 listens
7 4:32 65 listens
8 5:29 14 listens
9 4:39 14 listens
10 5:15 14 listens
11 2:31 12 listens

About this album

  • Updated: 20/10/2011

All music by Djet (A. Lisovsky) 2007/2008/2011

Design cover by A. Lisovsky / 2008

 

 

"...Many species of rats are island endemics and some have become endangered due to habitat loss or competition with the Brown, Black or Polynesian rat."

(wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat)

The tracks of this album are published under a Creative Commons licence, check the licence associated to each track.

Reviews for "Red Rat"

2 reviews


  • Write a review
Eight Million Ways To Die

angenehm verstörend ;-)

Report this review (spam, insults, etc.)

Eight Million Ways To Die • 2011-10-24 19:15:02

sehr interessantes industrial/noise/darkambient/electronic album! intensiv, voller kleiner details, brachial und dennoch subtil. das ganze erinnert mich ein wenig an diverse henrik björkk projekte (folkstorm, nordvargr). respekt!
pasha_limani

City decay never sounded this good

Report this review (spam, insults, etc.)

pasha_limani • 2011-11-11 22:59:06

From the first few blasts of noise that herald the start of the opening track it is clear that this is an album that exposes a murky urban underbelly. Part industrial, part dark ambient, "Red Rat" seems to hark back to the industrial behemoth that was the Soviet Union whilst simultaneously suggesting that it might equally be a soundtrack to some future Russian equivalent of Mega-City One. The pulsating "Electric Rat" features an insistent, repetitive beat that recalls the work of Suicide. It is an outstanding opening track that sets up the rest of the album nicely. The pace drops thereafter as the music begins to develop more of a dark ambient atmosphere and throughout the fifty-two minutes running time Djet demonstrates that he has complete control over both tone and structure. This is one of those albums which has that satisfactory feel of being a fully rounded work of art. Various influences are allowed to drift in and out at different times, the dub infused "Spiral Trip" being a particularly enjoyable diversion. Jamendo boasts an impressive array of high quality dark ambient and industrial releases. This is yet another example and further proof also that Djet is one of the more interesting contributors to the global netlabel scene.
Album name

0
Playlist
0
Your listening history