4 tracks, 2 bangers: D.K. starts a new season in the Antinote league with a 12" 100% dedicated to the dancefloor. There's a perfume of jungle emanating from the whole record. The Parisian producer has also been peeping on some early 1990's rave records, as demonstrated by the two first songs, Mystic Warrior, and perhaps even more flagrantly Elements, with its emotional pads and sad mock Jon Hassel-like trumpets.
Worries In The Dance, and Earth People are more of a warm up business, so to say in the language of the club. D.K. takes a step back, BPM-wise, only to allow a deeper exploration of the surroundings - namely shamans with bamboo flutes circling around you, monks meditating under a cascade, others ringing a prayer bell - but in a very artificial way / very distinctive signature of the French producer, that have more to do with Age Of Empire or any 1990's adventure game set in a fantasized Asia.
Worries In The Dance, and Earth People are more of a warm up business, so to say in the language of the club. D.K. takes a step back, BPM-wise, only to allow a deeper exploration of the surroundings - namely shamans with bamboo flutes circling around you, monks meditating under a cascade, others ringing a prayer bell - but in a very artificial way / very distinctive signature of the French producer, that have more to do with Age Of Empire or any 1990's adventure game set in a fantasized Asia.
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