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Sool | 
| Artist: Ellen Allien Label: Bpitch Control Category: Music
Buy New: $16.98
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 139496
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 175 UPC: 880319304323 EAN: 0880319304323 ASIN: B0016CPJC0
Release Date: May 27, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Save $10.00 when you spend $50.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Einsteigen | | • | Caress | | • | Bim | | • | Sprung | | • | Elphine | | • | Zauber | | • | Its | | • | Ondu | | • | Frieda | | • | Mm | | • | Out |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description Double LP version. Welcome once again to the Allien world: The album Sool is subtle, mysterious, and minimal. This could easily be Allien's most intimate album yet: the sounds of everyday life and snatches of whispers reveal themselves with field-recorded closeness, the beats are as soft and as near as a heartbeat, ambient synth sounds are as long and spacious as an arm stretching across a couch, and everything is arranged in exactly the right place, as in a well-appointed parlor. But Sool also illustrates that minimal is not only meant for private moments, but also for the dancefloor. Some songs clang with an industrial aggression, others throb with a stark intensity, while still others gently coax you onto the floor just to break your heart.
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| Customer Reviews:
Ellen Allien pushes techno into new territories July 9, 2008 Steward Willons 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
"Sool" is a surprising departure for techno queen Ellen Allien. Rather than give us another album of awesome, tuneful techno, she gives us a CD made more for listening than dancing. The music is at once unexpected and a logical progression from her earlier work. Where her previous albums were made of individual songs, "Sool" is more like one continuous work. It's not exactly a concept album, per se, but the flow and overall form points to something larger than a track-by-track format.
Since I have no doubt that Allien will continue to pump out the minimal techno tracks, I'm happy that she's also exploring this new direction. I've always thought techno could be more than music for dancing, but the "listening" type records always seem to fall under different labels such as downtempo, trip hop, or the unfortunately named IDM. Well, here it is - a techno album you can listen to all the way through while maintaining musical interest.
I'm not giving it five stars because it's not quite a masterpiece. Some of the tracks are a bit weak and periodically lapse into a momentary autopilot phase. Essentially, it's a great album, but not a masterpiece. She's got something even better coming in the future and when it arrives, I'm sure it will warrant a five-star review.
Ellen Allien fans need to get this - techno fans need to get this - electronic music fans need to get this. It demonstrates all the potential of techno beyond its dance function and it demonstrates it well. Check it out.
Dance-hall Deconstruction June 4, 2008 David M. Madden (salt lake, utah United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The High Priestess of Techno returns with an album of introspection. Born after a "hot and crazy summer and autumn", Ellen Allien retreated to her studio where "I push buttons and sing" went on all winter. The result is a deconstruction from the last decade of Allien works: "beats" are formed from anything but drum sounds; so-corny-they're-cool synthetic swirls flesh out melodies ("Sprung"); jumbo jet cabin ambience couples with restaurant conversations and chiming drones ("Einsteigen"); bursts of air occupy the bass frequencies while digitized flutes float overhead ("Ondu"). The few danceable tracks, "Its" and "MM", would have a hard time garnering more than a few head nods, as Allien prefers to work your senses, choosing subdued electronics and field recordings (I think hear the sound of water pipes as heard from another flat on this one) instead of driving 808 thumps and screaming acid. Screw the club: Sool is a headphone delight!
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