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Planetary Assault Systems - The Messenger flac album

Planetary Assault Systems - The Messenger flac album
  • Performer Planetary Assault Systems
  • Title The Messenger
  • Date of release 2011
  • Country Germany
  • Style Techno
  • Other formats ASF DXD FLAC AU VOC AIFF MIDI
  • Genre Electronic
  • Size MP3 1413 mb
  • Size FLAC 1179 mb
  • Rating: 4.7
  • Votes: 358

Формируйте собственную коллекцию записей Planetary Assault Systems.

Luke Slater will release his next album as Planetary Assault Systems this October on Ostgut Ton, entitled The Messenger. Slater's techno credentials are hard to match. His first release appeared near the end of the '80s, and over the next two decades he released dozens more under a gaggle of pseudonyms, of which Planetary Assault Systems is arguably the most significant. Berghain will host the release party for The Messenger on October 29th. DJ sets will come from James Ruskin, Norman Nodge and Shifted, and Planetary Assault Systems will play live. Tracklist 01. Railer (Further Exploration) 02.

Planetary Assault Systems is Luke Slater's most influential pseudonym leaving its definite mark on more than 15 years of Techno history. View the full artist profile. Slater is putting out the project's second album-and its first release since 2013-through his own Mote-Evolver label in May. Mon, 11 Dec 2017.

The Drone Sector by Planetary Assault Systems. View all albums . The Messenger. By: Planetary Assault Systems (2011, Electronic). 1. Railer (Further Exploration). 2. Beauty In The Fear. 3. Human Like Us. 4. Bell Blocker. 6. Movement 12. 7. Call From The East.

The Planetary Assault Systems project has been active for some 15 years now, channeling an exploratory theme into cutting edge, non-conformist techno for the clubs but also for listening at home. His previous album for Ostgut Ton, „Temporary Suspension, re- instated that classic . S sound and found the dextrous artist touring even more with this tougher, purist techno aesthetic. And yet again Slater maintains his prolific output with the announcement of „The Messenger

Listen to music from Planetary Assault Systems like Bear Bones, Humans Use Concrete & more. Find the latest tracks, albums, and images from Planetary Assault Systems. Planetary Assault Systems is Luke Slater's most influential pseudonym leaving its definite mark on more than 15 years of Techno history.

Luke Slater as Planetary Assault Systems< with his next Outstanding Album ! This Time on Berlins OSTGUT TON !!! Sales Information. The Planetary Assault Systems project has been active for some 15 years now, channeling an exploratory theme into cutting edge, non-conformist techno for the clubs but also for listening at home. And yet again Slater maintains his prolific output with the announcement of "The Messenger". In his own words it's a project that stays very true and honest to the Planetary Assault Systems goal: a journey of discovery, to create new sounds which are not otherwise present in club music at this time

Tracklist

Railer (Further Exploration) 6:51
Beauty In The Fear 6:21
Human Like Us 6:03
Bell Blocker 7:32
Wriss 6:27
Movement 12 1:16
Call From The East 4:26
Kray Squid 8:03
Rip The Cut 8:14
Motif 4:54
Cold Bolster 5:05
Black Tea 7:51

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
OSTGUTCD20 Planetary Assault Systems The Messenger ‎(CD, Album) Ostgut Ton OSTGUTCD20 Germany 2011
OSTGUTCD20DIGITAL Planetary Assault Systems The Messenger ‎(13xFile, FLAC, Album) Ostgut Ton OSTGUTCD20DIGITAL Germany 2011
OSTGUTCD20DIGITAL Planetary Assault Systems The Messenger ‎(13xFile, MP3, Album, 320) Ostgut Ton OSTGUTCD20DIGITAL Germany 2011
OSTGUTLP10 Planetary Assault Systems The Messenger ‎(2x12", Album) Ostgut Ton OSTGUTLP10 Germany 2011
OSTGUTLP10 Planetary Assault Systems The Messenger ‎(2x12", Album, Promo, W/Lbl) Ostgut Ton OSTGUTLP10 Germany 2011
OSTGUTCD20 Planetary Assault Systems The Messenger ‎(CD, Album, Promo, Car) Ostgut Ton OSTGUTCD20 Germany 2011


Talk about Planetary Assault Systems - The Messenger


Boraston
DAMN! this is better than good. Yes 6 years later and still unique and really special. Luke so glad you are on this planet (•́⌄•́๑)૭✧
Uaoteowi
I totally retract my previously unfair/scathing comment on this excellent album by Luke Slater, in my own defense though each time I attempted to listen to this album at home there was a room full of loud talking women who who complained about the noise enforcing unwanted reductions in volume thus robbing this album of all it's raw power & awe inspiring frequencies.So I waited until there were no women, rolled i big fat spliff, cranked the volume, put the base on plus 8 & I let the Messenger rip & I have to say I was more than pleasantly surprised to say the least.Above all though, 'Black Tea", the track i previously described as irritating is anything but, played loud as is meant to be, is fucking awesome, the frequencies he lets rip are truly awe inspiring, a truly intense techno monster!!! other standouts include Bellblocker, Call from the east & Cold BolsterSo yep, i am eating my words here but I am happy to do so, all round excellent techno though on both disks!!!!
Fordredor
plenty of women like techno! if they're not saying "oi, turn it up!!" when you put PAS on the platen, you're hanging with the wrong ones ;-))
Fordrelis
mmm if you despise minimal techno "with a passion", why should you listen to this album at all?
Rollers from Abdun
"Rip the cut" too bloody good!
Delan
It's too bad that Kray Squid and Railer are not on the vinyl release. Nevertheless, this is such a killer album!
Hiylchis
Oh my god, why is the best track - "Railer (Further Exploration)" - NOT ON VINYL VERSION!!!!!!
Dianalmeena
Absolutely wicked release that makes me feel like I'm 20 again (and I'm 41 at the moment). My only reservation - as others have pointed out - is that it doesn't feel like much of an album, but rather a collection of tracks. Given the quality of those tracks, however, I can certainly live with that.
Wiliniett
This is indeed a very rewarding album. If "Temporary suspension" was an epic return to form, then I have no idea where to place "The Messanger". It leaves me ensorcelled after each listen, giving techno music a much needed breath of fresh air. Although technically designed very much for the dance floor, these tracks surpass the level of a mere tool or adequate techno bomb by a dozen miles. As previously stated, Luke Slater relies on a ridiculous, seemingly endless plethora of odd effects, hooks, sounds and structutal ornaments no one would be ashamed of. Take Beauty In Fear for example. Can you dig the dynamic range in that track? As it slowly unravels, the amount and the depth of the music is just incredible. It starts out almost as a psychedelic chill work out before eventually reaching a more orthodox techno form. The sounds he introduces and pulls about throughout that one is jaw dropping - I played it out loud on my home speakers and was blown away by the layers and layers just pouring out and wrapping their arms around me! Then you have stuff like Human Like Us, Call From The East and Motif, which is just pure tripped out psychedelic madness to the fullest. Not really percussively aggressive, just down right dazzling. I am particularly fond of Call From The East, which completely kills it with resonant, reverberating high end bells, giving me the chills as soon as the beat is dropped. In a club, it must be causing mass hysteria, nothing less. People just standing there, with a big "what the phuck was that!?" look on their face and wondering just where that came from. As far as clubs go, Bell Blocker, Rip The Cut, Black Tea and Cold Bolster bring testosterone 10000 watts of mechanical audio madness to the first warehouse near you! Cold Bolster has an underlying, menacing synth that awfully reminds me of the classic Regis tune Speak To Me. Rip The Cut is loaded with discordant, almost industrial like hisses and rusty surface noise, enabling it to get spun even in the moistest and darkest of clubs! Kray Squid and Black Tea are fantastic teasers as well. While neither one starts really promising, due to their length, they both patiently build, gradually adding layers and then ending in a totally freaked out, tension meets uncontrollable neurosis aural explosion. Really great material for the dance floors. The only track which doesn't quite cut it for me is Wriss. Not that it's bad, and nothing on this album even dips its toes in mediocrity, but it's the constantly repeating vocal snippet 'wriss' which grows wearisome some two minutes deep. I am sure it will win some fans, regardless. "The Messenger" goes straight for the club jugular, and with enough styles and variety to go around three times. It's really seldom these days to find a techno album this sure of its own purpose, this confident of its own might and magic, and this cohesive. Despite a pretty wide range of style and sound deployed, I reckon your money's worth should be found in the super heavy, booming warehouse numbers that occupy half of the album, and leave heavy whip marks and contusions. Best described as a kind of brutal minimalism so muscular that minimalism really isn't the term I was looking for. From strobing industrial assaults to cerebral and corporal dance floor trips and mind tingling sonic voyages, "The Messanger" is, simply put, just tremendously well produced techno, pure of heart and deadly effective. Luke Slater is at the absolute peak of the game, and he's not afraid to show it. And to think it's been more than fifteen years since stuff like In From The Night and Angel Street hit the shelves... I would be surprised if this albums does not a become a reference point some time down the line, in near future.
Muniath
Luke Slater never lost his hardcore. I'm digging his recent work (Boom Tang Shwuck might be my favorite track in that Funf 7x12" box set) more than his older work.The Messenger rocks. It breaks the techno monotony with psychedelic sounds and dark melodies. There is most definitely Beauty In Fear.My only complaint is that Railer was left off the vinyl release. I love dj'ing gorgeous ambient music on vinyl, and Railer would have been a sweeter cut than Black Tea.
Zbr
[quote=undefined][/quote]Where can Railer be found on vinyl? What is the Discogs url for the release?