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        <title>A Number Of Small Things/Artists/Move D products</title>
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            <title>A Number Of Small Things/Artists/Move D products</title>
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                <title>Move D - Kunststoff 9,99 €</title>
                <link>http://www.anost.net/en/Music/CD/CD/Move-D-Kunststoff.html</link>
                <description>&lt;img src=&#039;http://www.anost.net/out/pictures/onthefly/oxarticle/icon/56x42/1/880918075624.jpg&#039; border=0 align=&#039;left&#039; hspace=5&gt;Background&lt;br /&gt;Originally from Heidelberg Germany, David Moufang (aka Move D) spent his childhood listening to the likes of Kraftwerk and Pink Floyd - yet rather than credit these auteurs with the inspiration behind his work, Moufang pinpoints another factor as the core influence to his musical gestation; space. Having been profoundly affected by a trip to the cinema to see &#039;2001: A Space Odyssey&#039;, Moufang spent his childhood obsessed with the cosmos - and when the desire to make music eventually took over it&#039;s little wonder that the results incorporated such strong elements of the ethereal and otherworldly. Schooled in classical percussion and with a keen talent for jazz guitar, Moufang was introduced to techno in 1989 by a friend and rapidly began to devour output from 808 State, Nexus 21 and Detroit&#039;s finest - finally releasing his first record alongside Jonas Grossmann as Deep Space Network. By the time his first solo work crept out as part of a Source Records compilation (&#039;Homeworks&#039;) in 1993, Moufang had already displayed a loose-limbed approach to techno that sent the foundations of Detroit spinning off into a new and laid-back orbit.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Kunststoff&lt;br /&gt; Translated into English as &quot;plastic&quot;, &#039;Kunststoff&#039; is anything but production line - succeeding in sounding as genre defying now as it was when originally released at the half-time interval of the Nineties.  Brought back into print by City Centre Offices for a whole new generation to discover, &#039;Kunststoff&#039; is a dreamlike journey through Move D&#039;s compelling vision of an electronic vista which doesn&#039;t feel a necessity to labour each sonic progression and instead allows the music to gradually unfurl like a majestic digital tapestry. The sound of techno if viewed through a piquant heat-haze, the likes of &#039;Soap Bubbles&#039; and album standout &#039;In/Out&#039; are intensely textured compositions that take their beats as a flexible spine onto which all manner of sonic flourishes can be mapped. As innovative as any album of the past two decades, &#039;Kunststoff&#039; is generous to the listener - refusing to insult their intelligence through easily pigeon-holed avenues, Move D instead throws up a startlingly diverse selection of music that nonetheless retains a firm cohesive thread. Best enjoyed as a whole, &#039;Kunststoff&#039; revels in juxtaposing the serrated grooves of &#039;Nimm 2&#039; against the kaleidoscopic synths and carbonated beats of &#039;Beyond The Machine&#039; - a lullaby for the silicon hearted. Put simply, a stone cold classic.</description>
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