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        <title>A Number Of Small Things/Artists/Dylan EttingerArtikel</title>
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        <description>Artikel aus der Kategorie Dylan Ettinger</description>
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        <copyright>A Number Of Small Things</copyright>
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                <title>Dylan Ettinger - New Age Outlaws 14,99 €</title>
                <link>http://www.anost.net/Musik/Vinyl/LP/Dylan-Ettinger-New-Age-Outlaws.html</link>
                <description>&lt;img src=&#039;http://www.anost.net/out/pictures/onthefly/oxarticle/icon/56x42/1/NNF 208.jpg&#039; border=0 align=&#039;left&#039; hspace=5&gt;REPRESSED!!! “Back in March of this year we released DR. ETTINGER’s New Age Outlaws album on cassette (NNF192) and it was great. But artists—in case you didn’t know—ain’t easily satisfied, and so Dylan felt compelled to return to the master tapes and further articulate the new age sci-fi ambient drift jazz vision of those pieces into something even grander and more elegant. Sounded like a worthwhile cause to us, so here’s New Age Outlaws: The Director’s Cut, mastered fresh for vinyl and bedazzled with new layers of robot noir synth lines, back alley cyber sax, and insomniac drum machine heartbeats. Dylan even architected a new track sequence and re-named a couple songs. Black vinyl LPs in jackets with stunning alien vista artwork by DAN MCPHARLIN, plus a photocopied cardstock insert.”—NNF.</description>
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                <title>Dylan Ettinger - Lifetime Of Romance ab 10,49 €</title>
                <link>http://www.anost.net/Musik/CD/CD/Dylan-Ettinger-Lifetime-Of-Romance.html</link>
                <description>&lt;img src=&#039;http://www.anost.net/out/pictures/onthefly/oxarticle/icon/56x42/1/NNF 250 CD.jpg&#039; border=0 align=&#039;left&#039; hspace=5&gt;Heartland synthesist DYLAN ETTINGER follows up 2010’s widely lauded New Age Outlaws imaginary cyber-soundtrack with a stark, dark, and intensely different collection of misshapen new wave weirdnesses, Lifetime Of Romance. Recorded at a proper studio, and written over the course of a year, the seven songs of Romance reflect a heavy influence from the fringier strains of bummed out quasi-industrial synth-pop in the vein of Fad Gadget, certain Cabaret Voltaire, early Human League, etc, but dragged through his own warped, wonky filter. The approaches vary radically, from abandoned factory dirges (“Sport And Superstion,” “Maude”) to dubbed-out man-machine paranoia (“Disparager”) to bouncy sine-wave robot radio singles (“Arco Iris,” “Blue and Blue”) and general electronic workshop exploration (“18.0”). It’s always to be heralded when an artist braves terrain they haven’t traversed yet, so it’s a kick to hear Ettinger’s secret circuitry language channeled into the pop architectures of twisted synth-wave melancholia for the first time. Another engaging step by an always intriguing American original.</description>
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