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Global Underground #39: Dave Seaman (Lithuania)

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Download links and information about Global Underground #39: Dave Seaman (Lithuania) by Dave Seaman. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Electronica, House, Trance, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 39 tracks with total duration of 06:08:42 minutes.

Artist: Dave Seaman
Release date: 2000
Genre: Electronica, House, Trance, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 39
Duration: 06:08:42
Buy on iTunes $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Blume der Nacht (featuring DJ Koze) 8:24
2. B4 Spring (featuring James Teej) 6:50
3. Vom Leben und Verstehen (Seelenluft Dub Mix) (featuring Mikroboy) 5:06
4. Deeper (featuring Audio Junkies) 3:46
5. Chabad (featuring Audio Junkies) 4:26
6. From the Ground Up (featuring 16 Bit Lolita'S) 8:00
7. Chatterbox (King Unique Remix) [GU Edit] (featuring The Fiord, Tim Richards) 3:23
8. El Sueño Español (featuring Javier Logares) 9:21
9. Falling Masonry (Stimming Mix) (featuring Georg Levin) 6:31
10. Understand This (featuring Jet Project) 6:40
11. Seconds (Max Cooper Remix) (featuring Minilogue) 8:28
12. Avalanche (featuring Erol Alkan, Boys Noize) 6:17
13. Annexe (Padapella) (featuring Jemmy) 4:56
14. 2000000 Dubs (featuring King Unique) 3:02
15. What Had They Done? (feat. Max Richter) (featuring Alexander Kostruba) 7:23
16. Tiger (Roland M. Dill 'Got Him By the Tail' Remix) (featuring Moonbeam) 9:08
17. Taurine On Sunday (Egbert Mix) (featuring Roland Michael Dill) 7:15
18. Triangle & Strings (Tom Middleton Remix Edit) (featuring Glenn Morrison) 2:09
19. Come Home (Sasha Remix) (featuring Yousef) 13:27
20. Sycamore Feeling (Gui Boratto Remix) (featuring Trentemøller / Trentemoller) 7:17
21. Digital Forest (featuring Fabrice Lig) 8:43
22. Polar (featuring James Talk) 7:29
23. Homecoming (GU Edit) (featuring Barry Jamieson, Charlie May) 4:03
24. Welcome to the Woods (featuring Applescal) 6:54
25. Under a Pink Cherry Tree (featuring Glenn Morrison) 7:16
26. Rejekt (featuring Dubfire) 6:32
27. Yeah Yeah (featuring Quivver) 3:32
28. Wonder (featuring Fusion F, Come T) 4:00
29. Up the Mountain (feat. The Battle of Land & Sea) (featuring Bomb The Bass) 4:42
30. Vorahnung (Edit) (featuring J. Gabriel) 3:35
31. Early Sept (Bocca Grande Reprise) (featuring Ajello) 4:45
32. Bloody Hands (featuring Peter Horrevorts) 9:51
33. Jule (Pig & Dan Remix) (featuring Solee) 7:38
34. Baltic Pine (Run Hide Survive Remix) [Seaman Re-Edit] (featuring Boy 8 - Bit) 5:45
35. At Les (Christian Smith's Tronic Treatment Remix) (featuring Carl Craig) 9:41
36. Too Hard to Breathe (Acappella) [feat. Kid A] (featuring Spitzer) 5:02
37. The Window Between Us & Them (featuring Steve Ward) 9:16
38. GU39 Dave Seaman: Lithuania (Continuous Mix 1) 1:00:44
39. GU39 Dave Seaman: Lithuania (Continuous Mix 2) 1:07:25

Details

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Dave Seaman's second contribution to the Global Underground series finds the U.K. DJ moving to a darker, less accessible sound than his previous album. The tracks still carry the tendencies of progressive house and trance, but these tracks seem less uplifting and more dreary, with each of the two discs submerging into a series of bland, hypnotic progressive house tracks before concluding with massive anthems. The first disc moves quickly into the great Futureshock remix of Moby's "Porcelain" — a totally reworked track that uses little more than the original's beautiful ambient synth hook — and then straight into the majestic female vocals of Ian Wilkie's "Guten Morgen." Following this haunting track, Seaman moves into a run of non-charismatic tracks that do little but keep the tempo pumping and the mood lulling until the final two tracks: remixes of Above's "New Day Dawning" and Breeder's "Tyrantanic" that conclude the disc with a powerful dose of progressive trance. Seaman composes a fairly similar set on the second disc, starting with the pristine strings of Pete Lazonby's "Sacred Cycles (Quivver Remix)" and dropping into a long run of dull tracks before concluding on an uplifting note with the vocal-driven "No Way Out" by Highland. While this album does function as a nice alternative to the anthem-filled progressive trance one might expect to hear with its rather melancholy trip into dark progressive house, it really needs to be listened to all the way through, unfortunately, requiring the sort of discipline many may not wish to invest.