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Aerotropolis

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Download links and information about Aerotropolis by Ikonika. This album was released in 2013 and it belongs to Electronica, House, Techno, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 49:37 minutes.

Artist: Ikonika
Release date: 2013
Genre: Electronica, House, Techno, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 49:37
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Mise En Place 1:36
2. Beach Mode (Keep It Simple) [feat. Jessy Lanza] 4:02
3. Mr. Cake 4:04
4. Practice Beats 0:48
5. Eternal Mode 4:45
6. Completion V.3 2:13
7. Manchego 3:39
8. Let a Smile Be (Y)our Umbrella 4:51
9. Lights Are Forever 4:25
10. Mega Church 4:25
11. Cryo 3:00
12. Backhand Winners 3:47
13. You Won't Find It Here 3:58
14. Zen Sizzle 4:04

Details

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After Contact, Love, Want, Have, Ikonika's sound became fuller and more colorful. Her scope of inspirations widened. Consecutive tracks on 2012's I Make Lists EP, for instance, incorporated acid house and early Latin freestyle without sounding the least bit slavish. Aerotropolis, her second album, adds even more references to the mix and leaves her fine debut in the dust. At times, it sounds like the air-travel equivalent to techno concept albums like Carl Craig's Landcruising, Model 500's Deep Space, and Raiders of the Lost ARP's 4; the producer once lived near, and worked at, Heathrow Airport. Various tracks contend with Dâm-Funk's modern funk, out-slug much of the revered Night Slugs catalog, and prod with as much force as anything on the Clone label. "Mr. Cake," her brightest track yet, is a gleaming hybrid of electro and house with a complex arrangement of intersecting melodies, tough drums, handclaps, and cowbells. "Manchego" draws from Mr. Fingers with its rattling stop-start foundation — akin to tracks like "Washing Machine" — but piles on delightfully noodly synthesizer patterns. She still has a knack for track titles; her aerotropolis is expansive enough to accommodate a "Mega Church," where drums slam hard enough to evoke half-ton doors as ghostly tones are drowned out by an outsized synthetic organ, suspenseful bass thrums, and snaking/prickling percussion. The briefer tracks aren't there strictly for the variety and demonstrate that she could score films ("Completion V. 3") and video games ("Practice Beats") with equal ease.