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Dillatronic

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Download links and information about Dillatronic by J Dilla. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Rock genres. It contains 41 tracks with total duration of 01:09:44 minutes.

Artist: J Dilla
Release date: 2015
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Rock
Tracks: 41
Duration: 01:09:44
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.96
Buy on Songswave €1.96

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dillatronic 01 3:06
2. Dillatronic 02 2:23
3. Dillatronic 03 1:04
4. Dillatronic 04 2:04
5. Dillatronic 05 1:03
6. Dillatronic 06 1:10
7. Dillatronic 07 2:23
8. Dillatronic 08 2:13
9. Dillatronic 09 2:35
10. Dillatronic 10 1:36
11. Dillatronic 11 2:22
12. Dillatronic 12 0:40
13. Dillatronic 13 2:16
14. Dillatronic 14 1:33
15. Dillatronic 15 2:44
16. Dillatronic 16 2:28
17. Dillatronic 17 2:09
18. Dillatronic 18 0:52
19. Dillatronic 19 2:47
20. Dillatronic 20 2:39
21. Dillatronic 21 0:46
22. Dillatronic 22 2:31
23. Dillatronic 23 0:59
24. Dillatronic 24 0:45
25. Dillatronic 25 0:41
26. Dillatronic 26 1:45
27. Dillatronic 27 0:47
28. Dillatronic 28 1:09
29. Dillatronic 29 1:58
30. Dillatronic 30 0:57
31. Dillatronic 31 1:14
32. Dillatronic 32 1:38
33. Dillatronic 33 2:01
34. Dillatronic 34 1:26
35. Dillatronic 35 1:48
36. Dillatronic 36 2:42
37. Dillatronic 37 1:25
38. Dillatronic 38 0:28
39. Dillatronic 39 1:03
40. Dillatronic 40 0:19
41. Dillatronic 41 3:15

Details

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Curated by his mother, Ma Dukes, Dillatronic offers 41 rare instrumentals from the late Detroit hip-hop producer James "J Dilla" Yancey, with the focus being on his "electronic music influences," who are as much Kraftwerk as George Clinton. Case in point, the funky, slinky track seven included here — none of the tracks are titled — which slowly rocks back and forth like Clinton's solo hit "Atomic Dog," while the 26th cut comes off as a cross between Madlib and "Maggot Brain" with Funkadelic guitars spinning and swaying in a psychedelic manner. The latter track also strays from the "electronic music influences" concept, which happens with about a quarter of the album's tracks. Good thing too, as the chugging and organic track three is a much bigger surprise than the half-speed redo of "Trans Europe Express" that is track 20, plus the drifting, Janet Jackson-esque closer has little to do with electro but is likely to become a favorite with the target audience (a combination of the Dilla faithful, underground beatheads, and amateur MCs looking for mixtape productions). While the collection doesn't come with the purposeful feel of Donuts, it flows extremely well for a beat tape, and one released nine years after the artist passed. Add to that the amount of new flavors and unexpected twists (Was track 12 influenced by early dubstep? What was the plan for the dark and dense track 28?) plus crisp, clean recordings that beat the bootlegs, and Dillatronic is a necessary pickup for fans.