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Almost Ambient Collection Volume One

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Download links and information about Almost Ambient Collection Volume One by Kill Switch... Klick. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:00:07 minutes.

Artist: Kill Switch... Klick
Release date: 2002
Genre: Ambient, Electronica
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:00:07
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Restraint 3:57
2. Copper Penny In My Hand 4:22
3. Lost Like Innocence 4:32
4. Bringing 2:45
5. Her Trembling Hands (2001) 4:24
6. Versificator 1:00
7. Feeding the Machine (Day to Day) 4:08
8. Object of My Desire (Slow Hands Mix) 3:58
9. Eventually (Forever) 5:06
10. A/B Continuity (Resurgence) 4:02
11. Cincher 3:42
12. 5 Hotwheels In My Box 2:59
13. Forgotten Shores 0:35
14. See Right Through You 3:46
15. Rise 1:34
16. Sa Ta Na Ma 1:56
17. Sniveler 2:07
18. "Music" 1:00
19. Bandwidth 4:14

Details

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After the acoustic experiments (!!!) of Organica, Kill Switch...Klick continue to move away from their industrial-goth roots into a calmer, more mature sound. Divided about equally between new material and old tracks (some remixed, some not), 2002's Almost Ambient Collection, Vol. 1 makes the case that this move is more organic than it might seem at first, since leader D.A. Sebasstian has always had a taste for Eno-style minimalism (the excellent "Feeding the Machine (Day to Day)," which marries an almost lush soundtrack-inspired soundscape with some deliberately discordant Cecil Taylor-style piano fills, bears a strong Another Green World influence) along with the more obvious goth and industrial influences. Of the reworked material, the clear highlight is a re-recorded version of "Her Trembling Hands" with new vocals by guest singer Courtney Hudak that turns the somewhat overbearing original tune into a delicate This Mortal Coil-style meditation. The qualifier in the title is spot-on — there are beats aplenty here, just not particularly aggressive ones — but Almost Ambient Collection, Vol. 1 suggests an intriguing new direction for this on-again, off-again collective.