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  Offworld Music
Record label catering to innovative music, artists and producers - from drum&bass to hip hop and electronic.

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DJ TIESTO - IN SEARCH OF SUNRISE 5: LOS ANGELES (BLACK HOLE)
 
DJ Tiesto's "In Search of Sunrise 5" finally gets going good on the fifth track, Fonzerelli's "Moonlight Party", which kicks in with thick textures, driving trance rhythms and catchy melodies. Disc One is a little slow going getting rolling; the first few tracks are of the pretty but kinda bland variety. It's Tiesto's curse; sometimes he does really top notch stuff, but one of his pitfalls is music that's pretty and even lush but somehow lacks hook. Of course, a mix that spans across two CDs can be expected to be a tad slow in warming up. There's always room for progression in trance. The plus side is that, yes, it does get moving after a warm-up period and, yes, the music is quite lovely. The beauty is there right from the start, it just takes the hooks a few minutes to catch up. Once moving, Tiesto tosses tasty textures at you, along with melodies that are relatively emotive and evocative of this 2-CD mix's title. It's sort of a musical sunrise (which would account for the progressive kick-off, huh?). After Fonzerelli's track, the goodness keeps moving with a mostly instrumental (a change-up from "Moonlight Party") number, Leama and Moor's "Everything Matters (Matthew Dekay Remix)", long building but enjoyable the whole way through. This is probably where the first CD starts "peaking", if you'll allow the analogy. The disc loses a tad of its momentum after this track as it slips into a really-long-build-up number that, even when it kicks in, is fairly reserved. Again, not bad music, but it could use a little salt. I may sound like I'm complaining a lot, but it's more that I'm just picky about trance. This is a good batch of tunes and my star rating reflects that, but I'd still like a bit more kick overall. Parker and Hanson's "Let Me Be" picks things up a bit with a lush and ethereal (but not ethereal-watered-down) track that never gets heavy-hitting but is absorbing. The lush ethero-prog flavor continues to flow until the minimalism of "People Will Go (Steve Forte Rio Remix)" by JES; this minimalism does flow into some decent textures but it's a bit too restrained. But following that one the CD steps back up to the deep etherea akin to what came before JES' number and even slides into some more textured, energetic trance on Tom Cloud's "Told You So" and follows through nicely to the end of Disc 1. The second disc starts off with promise on "LAX" by Pink Elephant, a darker number that points into the night (ironically). The listener begins to slide through some deep trance a la Armind Van Buuren, such as with a track from Shah and Laruso present the Global Experience, "Zanzibar." A Boy Called Joni's "Green Astronauts", at the track five spot, amps up the textures a bit. By now the listener has adjusted to the ethereal quality of the music as the progression has slowly sunk him into being enveloped by the music. But along with the etherea are numbers like Estuera's "Tales from the South (Jonas Stear's Revision)", another that provides some textured deepness, and "Hi Jack" by Smith and Pledger pres. Aspekt, which touches on the lower stratospheres of epic trance while maintaining the deepness and actually resolving into a William Orbitish interlude. Overall the second disc doesn't have as much high and lowing and stands as the plateau that disc one points to. What grumbling there is herein is just the impatience of a persnickety listener. This is a good CD, a bit slow going in spots, but nice nonetheless.-- review by Kristofer Upjohn


   

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