Serfs Of The Plant Kingdom
Reviews
Adam Pearson
Reviewed 2012-11-02
Reviewed 2012-11-02
Kind of ambient downtempo chill spaced out stuff. Heavy delay. Open galaxy planetarium compositions. Lots of loops and layers. Sounds like it was made in Reason. Maybe like a Ninja Tune release on hydrocodone.
*1. Dreamy cosmic swirling textures meet trip hop. (3:56)
2. Celestial ambient delayyyy. (3:34)
3. Chill, low-key, simple beats. (4:37)
4. Distant voice-type sounds and slowly shifting bleeps fed through the delay stack. (3:22)
*5. Flaring organ sounds, ebbing celestial bliss. (3:52)
6. Glitch hop chill feel. Odd but interesting percussion, kind of cerebral. (5:16)
7. Trippy keys, nice bubbly chill elect. loop. (3:59)
*1. Dreamy cosmic swirling textures meet trip hop. (3:56)
2. Celestial ambient delayyyy. (3:34)
3. Chill, low-key, simple beats. (4:37)
4. Distant voice-type sounds and slowly shifting bleeps fed through the delay stack. (3:22)
*5. Flaring organ sounds, ebbing celestial bliss. (3:52)
6. Glitch hop chill feel. Odd but interesting percussion, kind of cerebral. (5:16)
7. Trippy keys, nice bubbly chill elect. loop. (3:59)
Timmy Linetsky
Reviewed 2012-09-25
Reviewed 2012-09-25
Praguedren
Serfs Of The Plant Kingdom
Dank Disk Records
Reviewed by Underbelly
Tomas Effliger and Sector Seventeen make music self-described as indietronicambientdubstepadelica. Mostly just ambient space music.
FCC Clean
1. Epic flushes of synths with distant drums for good measure. Some female vocals in the mix. Cool, I guess.
2. Waves after waves of uplifting space synths, not out of place on a space documentary soundtrack. Unremarkable.
3. Filtered down, phased out synth intro. Subtle electro drums; very 80's sounding. Great for a John Hughes movie!
4. Hollow, breathy synths drenched in reverb. More subtle drums. Downsampled synths pan stereophonically.
5. More o' the same expansive synth landscapes. These guys need a sense of humor!
6. More orchestral sounding. Slow, plodding drums. Somewhat unremarkable.
7. Breathy, vocal sounding synth pad. Subtle drums and touches of harpsicord.
Serfs Of The Plant Kingdom
Dank Disk Records
Reviewed by Underbelly
Tomas Effliger and Sector Seventeen make music self-described as indietronicambientdubstepadelica. Mostly just ambient space music.
FCC Clean
1. Epic flushes of synths with distant drums for good measure. Some female vocals in the mix. Cool, I guess.
2. Waves after waves of uplifting space synths, not out of place on a space documentary soundtrack. Unremarkable.
3. Filtered down, phased out synth intro. Subtle electro drums; very 80's sounding. Great for a John Hughes movie!
4. Hollow, breathy synths drenched in reverb. More subtle drums. Downsampled synths pan stereophonically.
5. More o' the same expansive synth landscapes. These guys need a sense of humor!
6. More orchestral sounding. Slow, plodding drums. Somewhat unremarkable.
7. Breathy, vocal sounding synth pad. Subtle drums and touches of harpsicord.
Recent airplay
Plant Castles
minimum entropy — Jan 10, 2013
Serfs Of The Plant Kingdom
Electrowave — Dec 18, 2012
Fields And Haze
minimum entropy — Nov 28, 2012
Plant Castles
minimum entropy — Nov 21, 2012
Plant Castles
minimum entropy — Nov 14, 2012
Dreamless
late night dryer — Nov 08, 2012
Charting
2012-11-04 — 2013-01-06
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Dec 23 | 1 |
| Dec 2 | 1 |
| Nov 25 | 1 |
| Nov 18 | 1 |
| Nov 11 | 3 |
Track listing
| 1. | Serfs Of The Plant Kingdom | ||
| 2. | Helical | ||
| 3. | Moving Outward | ||
| 4. | Bromeliad | ||
| 5. | Fields And Haze | ||
| 6. | Plant Castles | ||
| 7. | Dreamless |