Gare du Nord - Kind Of Cool (2003)

Gare du Nord - Kind Of Cool
Original Release Date: Feb 12, 2002
Label: Import
Genre: Electronica, Downtempo, Jazz
Size: 362MB
Flac (Separate tracks + .cue + Covers)


Tracklisting:
01 Kind Of Cool 1 (Inner City Groove)
02 Sold My Soul
03 L'Hotel Beat
04 Panchira (Rasa Clinic, 1962)
05 Profondo Blu
06 Dark Chill
07 Kind Of Cool 2 (Miles Et Juliette)
08 Chinese Whispers, Japanese Strings
09 You're So Tight
10 !Yo... Que Pasa?
11 I'm Not A Woman, I'm Not A Man
12 Tres Cool

Gare du Nord - In Search of Excellounge (2002)


 

Gare du Nord - In Search of Excellounge
Original Release Date: Feb 12, 2002
Label: Play It Again Sam
Genre: Electronica, Downtempo, Jazz
Size: 261MB
Flac (Separate tracks + .cue + Covers)

Tracklisting:
01 How Was It For You
02 Taxi Au Moulin
03 Tune Up
04 Pablo's Blues
05 Excellounge Bar
06 Disco-Tek (Boogie All Night Long)
07 Room 69... Moi?
08 Searching Gainsbourg
09 Poem Rouge

Zero 7 - Yeah Ghost (2009)

Zero 7 - Yeah Ghost
Original Release Date: Sep 29, 2009
Label: Atlantic
Genre: Electronica, Downtempo, Trip-Hop
Size: 282MB
Flac (Separate tracks + .cue + .log + Covers)

Tracklisting:
1. Count Me Out (1:26)
2. Mr McGee (4:19)
3. Swing (3:58)
4. Everything Up (Zizou) (5:19)
5. Pop Art Blue (4:23)
6. Medicine Man (4:33)
7. Ghost sYMbOL (4:37)
8. Sleeper (4:40)
9. Solastalgia (1:59)
10. The Road (3:43)
11. All of Us (6:20)

 
Review by John Bush
Studio mainstays for well over a decade, Zero 7's Henry Binns and Sam Hardaker can wring an expert production from nearly any song, whether it's synth-based or band-based, instrumental or vocal, unadulterated pop or colored with some other genre shade thereof. Their fourth album as Zero 7 includes all of those approaches, so file it as another in a career of ever-evolving records that have moved them from chilled downbeat into dynamic alternative pop. A dedicated rhythm section appears on half the record, accentuating the feel that this is a band record -- albeit impeccably produced -- with an array of guests taking vocal turns. As before, the songs are written well and the guest vocalists are selected with care, but they're usually overwhelmed by the numerous production touches. Each song is a variation on the pop form, whether it's straight commercial pop on "Mr McGee," neo-soul on "Medicine Man," folkie introspection on "Swing," or starburst electronica on "Pop Art Blue." The best and most natural blend occurs on "Everything Up (Zizou)," which has a bit of indie guitar over its sheen of electronic pop, with vocals from Binns himself and the most impressive of the guests, Eska (who sings over five tracks total). Though Zero 7 are still not in the same class as Air (or even Phoenix), Yeah Ghost is an enjoyable record that shows them apparently on the way to something more unique.