Chosen Lords Aphex Twin

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CD

 
  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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Track List
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Chosen Lords

1LISTENFenix Funk 5 5:06
2LISTENReunion 2 / AFX 5:15
3LISTENPitcard / AFX 6:25
4LISTENCrying in Your Face / AFX 4:29
5LISTENKlopjob / AFX 5:32
6LISTENBoxing Day / AFX 6:50
7LISTENBatine Acid / AFX 5:34
8LISTENCilonen / AFX 5:42
9LISTENPWSteal.Ldpinch.D / AFX 3:48
10LISTENXMD 5a 7:58

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

In 2001, when Aphex Twin fans got what they'd been hoping for -- a new album -- they soon learned that not every Aphex Twin work was pure genius. (Granted, they'd heard very little evidence of mediocrity before that point.) Drukqs was a rambling wreck of an album, a hodgepodge of material that appeared to have been plundered from at least three distinct periods, stretching over a full decade of Richard D. James' career. The Analord series of 12" singles, inaugurated with January 2005's Analord 10 and eventually including ten additional volumes, was much different. It proved that James was still capable of brilliance -- not just scattered brilliance, but consistently excellent and occasionally stupendous work. The Analord material was throwback acid techno that moved at a fast pace and showed evidence of a malevolent streak behind it, just like the Aphex commercial breakouts Come to Daddy and Windowlicker. Fortunately, while the Analord singles featured much in the way of melody and subtlety, they lacked the cartoonish imagery that marred those two EPs (particularly the vocals and the video clips). More so even than "Come to Daddy," the Analord material found Aphex Twin returning to the music of his early career; stylistically, it's the logical follow-up to James' Caustic Window and Analogue Bubblebath material of the very early '90s, which attempted to (and usually succeeded in) creating the freakiest techno ever produced, without either deserting a steady beat or straying into self-conscious experimentation. Whether embracing a novelty (he covered the early-'70s synth hit "Buttered Popcorn") or pursuing highly evocative techno (the forerunner of IDM), the Caustic Window material was some of the best work of his or any other producer's career. Just one caveat: Chosen Lords serves to compile a few highlights from the Analord series, but not all of them, and it includes less than 25 percent of the material; vinyl is still the way to hear those tracks, and this compilation is simply an introduction to the 11 separate 12" releases. John Bush, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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Chosen Lordsby Anonymous

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April 21, 2006: I would have enjoyed if Richard D. James could have put some more songs on this album instead of only ten. With songs taken off the original 11 vynil-disc set "Analord," Richard D. James (Aphex Twin) condensed the 41 song collosus into a more tangible 10 song albums sized collection, and a bit lower priced. No doubt this album complements "Analord" and any other work by Aphex Twin. This album was released under the "AFX" alias of Aphex Twin. Songs included on this disc are are a good place to start at if you are a first time listener of Aphex Twin.