|
|
| # | Samples | Title | |
| Side 1 | |||
| 1. |
MP3 |
"Calabi Yau Manifold" | |
| 2. |
MP3 |
"Hyperelliptic Surfaces" | |
| 3. |
MP3 |
"Holomorpic N-0 Form" | |
| 4. |
MP3 |
"Compactification" | |
| 5. |
MP3 |
"Mirror Symmetry" | |
| 6. |
MP3 |
"Non Vanishing Harmonic Spinor" | |
| 7. |
MP3 |
"Hypersurface" | |
| 8. |
MP3 |
"Dimension II" | |
|
Review |
|---|
Dopplereffekt are one of the more mysterious units of the contemporary electronic music scene. There are no interviews and hardly any live appearances. The composers hide behind strange German pseudonyms whereas the song titles and lyrics are in English and make up a strange mixture of scientific, sexually explicit and political allusions. Dopplereffekt's music is also highly eclectic and unusual. Critics claim their style of electro resembles that of Drexcita and that they were indeed early members of that now legendary outfit. Musically "Calabi Yau Space" follows a more ambient/soundscape/experimental/electronic course akin to Der Zyklus' "Biometry" project or even Rephlex's "Quantum Transposition". The album features exclusive artwork under licence from CERN, the world's largest particle physics laboratory.



