Skip Navigation

MY LANGUAGE:
English
Español
Deutsch
简体中文
日本語
MY CURRENCY:
USD
USD dropdown

DEEP SPACE ORCHESTRA/JAMES JOHNSTON - The Chrome Hand EP



Artist: DEEP SPACE ORCHESTRA/JAMES JOHNSTON  Receive an e-mail alert when this artist releases a new title
Title: The Chrome Hand EP
Label: Boogie Originals  Receive an e-mail alert when this artist releases a new title
Cat: BGO 003
Format: 12"
Released: 12 September, 2011
Price: $9.11
Genre: Disco/Nu-Disco
Playlist: MP3
Availability: Guaranteed in stock! Ships same day.
Add to Wishlist
$9.11
Buy
#Samples Title
Side 1
1. Deep Space Orchestra - Chrome Hand - MP3 Sample MP3 Deep Space Orchestra - "Chrome Hand"
2. Deep Space Orchestra - Chrome Hand - MP3 Sample MP3 Deep Space Orchestra - "Chrome Hand" (Ben Sun remix)
Side 2
1. James Johnston - Faces & Traces Of Home - MP3 Sample MP3 James Johnston - "Faces & Traces Of Home"
2. James Johnston - Sunshine Stars - MP3 Sample MP3 James Johnston - "Sunshine Stars"

  • played by:Local Zero, Andy Ash, Mehdi, Mr. Scruff, Discomendments, Cosmic Boogie, Zambon (The Very Polish Cut-Outs), Satore, Andre Lodemann, Sound Black / Lady Blacktronika, Juno Recommends Disco, Alex Agore, I Love Disco!, Neil Diablo, Voyeurhythm, James Johnston, The Project Club, Sleazy Beats Recordings, Nicola Conte, The Tortoise, Kastil

  • Add to Wishlist
    $9.11
    Buy

    Review

    Cosmic Boogie's Boogie Originals imprint releases its third 12", with the increasingly impressive (and prolific) Deep Space Orchestra at the helm on the A-Side. "Chrome Hand" is a gently undulating slice of shuffling deep house, with a bewitching arrangement and a head-nodding groove. On remixing duties, Ben Sun (of the underrated and hard to spell Voyeurhythm imprint) strips the instrumentation right back, adds a killer spoken word vocal sample and boom - our favourite mid tempo warehouse jam since Marco Passarani popped up on Running Back. Flip over for a brace of original productions from James Johnston - namely "Faces And Traces Of Home" (which is pleasingly reminiscent of Move D's recent work) and the more upbeat "Sunshine Stars".