» » Leeroy Thornhill - Lowrise E•P
Leeroy Thornhill - Lowrise E•Ph1
Electronic
Performer: Leeroy Thornhill
Title: Lowrise E•P
Style: Breakbeat, Hardcore, Techno, Acid
Year 1993
Genre: Electronic
Rating: 4.2
Votes: 591
MP3 size: 1114 mb
FLAC size: 1268 mb
WMA size: 1554 mb
Other formats: APE MOD DMF AUD RA AIFF WAV

Leeroy Thornhill - Lowrise E•P mp3 album


Leeroy Thornhill - Lowrise E•P mp3 album

Tracklist

LOW1 Untitled
LOW2 Untitled
HIGH1 Untitled
HIGH2 Untitled

Companies, etc.

  • Pressed By – Damont

Notes

A further letter from Midi Management was also sent out : see images.

700 copies were pressed

Track LOW1 samples:
Vocal from Inner City - Ain't Nobody Better

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout: LR 001 LOW¹ BIG SHOUT TO KLK! DAMONT B
  • Matrix / Runout: LR 001 HIGH¹ DAMONT B


Anasius
Originally purchased this EP for LOW2, which brings deep thought to a high energy set. The breakbeat sequences on this track are brilliant! The strings create epic moments and are layered well. LOW2 juxtaposes an unusual moodiness with its distinctive breakbeat samples. Usually play this one to signal that all good things come to an end. LOW1 works better near the opener as it advances a high energy vibe. Alternately I use this is as kind of a transition track into something happier. LOW1 is proto happy hardcore but has some soundclash sample and dark pads. The pitched shifted Ooooh-oooh might be a little campy. LOW1 is filled with contradiction and is doing a lot things at once, but I would definitely recommend this. There are measures on this that have a nasty underground damp feeling. The vocals "I tried hard to let you go" along with the sweet synth work make this track complex, style wise. The breakbeat pattern and tempo makes this even more distinctive, because it is arguably too slow to be considered happy hardcore, bonafide. HIGH1 is a slow tempo techno track that can be used to wind things down in a studio set, but would not move the dance floor. It is a good track thematically, for this EP, however. HIGH2 is memorable for its floaty vocal sample. I find it difficult to mix with the majority of hardcore as it is a bit slow. The heavy reverb and high pitched chanting provide surrealism and meditation. This EP gets a bad rep because of the price. It is definitely worthwhile as far as white labels are concerned. Would recommend for LOW2 alone.
Kamuro
I piece of history - definitely, I picked this up in Vinyl Rhythm, Chelmsford for £5.99 back in the day. However, there is nothing special about any of the tracks. A1 is a poor quality happy hardcore track and the rest of the tracks sounded dated when it hit the shelves. It was 1993 and there a lot more releases of the same period out there of higher quality with substantially lower asking prices. This may not be a popular opinion... but it's the truth!