At last, a truly comprehensive guide to the influential German techno/trance label, Harthouse, as founded by one Sven Vath. With four double CDs each in excess of 75 minutes, this mammoth round-up of their early history is certainly exhaustive.
Speedy J and Hardfloor are the big name artists on offer here, with production coming from the equally seminal Luarent Garnier, David Holmes and of course Sven Vath. But what of the 35-or-so other tracks? These include the fat-and-frantic bass burblings of Arpegiators ('Freedom of Expression' and 'Discover Your Innerself' both stand out), the serene 'Plusation' by Trancepulsation (which turns out to be a secret guest-spot from European ambient guru Pete Namlook) and a seemingly infinite number of other magical moments, beats and breaks. In terms of new, less well-known names from the Harthouse vaults, check out Resistence D., Spicelab, Eternal Basment and Carl Lekebusch's mental Braincell project for some truly throbbing German techno and psychedelic trance.
All that from just Disc 1, so what of Disc 2? More of the same, which is either good news or bad depending on how into Harthaouse's hard house you are. But at the end of the day, this sound has always been more evolutionary than samey. Highlights on Discs 3 and 4 are Julika's brilliant hands-in-the-air epic 'MikeroBenics', Progressive Attack's 'Hypnoticharmony' and the dark soundtrack potential of 'Casablanca' by The Ambush. Retrospective is a rich, highly polished collection of the best of Europe's techno roots and is in many ways an essential archive release for your own personal vaults. 7/10
This review also published in: DJ magazine
Sunday, March 01, 1998
Various - Retrospective box set (Harthouse)
Posted by Ian Peel
Labels: DJ
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