00 Individual Isolation.nfo
General Information
===================
Title: Individual Isolation
Author: Pegasus
Release Year: 1996
Genre: Berlin-Shool
File Information
================
Number of Tracks: 10
Total Duration: 0:51:14
Total Size: 263.48 MB
Files Created on: 25-Jul-2016 19:17:10
Encoded At: CBR 838 kbit/s 44 KHz Stereo
ID3 Tags: No
NFO Created: 26-Jul-2016 10:01:09
NFO/SFV/PAR created by: Mp3BookHelper http://mp3bookhelper.sourceforge.net/
Posting
=======
Posting date: 26-Jul-2016
File List
=============
Duration File Name
01 0:03:20 01 The Job.flac
02 0:04:52 02 The Friends.flac
03 0:03:16 03 The Love.flac
04 0:08:54 04 The Society.flac
05 0:04:51 05 The Confusion.flac
06 0:05:31 06 The Fight.flac
07 0:04:34 07 The Individual Isolation.flac
08 0:04:18 08 The Falling.flac
09 0:07:01 09 The Prison of Thoughts.flac
10 0:04:37 10 The Individual Integration.flac
Description
===========
Pegasus - very rare electronic group from Germany (ambient, new age, berlin
school, traditional electronica). Based by two members Mark Hoffmann and Martin
Limbach. Originally recorded in 1993, this CD offers 10 bite sized tracks, the
longest clocking in at just under the 9 minute mark. 'The Job' opens with a
slightly quirky theme, however the bulk of melodic content is supplied by the
sequence which busily weaves its way around the rhythm track. 'The Friends'
immediately brings to mind Harold Faltermeyer's 'Axel
F' before going off at a tangent and adopting a more laid back stance. Obligatory flutey synth jostles with brass type sounds, and the arrangement is workmanlike rather than inspiring. 'The
Love' initially raises the tempo, but it soon slows down again. However, this is an enjoyable piece which interplays piano with synth lines, raising the tempo at intervals allowing bass sequences to flesh out the sound. 'The
Society' is the longest track and opens with some well a presented ambient noise collage. A few minutes in a sequence starts to develop which unusually takes the track into quite a "funky" direction, complete with more quirky melodics. It's
certainly different, but it does sound a bit "weedy" in places. You
can't accuse 'The
Confusion' of being weedy though. Beefy synth chords and booming sequences combine to produce potent brew, and the classical interludes perhaps explain the title - a bit of schizophrenia? The title track again serves up classical touches with contemporary rhythms, however 'The
Falling' is very different and could easily be the soundtrack for the weirder parts of 2001. 'The
Prison of
Thoughts' serves up a heavy beat and some fine syncopating sequences which support more enjoyable melodies all the better for being picked out with true synth, rather than classical, timbres. 'The
Individual Integration' closes and this is another fine uptempo number with drums and sequences aplenty.
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