Kami-Sakunobe House Explosion K-S.H.ERoutes Not Roots

Genre:

Electronic

Style:

Deep House

Year:

Tracklist

Down Home Kami-Sakunobe 7:07
Saki-Chan (Pt.1) 2:44
Hobo Train 12:50
Fuck The Down-Low 2:04
B2B 9:50
Stand Up 6:03
Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair 2:47
Double Secret 6:21
Saki-Chan (Pt.2) 1:41
Crosstown 13:39
Head (In My Private Lounge, My Pad) 6:09
Infected 8:34

Credits (3)

Versions

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    5 versions
    Image , In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory
    Version Details Data Quality
    Cover of Routes Not Roots, 2006-03-10, CD Routes Not Roots
    CD, Album
    Comatonse Recordings – C.013.CD Japan 2006 Japan2006

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    Routes Not Roots
    CD, Album, Compilation, Reissue
    Skylax – SKYLAX CD 120 2011 2011
    Recently Edited

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    Routes Not Roots
    CD, Album, Compilation, Promo, Reissue
    Skylax – SKYLAX CD 120 2011 2011
    New Submission

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    Routes Not Roots
    CD, Album, Compilation, Reissue
    Skylax – SKYLAX CD 120 2016 2016
    Recently Edited
    Cover of Routes Not Roots, 2024-02-23, CD Routes Not Roots
    CD, Album, Reissue
    Comatonse Recordings – C.013.CD.R1 Japan 2024 Japan2024
    New Submission

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    Reviews

    • patrizio82's avatar
      patrizio82
      Artist, álbum and all tracks appear as “No Name” in my cd player. That correct? All the rest of cds from Dj Sprinkles i have show the info correctly.

      Great cd, like everything from Terre

      • djased1's avatar
        djased1
        I see no one mentioned it here, but B2B and Crosstown sample the film "Tongues Untied" by Marlon Riggs.
        Amazing documentary, highly recommended.
        • ozblotto's avatar
          ozblotto
          Great album, nothing more needs to be said. Is Double Secret using a sample of Talk Talk - The Rainbow?
          • themwaves's avatar
            themwaves
            Still in love with this. Also lucky to have a signed copy.
            • skylaxrecords's avatar
              skylaxrecords
              K-S.H.E. "Routes Not Roots" 5/5 (Resident Advisor)

              "Terre Thaemlitz's Routes Not Roots was only released five years ago, and yet here we are with a reissue at the tail end of a comprehensive campaign by French label Skylax Records. Maybe the premature revisionism is appropriate in this case: the kind of sprawling, deconstructive house statement laid out on Routes Not Roots is decidedly pre-internet in the time it takes both to unfold its carefully layered tale and to properly invest in the mammoth album. Originally released on Thaemlitz's Comatonse platform, it was, until now, out of print, and ittedly Skylax have done a service in giving the album a second go after the wave of new interest in Thaemlitz following his 2008 album Midtown 120 Blues.

              Stylistically, Routes Not Roots is the logical precursor to Midtown 120 Blues, spacious deep house built from the ghosts of New York house and garage and the disquieting technological anxiety of Tokyo. Though crafted with a more diverse set of samples and moods, Roots features embryonic iterations of the luscious deep blue depression that would come to define Midtown 120 Blues; Roots is rawer, redder and more volatile. The most obvious connection is "Hobo Train," where acoustic guitar, claustrophobic drum loops and dark, discordant piano form a whirring, propulsive rhythm that itself doesn't sound unlike a rocketing train. The track utilizes the same memorable speech sample as Midtown's "Sisters, I Don't Know What This World Is Coming To," which on that album was a synth-heavy aural landscape subverting the manic-depressive hope of "Train" into near-hopelessness.

              That comparison sets the crucial difference that colours this album: Routes is lively and unpredictable. Here, Thaemlitz sets his ever-active conceptual sights on sexuality and "complicating origins," exemplified in its use of samples taken from country songs (making "black" out of "white" according to Thaemlitz). "Crosstown" stretches out over thirteen minutes, a chorus of excitable drums, shakers and shimmering chords, but the somewhat festive mood is dampened by the disturbed identity politics that circle repeatedly in the form of an unforgettable vocal sample. "You my bitch!/Nuh-uh, we are bitches" sounds defeatist in the context of overwhelming cultural oppression and suppression, the kind of intra-musical critical thought Thaemlitz is known for.

              Routes Not Roots largely lives up to its mission, playing with and obscuring the origins and constructions of deep house music. The all-important house piano is plastered over the album, but it's always dark, dissonant and dreadful, staining the stimulant-addled shake of "B2B" and stomping unceremoniously over the gorgeous melody of opener "Down Home Kami Sakunobe." With the stream of lengthy house workouts interrupted by tense spoken interludes and ambient meanderings, Roots is also a transparent self-portrait of Thaemlitz, exorcising and fearlessly exhibiting every aspect and facet of his personality as it pours out in awkwardly sized, uneven chunks.

              But that's what Routes Not Roots is all about: Thaemlitz makes his audience feel things, channeling every bit of pain, deprivation and release that led to house music's birth into what sounds like a rebirth, an idea he would go on to focus and perfect with Midtown 120 Blues. Even if it's a little meandering at times, imperfections or not, Routes is about one of the most unique and affecting house albums you'll ever hear." Andrew Ryce
              https://www.residentadvisor.net/reviews/8861
              • systemD22's avatar
                systemD22
                I can't believe it took me this long to listen to this. Words cannot describe the genius
                • crystalizedship's avatar
                  crystalizedship
                  & 2014 still available directly from Terre http://www.comatonse.com/releases/k-she/cd.html
                  a sheer beauty
                  • lakechoes's avatar
                    lakechoes
                    Still available as vinyl and cds as normal priced items there: http://comatonse.com/releases/k-she/cd.html
                    One of the best electronic album i've ever heard.
                    • vanez.art's avatar
                      vanez.art
                      Edited 12 years ago
                      no comments yet? the shame of it!
                      here we have lush, subtle, classy ambient-house ("fagjazz") by Terre
                      now I WANT this on CD (from Comatonse of course,their [actually Terre's] design is just superb).

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                      • Avg Rating:4.73 / 5
                      • Ratings:128

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