- Digital
Tommy Four Seven
Veer
47
- Cat No: 47020
- Release: 2019-04-05
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Tommy Four Seven - Dead Ocean
04:24 -
2. Tommy Four Seven - Radius
04:53 -
3. Tommy Four Seven - 2084
06:04 -
4. Tommy Four Seven - The Virus
04:55 -
5. Tommy Four Seven - Neuromorph
04:01 -
6. Tommy Four Seven - Feed
04:50 -
7. Tommy Four Seven - Aphelion
02:44 -
8. Tommy Four Seven - X Threat
05:11 -
9. Tommy Four Seven - Protocol 9
05:14 -
10. Tommy Four Seven - Colony
06:16
16bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
The British DJ and producer Tommy Four Seven will release his second album, Veer on April 5, 2019 via his label, 47.
Veer sees Tommy further refine his disruptive take on Techno and is his first full length solo record since Primate (CLR, 2011), although as one half of the electronic duo These Hidden Hands, he has also released two albums (These Hidden Hands, 2013 / Vicarious Memories, 2016) in the interim.
A 10 track double vinyl LP, Veer pulls the listener deep into its fractured rhythms, textures and cinematic electronics. Ostensibly a dance music record, certainly with no deficiency of bangers, when pulling back the layers however the meticulous sound design demands just as much discerning listening as it does volume in a club. Tommy also gives an unconcealed nod to a Sci Fi film nostalgia which emanates throughout the project, conjuring memories of flickering 35mm film, desolate polysynths and existential threats. An exercise in confounding retrofuturism into today?s future sound.
Veer sees Tommy further refine his disruptive take on Techno and is his first full length solo record since Primate (CLR, 2011), although as one half of the electronic duo These Hidden Hands, he has also released two albums (These Hidden Hands, 2013 / Vicarious Memories, 2016) in the interim.
A 10 track double vinyl LP, Veer pulls the listener deep into its fractured rhythms, textures and cinematic electronics. Ostensibly a dance music record, certainly with no deficiency of bangers, when pulling back the layers however the meticulous sound design demands just as much discerning listening as it does volume in a club. Tommy also gives an unconcealed nod to a Sci Fi film nostalgia which emanates throughout the project, conjuring memories of flickering 35mm film, desolate polysynths and existential threats. An exercise in confounding retrofuturism into today?s future sound.