Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Phuture 2000
1999 studio album by Carl Cox From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Phuture 2000 is the second album by the English musician Carl Cox, released in 1999.[1][2] "The Latin Theme" was the first single; the title track was released as a single in CD and limited edition DVD formats.[3][4] The album peaked at No. 77 in the Official Albums Chart.[5] "Dr. Funk" peaked at No. 26 in Billboard's Hot Dance Music chart, the highest charting American single from Phuture 2000.[6] Cox labeled the album's music "breakbeat-cure-house funky techno".[7]
Remove ads
Production
Phuture 2000 was produced by Cox.[8] He wanted to make it more dancefloor-friendly than his debut.[9] He worked with the English musician Dave Angel on some of the tracks.[10] Cox included some jungle songs, which he completed after an intended collaboration with Roni Size never materialized.[7] His favorite instrument was the Clavia Nord Lead.[7] "Dr. Funk" samples Jackie McLean's "Dr. Jackyll and Mister Funk".[11] The closing track is a version of the title song, remixed by the British music duo Hybrid.[12]
Critical reception
The Windsor Star stated that "Dr. Funk" "picks up on the slinky disco sound currently promulgated by French artists like Cassius and Dimitri from Paris."[18] The Burton Mail praised the "hard house" and Cox's "talents for lavish production and ... ear for a good tune".[14] The Toronto Star noted that "there's an endearing simplicity and kinetic practicality to [the] hard-house drivers".[10] The Cambridge Evening News opined that Cox attempted to incorporate too many genres.[19] The CMJ New Music Report said that Cox "uses a base recipe of multi-layered melodies and domineering rhythmic structures to give each song his authentic flavor."[20] The Boston Phoenix concluded that "the hardness of [the] music veers far away from the joyfully plush and soulful deeps of most house music."[21]
Track listing
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads