Tosca / Dehli 9
Artist Tosca
Album Title: Dehli 9
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Electronica/Dance: Electronica
Format CD (2)
Released 02/25/2003
Label G-Stone Recordings/!K7 Records
Catalog No !K7140CD
Bar Code No 730003714023
Packaging Digipack
Tracks
Dehli 9 [disc 1]
1. Oscar [Featuring Anna Clementi] (5:20)
2. Me + Yoko Ono [Featuring Anna Clementi] (6:08)
3. Gute Laune [Featuring Tweed] (4:56)
4. Mango Di Bango (6:17)
5. Wonderful [Featuring Earl Zinger] (5:02)
6. Every Day & Every Night [Featuring Sugar B.] (6:14)
7. Dave Dudley (6:25)
8. Rolf Royce [Featuring Stephan Graf Hadik Wildner] (5:47)
9. Sperl (7:39)
10. La Vendeuse Des Chaussures Des Femmes Part 1 (6:51)
Dehli 9 [disc 2]
1. D-Moll (3:00)
2. Einschlaf (1:50)
3. Wien In E (3:12)
4. Schwimmer (3:43)
5. 1504/7 (3:25)
6. Slow Hell (3:08)
7. Song (2:58)
8. Romanze In Es (2:22)
9. Fluß (6:13)
10. Ping (3:16)
11. 2504/1 (3:06)
12. Piano (8:45)
Date Acquired 08/01/2003
Acquired from Amazon
Purchase Price 14.99

Notes

Date of US Release February 25, 2003

Although his name will be forever tied the anti-prolific yet incredibly well known duo Kruder & Dorfmeister, Richard Dorfmeister has spent most of his musical life teamed with schoolmate Richard Huber. The pair have released four albums and as many full-length remix projects as Tosca in the same time K&D has yet to put out one album. And that is still not considering the time Dorfmeister and Huber spent playing together in Delhi 9, the high-school group from which this album takes its name.Those who know only of Dorfmeister's more popular unit will be far from shocked upon hearing this release. No matter who Dorfmeister works with, the same lithe and soothing soundscapes come through in the finished product. Yet Delhi 9 does stand out from previous efforts by programming more upbeat jazzy licks before running them through the familiar dub echo chamber. This slight increase in energy makes Delhi 9 less a record for blunted evenings and more of a calming and focused companion perfect for getting through a day's stress. Far more druggy is the bonus second disc, which consist of solo piano compositions played by Huber and subtly rearranged by Dorfmeister in the studio. What might have been dull avant piano movements come alive in the space between the minimal notes where Dorfmeister works his magic beneath the note's resonance Listeners will surely spend most of their time with disc one, but disc two is well worth at least one somber evening's listen.

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