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Takes you to a world where everyone dresses in black, 9 Feb 2002
By A Customer
Full Tilt, London's longest running alternative club, presents the third in it's series of compilations that includes tracks by well known acts as well as showcasing numbers by new acts. Whether you've witnessed the Full Tilt madness that ensues every Friday in Camden's Electric Ballroom or not, this compilation is definitely a must have for those like their music a shade darker than the rest.
The compilation opens with "Juggernaut" by Adrenalin Junkies, a pile driver of a big beat track. Next is an arse kicking remix of Killing Joke's "Democracy" by NIN and from then on it's off on a musical roller coaster ride. It goes rushing through a radical remix of Depeche Mode's "Headstar" to Dub War's drum and bass work out of "One", Eminem rapping on Bad Meets Evil's "Nuttin to Do", Pitchshilfter and Jello Biafra parody the TV generation on "As Seen On TV", and now it rocks out with The Lost Prophet's "A Thousand Apologises". Kill 2 This make no apologies for their Darkwave stomper "Figure of Eight", when suddenly things change mood dramatically with a hands in the air remix of Moby's dance classic "Porcelain", leading to the techno craziness of Ultraviolence's "Sex". I.O.N. snap back the mood, in classic Full Tilt style, with the scary reminder that "Elvis is Dead". Then Scarlet Messiah entrap us by combining rock and dance on their Darkslave remix of "Slave" and Sulpher give the final taste of Darkwave with "Fear Me" before Linea 77 goes all metal with "Headtied". The CD ends on a reminder that Full Tilt started as a punk rock club with the Buzzcocks' classic "Boredom".
As a regular Full Tilt-er this CD captures a night out at this Camden club night perfectly. It is not afraid to move through musical genres and shows how wide the tastes are of "those weirdoes who always dress in black".
For me the highlights of the CD are the tracks by Killing Joke, Pitchshifter,
Kill 2 This, Moby, I.O.N., Sulpher but the best is Slave by Scarlet Messiah.
If you like your music challenging and dark but still want to jump around your bedroom before going out on a night of snakebite and black, black PVC and black eyeliner (you see the theme here - we like black) then this is the album for you. If not, then try it anyway... because one you try a taste of Full Tilt 3, you're doomed. Next stop... Camden market!!!!!
Why am I not making music at the moment!!! I demand answers dagnabit.
Oh and I didn't write this review