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Brothers Gonna Work It Out: A DJ Mix Album | 
enlarge | Artist: The Chemical Brothers Label: Astralwerks Category: Music
List Price: $16.98 Buy Used: $0.99 You Save: $15.99 (94%)
New (6) Used (38) Collectible (1) from $0.99
Rating: 57 reviews Sales Rank: 62978
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 017046624329 EAN: 0017046624329 ASIN: B000009Z4T
Release Date: September 22, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Brother's Gonna Work It Out/Not Another Drugstore (Planet Nine Mix)/Block Rockin' Beats... | | • | Makin' A Living/Hot Wheels-The Chase/The Theme (Unique Mix)/Gimme Some Love | | • | The Jazz/Sidewinder (312 Vs. 216 Stomp Mix)/Doin' It After Dark (D-Ski's Dance)/Don't Stop... | | • | Morning Lemon/Mars Needs Women/Thunder/Losing Control/Mother Earth | | • | The Riot/Trip Harder/Everything Must Go (Chemical Brothers Remix)/I Think I'm In Love... |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Perhaps once you become as famous and as in demand as Tom Rowlands and Ed Simons, the world is your oyster and it's up to you to select the pearls. As the Chemical Brothers, these two DJs have turned the anonymous world of club DJ-ing into celebrity sport and ushered in the electronica wave. From Britain with love, the Brothers send this hourlong collection of remixes on which they seamlessly traverse everything from '70s soul (Willie Hutch's "Brothers Gonna Work It Out") to their own "Block Rockin' Beats" to industrial faves Meat Beat Manifesto and Renegade Soundwave, ending their trip with a treatment of Spiritualized's "Think I'm in Love." The pace is relentless, the demands of the dance floor being never-ending. And while much of their stuff is just a matter of getting devilish with the dials and juicing everything up, the CBs have managed to bring some fine taste to their party as the ultimate gift. --Rob O'Connor
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| Customer Reviews: Read 52 more reviews...
has its place... December 10, 2005 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
this chemical brothers release may disappoint some puritans, but it is hot. is that some wink i hear??
Crate of records May 28, 2005 N. P. Stathoulopoulos (Brooklyn, NY) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a bit of a different mix-up album. Be warned it only has five tracks, which makes a big difference how you approach after hearing it once. While most discs like this would have about four times the tracks (going through every break, etc) this one breaks the whole mix down into five distinct parts, lending each track its own specific feel. Sometimes it's funky and pumped up like the first track, then it settles into some extremely repetitive beeps and blips and whoops and becomes almost two much at one point, but thankfully differs up later on after 'Mars Needs Women'.
I don't tend to think of this disc in individual track terms, I can barely remember who they mix up on here, though several Chemical tracks appear given a serious makeover.
Recommended for fans of the Brothers, others might opt for the Crystal Method's Community Service discs.
A very "mixed" album April 30, 2005 P. Kopetko (Canberra, Australia) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you're a big Chemical Brothers fan, then this disc is for you... but ONLY after you've bought ever single other album they've released!
"Brother's Gonna Work it Out" is a couple of beautiful highlights (particularly the last track of the album, which features some material very reminiscent of the brothers' version of Mercury Rev's "Delta Sun Bottleneck Stomp") surrounded by grungy, annoying loops of early 90s electro squished awkwardly over grungy, annoying loops of late 70s hip-hop and house. Bland beats and two-note bass riffs roll over and over and over with irritating squeeky synths blathering away in a different key on top for a hauntingly large portion of this album. It's too dissonant to count as "music", but too pointless and repetitive to count as "art".
Avid fans who are after a few rare CB tracks can find "Morning Lemon" and "Not Another Drug Store" on the 2CD version of "Singles 93-03", which should definately be purchased well before attempting to digest this album.
Having said that, there are a few sub-tracks on this CD that are very cool indeed, but listeners must be prepared for a long haul of badly DJed rubbish around them.
Impressive! August 30, 2004 Lil' Rowlands (Detroit Lakes, MN) I have read about this and sounded intrigued about hearing Tom and Ed's rare DJ sessions combined onto this album called 'Brother's Gonna Work It Put'. It was very wicked how they combined every song together so you would never notice that the track number changed. I loved how the song Brother's Gonna Work It Out silently builds into 'Not Another Drug Store (Planet Nine Mix)' and I thought the Micronauts Mix or 'Block Rockin' Beats' was ACE (I've always been impressed with what The Micronauts could do after hearing their remix of 'Bruce Lee' by Underworld). A lot of these other artists I have never heard of when you get to tracks two and three. I was anxious to hear how 'Morning Lemon' was used in the mix. It pretty much sounds the same if you've heard it on their Singles album, but it makes it unique on the DJ Mix album. It starts off through the high-pitched sound effects of the last song and ends with the building up of 'Mars Needs Women'. Morning Lemon along with other songs like 'Come With Us' and '(The Best Part Of) Breaking Up' have been some of the most wildest songs I've heard from The Chemical Brothers. Brother's Gonna Work It Out is DYNAMITE! GET IT!
Buy it for the Manic's remix track August 5, 2004 M. J Perez (Miami, FL United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is one of the very rare places you can hear the Chemical Brothers remix of "Everything Must Go" by the Manic Street Preachers. The Manics best-of CD release "Forever Delayed" came out without this track - so the only other place to hear it is on the Manics' original 12" vinyl release (mega rare) of the single "Everything Must Go". Enjoy!
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