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Music for the Maases | 
enlarge | Artist: Timo Maas Label: Kinetic Records Category: Music
List Price: $20.98 Buy Used: $3.75 You Save: $17.23 (82%)
New (6) Used (16) Collectible (1) from $3.75
Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 25083
Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 677285466526 EAN: 0677285466526 ASIN: B00004YWZH
Release Date: October 3, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
Disc 1
| • | Dooms Night (Timo Maas Mix) - Azzido Da Bass | | • | Sunburn (Timo Maas Breakz Again Mix) - Muse | | • | Better Make Room (Original Mix) - Mad Dogs | | • | Drive By (Timo Maas Mix) - Jan Driver | | • | City Borealis - Timo Maas | | • | ATOM Noize - Kinectic A.T.O.M. | | • | Riding On A Storm - Timo Maas | | • | Eclipse - Timo Maas | | • | Der Schieber - Timo Maas | | • | Flash (Timo Maas Mix) - Green Velvet |
Disc 2
| • | Zoe (Timo Maas Mix) - Paganini Trax | | • | Twin Town (Original Mix) - Ian Wilke Vs. Timo Maas | | • | Let The Freak (Timo Maas Mix) - Big Ron | | • | Schieber 1 - Timo Maas | | • | Annihilate (Timo Maas Mix) - Major North | | • | Everytime (Unreleased Vocal Timo Maas Mix) - Lustral | | • | O - The Fifteenth Letter Of The Alphabet | | • | Supertransonic (Timo Maas Mix) - Poseidon | | • | Mama Konda (Timo Maas Mix) - Orinoko | | • | Mama Konda (High On Kilimanjaro Mix) - Orinoko |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Details Dance: 'music for the Maases' is Timo's Retrospective Production Anthology. It Takes in Older and Seriously Overlooked Moments Like 'killin Me' While Keeping the Vibes Banging and Up to Date with 'der Schieber' and 'dooms Night'.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Awful! May 5, 2008 Jeff Carsten (Charlotte, NC USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
They should be ashamed of themselves. This is a collection of rhythm tracks. No particular sense of melody, no development, nothing but repetitive tone generators. I sent my copy to the garbage dump.
Inconsistent, lacked smooth transition May 24, 2004 The Excellector (Baltimore, MD, USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Yet another example of a two disc DJ album where disc 1 leaves you hanging and disc 2 attempts to kiss and make up with you to make the save. Disc 1 moved too quickly from sound to sound. It lacked the smooth transition through sounds that make the greats. There's no feeling in most of disc 1. It brings somewhat of a tacky sound at times. Discs 2 comes back strong to take you for the ride. Yet, not enough to totally rebound from the poor opening act. Peace
Suprising July 12, 2001 Simon Engelbert (littleton Co) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
When I first saw this cd I didn't think it would be good but upon taking the advice of a reviewer i decided i would take a chance and buy it. I can't say how happy i am that i bought it it is one of my favorite cd's. he has his own unique and individual style. A great Cd.
Eh...not bad, not good either June 2, 2001 Erica Anderson (Minneapolis, MN) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
I had to see what the fuss was being made about Timo Maas, I must say that I am still scratching my head figuring out why people are making much ado about nothing with this guy. Never in my life have I heard anything more repetitive than this cd. One of the reasons why I don't often buy dj mix cds is because I fear that the music will come up a few cards short of a full deck and will be left disappointed. Disc one is definitely disposable and is considered useless to me. Disc two gets somewhat better but not by much. Definitely not one of my better purchases I've made this year.
May not be a great technical mix, but it sure makes you move May 26, 2001 ghibli99 (the West Coast, USA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
While Timo Maas has been criticized for creating DJ mix CDs that aren't on the same level as the best in the business, he still manages to create soundscapes that get your head bobbing, toes tapping, and body moving. By the time you get to Timo Maas's own "Schieber 1" on disc 2, if you're not moving, you're either sleeping or dead. I've heard the same things said from multiple reviewers about Paul Van Dyk and Paul Oakenfold (great producers, bad DJs), but there's very little denying that PvD's "Vorsprung Dyk Technik" (disc 1) or Oakenfold's "Resident" have set off that all-important dance response in people that hear them. And if there's anyone who have been lucky enough to hear PvD's live mixes at Homelands or Berlin (or LA for New Years Eve 2000), they know what "producer" guys like this are capable of.Getting back to Timo Maas, however, there are some transitions that will make you go, "Huh?" (one of them occurs between tracks 5 and 6 on disc 2, which simply don't want to blend with each other at all), but for the most part, this is a solid showcase for Maas' own work, his remixes, and other assorted vinyl that he likes to spin. Solid.
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