
We’re starting another music category on our blog called “Music On Spotify”. In this category we’ll list posts containing music albums we recommend listening to. These will mostly consist of edm, trance, dance, and techno music albums, however we may list albums from other music styles also. Just our way of helping you find good music to listen to when you are making art, studying, or just chillin’ out. We hope you enjoy the album recommendations. If you have any concern if an album is good or not, have no fear. We would not post an album we don’t like on our blog. Here’s our first post to get this series started.
13 Tracks – 1 hr 19 min – EDM – 2008
- -1
- Look Inside Your Head
- Riff
- By Any Demand
- 15
- Pure Vida
- Sushi
- The Bass
- Lobby
- Apple
- Grasshopper
- Dozer
- Outrospective
UPDATE: Friday, September 29th, 2017
Here is a review of the album we found on trance.nu that was posted on Wednesday, January 16th, 2008:
Sander van Doorn is one of the biggest dance music success stories of recent years. Making his name with tightly produced and crisply mastered tech trance bombs, the reluctant superstar from Eindhoven quickly shot to the higher echelons of the dance world, conquering every corner of the globe with razor sharp, crowd pleasing DJ sets. His infectious enthusiasm and personality have won him legions of fans who will no doubt be licking their lips, as here is his debut artist album, Supernaturalistic. This has been sneaked out with a minimum of fuss and very little fanfare, with recent productions serving more to confuse than to confirm what sort of musical ride we are in for.
The dancefloor perfection of Riff, the mildly irritating King Bee sample on By Any Demand and the minimalist masterpiece Grasshopper are all present and correct, albeit in heavily edited forms. All three tracks were huge dancefloor hits for the Dutchman, especially in his home country where they dominated both the dance and commercial charts. These have been played to death over the past year though, and sadly there is no place for the mesmerising King Of My Castle, so of more interest is the rest of the album.
Look Inside Your Head is an excellent intro, a haunting melody that segues neatly into Riff. Fans of his much-missed Purple Haze alias will lap up the hypnotic, trancey 15 and forthcoming single The Bass with its ‘French Kiss’ style climax is reminiscent of early Sander and another sure-fire dancefloor smash. The obligatory downtempo moment is present and correct in the shape of Lobby, and, like the rest of the album, it is awash with dark overtones yet remains a starkly beautiful piece of electronica.
His passion for minimal techno, first shown on Grasshopper, is expanded on the tracks Sushi and Apple. Apple is the more effective of the two, a chugging groove building to transfixing melodic climax while Sushi is like a cricket to the far superior Grasshopper. Elsewhere, the skittering, menacing Dozer, mooted as a future single, will be causing plenty of future dancefloor destruction, as will the brooding and melodic Pura Vida. Closing track Outrospective finally provides a ray of optimism on an otherwise bleak album that is immediately ruined by some completely needless arrogance tacked on at the end that tarnishes all that has gone before it. Hear it to believe it.
Conclusion
Sander van Doorn delivers a slickly produced, smooth flowing, varied opus, with each track neatly edited and melded together. However it is overall completely lacking soul and is oppressively, relentlessly dark and bleak. Tech trance albums can be done well, shown by the crowd pleasing hooks that burst from a Marco V album, or recent brilliant efforts from the likes of Stephan J. Kroos and DJ Preach. Those albums have character, life. Supernaturalistic is choc full of past, present and future dancefloor hits yet as an album it’s a curiously morose listen that is about as exciting as the track titles. Some full vocal tracks perhaps would give it a bit more of a human element but overall this is a reflection of the music he plays, made for the club, not the bedroom. A great artist album is no doubt in Sander van Doorn’s veins but this, sadly, isn’t it. 3/5
Here is another review from BBC:
This is a solid clubbers’ album that will secure van Doorns place in the Dutch Trance…
Paul Sullivan 2008
That the Dutchies love their big-room sounds is no secret. From Sander Kleinenberg and Tiesto to Ferry Corsten, Marco V and Armin van Buuren: The country has churned out more than its fair share of high profile crowd-pleasers, many of whom have straddled not only the realms of techno and trance but also the usual divisions between underground and mainstream.
Sander Van Doorn is the latest in this royal lineage, and Supernaturalistic his statement of intent. Hailed by some as ‘the saviour of trance’, fans of van Doorn will know he’s as much of a techno aficionado as a trance don, and many of his key productions – Dark Roast and Grasshopper; King of My Castle and By Any Demand – merge these genres in a savvy and uplifting manner.
On Supernaturalistic, the DJ/Producer continues the same line of attack, flitting between hands-in-the-air euphoria and deeper, more penetrative workouts. Following the compelling intro Look Inside Your Head, fans will be delighted to hear the growling, pulsing fury of van Doorn’s anthemic Riff, a monster of a tune whose power has not diminished over time.
His King Bee-sampling By Any Demand, on the other hand, still carries the whiff of cheesy novelty that made it hit and miss for many of us in the first place. 15, Apple, and Pura Vida get things back on track, bringing into play van Doorn’s penchant for heady, euphoric sounds and an undercurrent of serious dancefloor hedonism.
More subtle fare is proffered too: the pounding Sushi, forthcoming single The Bass, (a monster of a track that carries a memorable French Kiss-style build), and the previously released Grasshopper, one of his more epic moments all underline the producer’s penchant for a spot of minimalism.
Elsewhere van Doorn shows off his expanded palette by tackling melodic mid tempo fillers (Lobby) and coming up with leftfield tunes like the skittering, menacing Dozer. Closing track, Outrospective, provides a ray of optimism that we realize has been notably lacking on Supernaturalistic. But despite a dearth of vocals and a general play-it-safe approach, this is a solid clubbers’ album that will secure van Doorns place in the Dutch Trance Hall Of Fame.
And here is a wiki about the album.
More album info and reviews on Discogs.
Find more album info on Google.
If looking to purchase the album in cd or mp3 format you can get it at Amazon. Note: We’re not currently affiliated with Amazon so we do not get any commission for recommending a purchase through them. We just want to make it easy for you to find the album there if you’re interested to buy it.
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