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Seven Ways
 
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Seven Ways

Paul Van Dyk Audio CD

Price: CDN$ 18.39 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Details


Disc: 1
1. Home
2. Seven Ways
3. Heaven
4. I Like It
5. Come (And Get It)
6. Forbidden Fruit
7. Beautiful Place
8. People
9. The Greatness Of Britain
10. I Can't Feel It
See all 11 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. Seven Ways (Star Ways)
2. Today (Trance Ambient Mix)
3. Words (For Love)
4. Beautiful Place (Paradise Mix)
5. Forbidden Future
6. Words (Mana Mix)
7. Words (Curved Headcase Mix)
8. Sundae 6 a.m.
9. Beautiful Place (Just Beautiful)
10. Forbidden Fruit (BT's & PvD's Food Of Love Mix)

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  30 reviews
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful
A great trance album. Mar 10 2000
By Flint Ironstag - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
The thing that really impressed me about this album is the fact that Paul Van Dyk manages to make Trance interesting. When I got it in 1999, trance had become fairly mainstream and had degenerated to simplistic synth melodies with the now standard *boom-tss-boom-tss* beat pattern. It was truly refreshing to hear this album. Don't misunderstand, it has the aformentioned qualities, but somehow, Paul Van Dyk makes you forget that and lose yourself in the music. The album is extremely cohesive, all mixed together and seeming to follow a natural progression that makes it sound as if you are listening to one long, interconnected piece as opposed to 11 seperate songs. It's not really something to skip around in, you want to listen to it all in one sitting. Add to the spectacular first cd a second remix cd, and this is really a great set to get for burning a couple of hours at a time.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
A Solid Album Feb 23 2000
By Bob Lin - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
I read the previous online reviews and drew three common threads. First, many people felt that van Dyk sounded better live. I've never heard him live, so I wouldn't know, but my guess is that it's probably true. I hear great potential in these tracks, and would daresay that van Dyk would be banging live. Secondly, many people believed this album to be something truly magical and better-than-caffeine. I disagree on this point. I sat through this album... not once getting the urge to get up and dance. I wouldn't go so far as to call it a chillout album, but the beats just weren't infectious enough to get me up and moving. I guess I've just been listening to so much of this stuff (techno, rave, & trance) that it's just sort of numbing. I still thinks it's good, though. The last thing I read was that his beat is extremely repetitive. This may be true, but I didn't pick up on this at all while I listened to the album. It works very well and shows how skilled van Dyk is at what he does. All in all, I really liked this album.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
vital trance creation Mar 29 2001
By Richard Diaz - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
Quick, how many trance albums can you name? Not compilations, nor DJ mixes, but artistic endeavors crafted by musicians intent on delivering a complete, original experience? More than likely you didn't get past a few fingers, especially if just counting the good ones, but you probably had Paul van Dyk figured in there somewhere. Though known for his DJ exploits or his newest release Out There and Back (a quality if perhaps too-slick tech/trance piece aiming more for clubbers) he should be recognized for making one of modern trance's seminal statements with Seven Ways.

Conceived as a continuous mix, the variety and depth of sound are startling. Opening "Home" has breathtaking builds and chords that pack twice the intricacy of most tunes cranked out today, which in no way prepare you for the fierce, dark growling "Heaven." "I Like It' runes on pure groove, before shifting to the Van Dyk trademark acid squelch/ euphoric atmosphere combo found in several tracks as in "Come and Get It." "People" is the lone stumble before closing with the expansive "I can't feel it," building you up one last time for PVD's oft-mixed "Words." Oh, and there's an entire second disc of alternate cuts to boot.

It's unknown how well electronic dance music can stand the challenge of time, though certainly rereleases of label catalogs like Transmat, and the stream of wide-reaching house and disco sets such as The Loft and Live at the Paradise Garage show the viability. As for trance, Seven Ways plays as invigorating and vital as it did in 1996, no small feat in a genre constantly reinventing its style.


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