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THESE ARE EXCERPTS OF REVIEWS OF ELECTRIC PUHA'S ALBUM "SISTERS IN PARADISE"
"you can't label electric puha . "sisters in paradise" is a special soundtrack for this summer, very eclectic music that is not easy to catagorise. sometimes you hear early primal scream or the happy mondays and then you get the trip hop of tricky or the dub-lounge of the thievery corporation and in the end you think you are in a limo with afex twin. sparkling electro freshened up with inventive samples ... a shameless feel-good experience."
ingmar griffoen, utrechts nieuwsblad
"nice chunky electro vibes - good choons for good weather"
loes lee moving tartget / kink fm.
"..they've made a record that immediately makes us dream of the happy mondays, the stone roses and the rest of the weird manchester scene, but that's not all - they stash away all kinds of other influences in their music (electro, dub, funk, hiphop, ...) and make an eclectic, very varied and spirit-full brew.
markus neimenthaler, digg magazine.
"great tracks, funky uptempo shit is what i like! three cheers for puha! "
dj solo, metro records.
"sweltering sounds. dance music is fascinating when djs look beyond their own horizons and with electric puha you hear funk, dub, hiphop, and even jazz, but above all this trio loves to interact with live musicians - from the trip-hop of "sound easy" to the electro of "under the traffic" the range of influences is always wide - kraftwerk, herbie hancock, the stone roses, the happy mondays, funkadelic and even eric burden's war seem to be looking on at these creations."
haarlems dagblad.
"..go to the record store and get electric puha's album "sisters in paradise". sheer coolness. ... "
www.chezlubacov.com.
"a must have ... electric puha's album "sisters in paradise" is a very fine record, a commercial homage to the sound of the underground and the whole album could be used as a soundtrack for a tarantino movie."
avante garde magazine.
"electro you can enjoy whilst lying on the sofa combines with the manchester sound of the happy mondays, the stone roses & new order but also with influences of miles davis & herbie hancock. on the dvd all the tracks are dressed with inspired videos from dutch visual artists"
bb, rifraf magazine.
"i found myself playing this unpolished pearl of electro-lounge over and over again."
dj svendex, supernatural.
"..the puha sound is difficult to define. itŐs a sort of cross-pollination of jazz, funk, electro & rock, with as a thread: the groove.."
robbert weij, gomagazine.
"a very wide sound with influences from electro, hip-hop and many more. "stomper (electro-filth mix)" is exactly what the title suggests, peak time electro material with a punk punch. "let me talk to the driver" is a freaky scratchy house track with a nice swing and a fine flipped sound - strange but tasty. "(usa) who are you?" is a modest tech house track with a nice fat bassline layered with some really special hefty sounds.."
high rollers, go magazine.
"...sisters in paradise, feels simply like big fat unpretentious fun... it's like being submerged in a warm bath..."
marco barneveld, reload magazine.
" .."sisters in paradise" is wild and versatile like tales from the red light district. electric puha sound totally individual, which is a big achievement nowadays ... sisters in paradise is a pure rivella-album: a little strange, but nice."
dave roozendaal, kindamuzik.
"..it's a fat record, it really is"
dj timur perlin, radio3 fm.
"..relaxed, sluggish and dubby it ain't. hectic and complex dance is the order of the day, with a lot of manchester and jxl influences"
ro krom, fret magazine.
"we are witness to an amazing drunken party ... these images were never meant to be watched by a third party and that makes it even more fun combined with electric puha's house beats"
gert verbeek, fret magazine.
"funny dance explorations from u-town city - three producers with a lot of atmospheres and themes within their powers - a bit of electro, a piece of big beat, a sniff of idm and a touch of house, you want it, they've got it ... slick & professional"
jacob haagsma, oor magazine.
"how can you name this style ?"
move x magazine.
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