Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine is setting the blue hour temperature on the dial.
Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine by Satie off Complete Piano Works, Volume 6 (1994) is coming through with a slow-burn glide, a subtle lift / tender voltage lean, and a touch of tender voltage. Electric Funeral is already changing how the current record reads.
The album tracks and side doors, not the obvious front window.
Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine by Satie off Complete Piano Works, Volume 6 (1994) belongs here because keeps the emotional pressure steady after Vocalise, Op. 34 by Sergei Rachmaninoff and turns the color from 2000s into 1960s. It feels more like a shelf move than an obvious front-window pick, which keeps the deep-cuts promise intact.. Electric Funeral is waiting as the answer, so this record is doing more than setting a mood; it is shaping the turn.
Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine comes through with a slow-burn glide and classical around the edges, giving the sequence a 1990s depth instead of a quick disposable hit. The crowd response around Me And Mrs. Jones by Billy Paul suggests listeners are leaning toward texture and detail, not just impact.
Listen for how Electric Funeral answers the color and pressure of the current record instead of simply matching its tempo. The real hook is in how the classical grain keeps glowing even as the transition opens up.
Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine by Satie lands here because keeps the emotional pressure steady after Vocalise, Op. 34 by Sergei Rachmaninoff and turns the color from 2000s into 1960s. It feels more like a shelf move than an obvious front-window pick, which keeps the deep-cuts promise intact.. The classical edge gives the turn a more precise contour than a plain mood match. Electric Funeral can step in after it without the handoff feeling pre-chewed.
On Complete Piano Works, Volume 6 (1994), Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine shows Satie working in a 1990s pocket with classical in the grain. The cut moves with a slow-burn glide, which is why it can hold this turn without flattening it. Inside Deep shelf drift, it reads as curation rather than stunt programming.
Listen for the classical texture in the pocket, especially in the way the arrangement keeps color moving under the lead. It also leaves a lane for Electric Funeral to arrive without the segue feeling forced.
Electric Funeral keeps deep shelf drift honest by sounding like a real choice inside that lane, not a decorative gesture. The heavy metal edge gives the turn a more precise contour than a plain mood match. Who Scared You (Doors Only Mix) can step in after it without the handoff feeling pre-chewed.
On Paranoid (1970), Electric Funeral shows Black Sabbath working in a 1970s pocket with heavy metal in the grain. The cut moves with a slow-burn glide, which is why it can hold this turn without flattening it. Inside Deep shelf drift, it reads as curation rather than stunt programming.
Listen for the heavy metal texture in the pocket, especially in the way the arrangement keeps color moving under the lead. You can hear how it answers Enfantines: Ii. Peccadilles Importunes, Lui Manger Sa Tartine without borrowing the same emotional weight. It also leaves a lane for Who Scared You (Doors Only Mix) to arrive without the segue feeling forced.
Who Scared You (Doors Only Mix) keeps deep shelf drift honest by sounding like a real choice inside that lane, not a decorative gesture. The rock edge gives the turn a more precise contour than a plain mood match.
On The Soft Parade (50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition) (1969), Who Scared You (Doors Only Mix) shows The Doors working in a 1960s pocket with rock in the grain. The cut moves with a slow-burn glide, which is why it can hold this turn without flattening it. Inside Deep shelf drift, it reads as curation rather than stunt programming.
Listen for the rock texture in the pocket, especially in the way the arrangement keeps color moving under the lead. You can hear how it answers Electric Funeral without borrowing the same emotional weight.
Open saved booth copy
Mr Rassy is lining up Electric Funeral by Black Sabbath off Paranoid (1970). It hit in 1970, it comes off Paranoid, Heavy Metal on the edges. The transition feels clean and alive. Deep shelf drift is opening up. keeps the emotional pressure steady after Vocalise, Op. 34 by Sergei Rachmaninoff and turns the color from 2000s into 1960s. It feels more like a shelf move than an obvious front-window pick, which keeps the deep-cuts promise intact.