Open today: 15:00 - 19:00

By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.

The Trinity
Gonna Take Time (The Salt City Mix - The Roger Sanchez Mix)

Gonna Take Time (The Salt City Mix - The Roger Sanchez Mix)
Gonna Take Time (The Salt City Mix - The Roger Sanchez Mix)Gonna Take Time (The Salt City Mix - The Roger Sanchez Mix)Gonna Take Time (The Salt City Mix - The Roger Sanchez Mix)Gonna Take Time (The Salt City Mix - The Roger Sanchez Mix)

Catno

NWKT DJXR 90

Formats

1x Vinyl 12" 33 ⅓ RPM

Country

UK

Release date

Jan 1, 1996

Media: VG+i
Sleeve: Not Graded

7€*

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

Haçienda resident DJ collection (DJ Buckley Boland).

A1

Gonna Take Time (Salt City Caffeine Orama Mix)

B1

Gonna Take Time (Roger's Massive Anthem Mix)

Other items you may like:

Lush and adventurous melodic electro/techno tunes in his wellknown style by Carl Finlow! Combining robotic melodies and smooth rolling drum machines in a Kraftwerk meets The Other Peoples Place meets Underground Resistance kinda way. 3 new tracks and a reissue of the lovely 'Anomaly', originally released on Device in 2003 as part of Carl's Electrilogy + album. The first artists release on the Craigie Knowes label after their sweet War Child fundraiser compilation album. Recommended!!
Bosconi welcomes Cosimo D’Amicis aka Cixxx J with his first EP on the tuscany’s finest imprint. The artist explains here the essential meaning of the release with his own words: “Music gives people the gift of connection by making people mirror into each other. Here the recipe is simple: feed your sequencers all the feelings, and let them become grooves you can dance to. These four psycho-synthetic streams are deeply rooted in italo disco classics, and filtered through that whole culture that originated in Chicago and Detroit and that keeps un-becoming. All the ingredients are carefully selected to bring you to another dimension, because there is no such thing as glorious as love at first BITE
Vels Trio has been bubbling away for some time on the London jazz underground, wowing audiences with a suitably deep, cosmic and gently colourful take on jazz-funk shot through with musical spirituality. Celestial Dreams is the former Total Refreshment Centre regulars' first full-length excursion and it's very good indeed. After beginning with the Tangerine Dream style synthesizer soundscape that is 'Dormant Days', the talented threesome flits between dazzling, jazz-fired workouts (see 'McEnroe' and the similarly skittish, high-octane 'The Winter Games'), laidback downtempo groovers ('The Wad', the deliciously deep 'May as Well Be'), cuts smothered in vintage synthesizer sounds ('Pop Stuff', the drowsy '40.2') and spacey, quick-fix bursts of energy ('Ceegee').(Juno Review)