Zimmer086 – UnoRace – The Album (Russia)
mp3, 320kbps, stereo, electronic, versatile, techno
086.01 – UnoRace – Stars
086.02 – UnoRace – Hailstone
086.03 – UnoRace vs. Xalm Retribution – In the Dark
086.04 – UnoRace – Side View
086.05 – UnoRace – Fury
086.06 – UnoRace – Empty Road
086.07 – UnoRace feat. Xalm Retribution – The Mist
086.08 – UnoRace – Robotronic – Xalm Retribution Remix
086.09 – UnoRace – My little Party
086.10 – UnoRace – State of Public Opinion
086.11 – UnoRace feat. Xalm Retribution – The War
086.12 – UnoRace – Creak
download & stream -> archive.org
download & stream -> sonicsquirrel.net
download & stream -> last.fm
download ZIP (MP3 | 152MB)
Artwork (667px)
[by nikola janeski]
An album is a musical recording originally in gramophone or vinyl format, then in other formats such as Compact Cassette, Compact disc, and increasingly in digital format such as MP3. Audio albums in physical form are often provided with decorative covers (cover art) and liner notes and inserts about the music and recording, giving background information and analysis of the recording, lyrics and librettos, images of the performers, and other images and text, as well as thanking contributors. When supplied with compact discs they are known as CD booklets.
Historically, the term “album” came from a collection of some form, and in musical usage the word was used for collections of short pieces of printed music from the early nineteenth century. Later, collections of related 78rpm records were bundled in book-like albums (one side of a 78 rpm record could hold only about 3.5 minutes of sound). When long-playing records were introduced, a collection of pieces on a single record was called an album; the word was extended to other recording media such as compact disc, MiniDisc, Compact audio cassette, and digital or MP3 albums, as they were introduced.
The introduction of CDs to radio caused a bit of a crisis for a generation of DJs, who didn’t know whether an album of music on a CD should still be called an album, as they had all grown up with 33-rpm LPs, which they considered synonymous with albums. //wikipedia