Back to Mine: Adam Freeland

Back to Mine: Adam Freeland, compiled by DJ Adam Freeland is the twenty-first compilation album in the Back to Mine series published by the Dance Music Collective.

Back to Mine: Adam Freeland
Mixtape by
ReleasedJuly 25, 2005
Length1:08:55
LabelBack to Mine
CompilerAdam Freeland
Adam Freeland chronology
Fabric Live 16
(2004)
Back to Mine: Adam Freeland
(2005)
Global Underground 032
(2005)
Back to Mine chronology
Back to Mine: Pet Shop Boys
(2005)
Back to Mine: Adam Freeland
(2005)
Back to Mine: Roots Manuva
(2005)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Collective (BBC)[1]
NME[2]
Exclaim(unfavorable)[3]

The compilation album received coverage in NME;[4] the review's conclusion was "Damn near perfect - 8/10." [5]

Freeland shared his thoughts on the album compilation process:[6]

When asked to compile this Back to Mine, I initially starting scouring my record collection for my favourite records of all time and those that have had the biggest influence on my style...This is a snapshot of some of my favourite tracks that are keeping my neighbors up right now. I have compiled the mix to start all guns blazing, as you would want to hear arriving back home steaming after a big night, then, as the evening progresses, it gradually mellows out to end up as a stoned, horizontal, blissful haze.

Track listing

  1. Adam Freeland – Intro
  2. ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead – Will You Smile Again for Me
  3. Autolux – Turnstile Blues
  4. Interpol – Untitled
  5. TV on the Radio – Staring at the Sun
  6. Ambulance LTD – Yoga Means Union
  7. The Beta Band – It's Not Too Beautiful
  8. Jape – Floating
  9. EL-P – Constellation Recall
  10. Elliott Smith – Needle in the Hay
  11. PJ Harvey – The Slow Drug
  12. FunkadelicMaggot Brain
  13. Dyke House – Sandy Strip
  14. M83 – Lower Your Eyes to Die With the Sun
  15. Trans Am – A Single Ray of Light on an Other Wise Cloudy Day
  16. Boards of Canada – Zoetrope
gollark: Idea: somehow bolt all of IPFS onto this browser thing too?
gollark: Oh yes, this is quite bad.
gollark: I mean... maybe?
gollark: Oh, you mean "have people externally label a page", not "have the pages have pointers to an external service".
gollark: There is empirical evidence of this in that we actually have the the various `aria-` attributes now, and basically nothing uses them, although that might just be because we have plenty of semantic elements anyway.

References

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