Ross Ross Ross

Ross Ross Ross is an EP by French electronic musician SebastiAn on August 28, 2006. The release contains three songs. A compilation promotional CD of the same name was also released in 2006 and includes songs from SebastiAn's EPs Ross Ross Ross, H.A.L., and Smoking Kills, along with nine remixes that he produced.

Ross Ross Ross
EP by
ReleasedAugust 28, 2006
StudioSebastiAn's home in France
GenreElectro house
Length13:04
Label
ProducerSebastiAn
SebastiAn chronology
Ross Ross Ross
(2006)
Remixes
(2008)

Reception

Fred Miketa of XLR8R reviewed the CD, giving it 8/10 and saying, "You can call Ross Ross Ross fucked-up techno or chopped electro, but don't say that it isn't ahead of its time."[1] Gareth Thorton of Glasswerk gave it another favourable review, highlighting in particular the title track: "In terms of high points it’s hard to look beyond title track Ross Ross Ross, a raucous mesh of truncated samples causing the involuntary thrusting of body parts."[2] Lara Moloney of The Skinny gave it three out of five stars, noting, "Good tracks to listen out for are the Ross Ross Ross production and Cut Copy's Going Nowhere remix which has a more enthusiastic dance beat."[3]

EP track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Ross Ross Ross"3:22
2."Head/Off"4:40
3."Walkman"5:02

Promo CD track listing

Productions
No.TitleLength
1."Ross Ross Ross"3:22
2."Head/Off"4:40
3."Walkman"5:02
4."Smoking Kills (?)"3:46
5."Dolami"4:01
6."Shoot"4:22
7."H.A.L."2:48
Remixes
No.TitleArtistLength
8."Happy Without You (SebastiAn Remix)"Annie5:15
9."Texas (SebastiAn Remix)"Benjamin Theves5:26
10."Human After All (SebastiAn Remix)"Daft Punk4:50
11."Walking Machine (SebastiAn Remix)"Revl9n3:29
12."Going Nowhere (SebastiAn Remix)"Cut Copy3:20
13."Pop the Glock (SebastiAn Remix #1)"Uffie3:24
14."Pop the Glock (SebastiAn Remix #2)"Uffie2:42
15."Bossy (SebastiAn Remix)"Kelis3:20
16."Paris Four Hundred (SebastiAn Remix)"Mylo4:28
gollark: Oh, and it's not a special case as much as just annoying, but it's a compile error to not use a variable or import. Which I would find reasonable as a linter rule, but it makes quickly editing and testing bits of code more annoying.
gollark: As well as having special casing for stuff, it often is just pointlessly hostile to abstracting anything:- lol no generics- you literally cannot define a well-typed `min`/`max` function (like Lua has). Unless you do something weird like... implement an interface for that on all the builtin number types, and I don't know if it would let you do that.- no map/filter/reduce stuff- `if err != nil { return err }`- the recommended way to map over an array in parallel, if I remember right, is to run a goroutine for every element which does whatever task you want then adds the result to a shared "output" array, and use a WaitGroup thingy to wait for all the goroutines. This is a lot of boilerplate.
gollark: It also does have the whole "anything which implements the right functions implements an interface" thing, which seems very horrible to me as a random change somewhere could cause compile errors with no good explanation.
gollark: - `make`/`new` are basically magic- `range` is magic too - what it does depends on the number of return values you use, or something. Also, IIRC user-defined types can't implement it- Generics are available for all of, what, three builtin types? Maps, slices and channels, if I remember right.- `select` also only works with the built-in channels- Constants: they can only be something like four types, and what even is `iota` doing- The multiple return values can't be used as tuples or anything. You can, as far as I'm aware, only return two (or, well, more than one) things at once, or bind two returns to two variables, nothing else.- no operator overloading- it *kind of* has exceptions (panic/recover), presumably because they realized not having any would be very annoying, but they're not very usable- whether reading from a channel is blocking also depends how many return values you use because of course
gollark: What, you mean no it doesn't have weird special cases everywhere?

References

  1. "Ross Ross Ross". XLR8R. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  2. "Glasswerk Northeast \\ SebastiAn - Ross Ross Ross". Glasswerk.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  3. Single review by Lara Moloney. (2006-12-12). "SebastiAn - Ross Ross Ross EP". The Skinny. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
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