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Featured track
Condition
$41.00
1 in stock
Cart is saved on this device. Checkout prepares your order summary. Refresh this page for the latest stock and price.
Featured track
Condition
Album lore
Virtual Crime, issued on Mall Music Inc. in early 2015, finds DJ Mastercard navigating the intersection of footwork, singeli, and club subgenres from Jersey and Baltimore. The six-track collection includes collaborations such as "Cryogenics," featuring 4J LTE, and "Savage," with DJ Paypal, which stands out as a particularly kinetic signal from this lineup. The record leans into experimental edges of juke and electronic hip-hop, maintaining a brisk pace throughout.Each cut unfolds with clipped rhythms and rapid-fire percussion, evoking the dancefloor urgency endemic to these regional styles yet filtered through Mastercard’s distinct approach. Though not widely circulated, with just over two thousand listeners on Last.fm, Virtual Crime offers a concise artifact for those tracing the lineage of cross-pollinated club music in the mid-2010s. Its contained runtime and focused scope make it a compact addition to the canon of experimental electronic dance music from this era.
How did this get here?
| SKU | SPOT-4BkTyoEiJQ71EhE2lFMIAU |
|---|
Quick preview
Listen to a sample on YouTube — opens in a new tab; own this release here for the full listening experienceOpen this track on Spotify
Album lore
Virtual Crime, issued on Mall Music Inc. in early 2015, finds DJ Mastercard navigating the intersection of footwork, singeli, and club subgenres from Jersey and Baltimore. The six-track collection includes collaborations such as "Cryogenics," featuring 4J LTE, and "Savage," with DJ Paypal, which stands out as a particularly kinetic signal from this lineup. The record leans into experimental edges of juke and electronic hip-hop, maintaining a brisk pace throughout.Each cut unfolds with clipped rhythms and rapid-fire percussion, evoking the dancefloor urgency endemic to these regional styles yet filtered through Mastercard’s distinct approach. Though not widely circulated, with just over two thousand listeners on Last.fm, Virtual Crime offers a concise artifact for those tracing the lineage of cross-pollinated club music in the mid-2010s. Its contained runtime and focused scope make it a compact addition to the canon of experimental electronic dance music from this era.
How did this get here?
| SKU | SPOT-4BkTyoEiJQ71EhE2lFMIAU |
|---|
Quick preview
Listen to a sample on YouTube — opens in a new tab; own this release here for the full listening experienceOpen this track on Spotify