Album lore
Paradise, issued in 2013 on M-Plant, presents Robert Hood’s Floorplan project at a juncture where disco house and Chicago house convene with a distinctly funky pulse. The nine tracks, including “Baby, Baby,” unfold with the precision and warmth emblematic of Detroit’s techno lineage, yet veer into more groove-laden, dancefloor-ready territory. Recorded under Hood’s stewardship, the album melds minimal techno’s structural clarity with the rhythmic buoyancy of house, reflecting the city’s evolving club sensibility.This release stands as a testament to Hood’s adeptness at straddling the lines between genres, crafting tracks that nod toward classic Chicago house motifs without sacrificing the mechanized rigor of Detroit techno. The record’s resonance lies in its blend of buoyant basslines, clipped vocal samples, and syncopated drum patterns, a signal to crate-diggers and selectors who prize the intersection of funk and machine. Paradise remains a noteworthy artifact within the continuum of 2010s house music, emblematic of M-Plant’s discerning output.
Catalog intelligence
Spotify album linked for metadata
How did this get here?
| SKU | SPOT-10tWXABJHqiOFtRevvm6Pm |
|---|
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
Paradise, issued in 2013 on M-Plant, presents Robert Hood’s Floorplan project at a juncture where disco house and Chicago house convene with a distinctly funky pulse. The nine tracks, including “Baby, Baby,” unfold with the precision and warmth emblematic of Detroit’s techno lineage, yet veer into more groove-laden, dancefloor-ready territory. Recorded under Hood’s stewardship, the album melds minimal techno’s structural clarity with the rhythmic buoyancy of house, reflecting the city’s evolving club sensibility.This release stands as a testament to Hood’s adeptness at straddling the lines between genres, crafting tracks that nod toward classic Chicago house motifs without sacrificing the mechanized rigor of Detroit techno. The record’s resonance lies in its blend of buoyant basslines, clipped vocal samples, and syncopated drum patterns, a signal to crate-diggers and selectors who prize the intersection of funk and machine. Paradise remains a noteworthy artifact within the continuum of 2010s house music, emblematic of M-Plant’s discerning output.
Catalog intelligence
Spotify album linked for metadata
How did this get here?
| SKU | SPOT-10tWXABJHqiOFtRevvm6Pm |
|---|
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