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Portable Network Graphic  |  1993-01-01  |  24KB  |  752x576  |  4-bit (6 colors)
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OCR: I AM/FM X Title Kickin' Klasix Producer 17 Bit No Wham Bam 2411 No of Disks No of Tracks Music lans Unstated Bhangra comes to the Amiga, a combination of traditional Asian instruments, Mixed in with modern dance beats. As I've never heard any form of Bhangra on the Amiga before, it was with some trepadation that I inserted the disk, and waited for the selector screen to appear. Klasix" as Wham Bam were claiming, or just a Forgettable Flop ? Was it going to be a "Kickin Har Gunga (Underground Mix) : I was wondering why there were only two tracks on the disk, and now I think I know why, This "song", and I use the word to itself. loosley, consists of 7 rather large samples, each one having a whole pattern The samples themselves are actually sampled quite well, and so they be considering the amount of disk space they each take up. 5 of the samples come from one soure, presumably the original version of "Har should Gunga", while I noticed the other two samples originate from House of Pain's, "Jump Around", and A Tribe called Quest's, "Can I Kick it ?" The trouble with trying to mix these two samples with the others were that the BPM's didn't Match up, so you get a very noticible difference in the speed of the beats in the transistion from one sample to another. Rating 1. East and West (nection Yikes ! More of the same, as another 7 large samples go through similar treatment. The only difference between this track,