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About Oxide & Neutrino
British garage duo Oxide & Neutrino comprises So Solid Crew's Alex Rivers aka Oxide (born in Isleworth, West London in 1982) and Mark Oseitutu aka Neutrino from Brixton. They met in a London-based pirate radio station before start working together. Their single "Bound 4 Da Reload (Casualty)," released in April, 2000 anticipated their first album entitled Execute. That full-lenght debut entered the UK album chart at No 11, setting the record for a garage outfit. Its follow-up called Solid Sound of the Underground featured tracks by DJ Dee Kline and So Solid Crew. In addition, the 2-step/British garage team achieved a Brit Award nomination as Best British Newcomer in the dance music category. In 2002 Oxide & Neutrino returned to the local charts with "Dem Girls (I Don't Know Why)," from their album 2 Stepz Ahead. ~ Drago Bonacich, All Music Guide
Oxide & Neutrino's Discography (7)
| 2 Stepz Ahead: LIMITED EDITION | Warner Music... |
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| Dem Girls | Eastwest Rec... |
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| Execute | Relentless |
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| Execute | Warner Music... |
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| Execute: CD Sampler | Warner Music... |
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Compilations Featuring Oxide & Neutrino (20)
| Classic Ser.01 Vol.32 |
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| The Ultimate Teen Flick Soundtrack | Warner Music... |
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| Boom Selection II: THE ESSENTIAL URBAN S... | Warner Music... |
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| Huge Hits 2003: THE VERY BEST OF 'HITS' | Warner Music... |
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| The Ultimate Teen Flick Soundtrack | Warner Music... |
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Shazam Recommends...
Shazamers Who iD'd Oxide & Neutrino
| Featured Review | |
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Kids MGMT |
| With 2005's "Time To Pretend" MGMT created a musical moment that would resonate for the next three years, putting it amongst the creme de la creme of new millennium indie anthems. With latest single, "Kids", MGMT fail to scale the heights they did with their first single, but still deliver a track that has met with strong approval from such critical sources as Pitchfork media, Zane Lowe and, surprisingly, dance music bible Mixmag who cited it as one of their "tunes of the year". Sporting an overridingly childlike melody that shimmers due to the interesting use of a distorted stylophone, the track washes over the listener thanks to the great use of a Gary Numan-esque synth line. This is all brought to the fore on the new remix by Belgian dance maestros Soulwax, who turn the muted indie cool of the original into an irrepressible club monster. If any evidence is needed, here is a clip of Erol Alkan playing the track at the recent Pukkelpop festival. Quite simply, amazing! | |
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