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Eric Prydz

Eric Prydz Presents Pryda

Eric Prydz

39 SONGS • 7 HOURS AND 11 MINUTES • MAY 21 2012

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
3
Beyond 8
05:44
4
Javlar
06:24
5
Sunburst
05:32
6
Hardrock Lausanne
04:58
7
You
06:58
8
SW4
05:27
9
Leja
05:57
10
Mighty Love (Instrumental)
05:41
11
Allein
05:36
12
You (Interlude)
03:18
13
Pjanoo (Eric's Intro Edit)
05:59
14
Eric Prydz Presents Pryda (Retrospective Mix, Pt. 1)
75:24
15
Eric Prydz Presents Pryda (Retrospective Mix, Pt. 2)
78:26
16
Lesson One
07:56
17
Miami To Atlanta
08:16
18
Genesis
10:43
19
Rakfunk
05:48
20
Europa
08:17
21
Aftermath
14:39
22
Frankfurt
08:37
23
Armed
07:53
24
Reeperbahn
08:32
25
Muranyi
08:02
26
1983
12:01
27
The Gift
07:54
28
The End
09:01
29
RYMD
09:01
30
Waves
07:38
31
EMOS
09:37
32
VIRO
07:42
33
Glimma
07:19
34
Juletider
07:01
35
With Me
07:13
36
2Night
07:27
37
Melo
08:36
38
M.S.B.O.Y
07:14
39
Mirage
07:23
℗© 2012 Virgin Records Limited

Artist bios

Swedish DJ and producer Eric Prydz releases singles and EPs under a variety of project names, including Pryda, Cirez D, Sheridan, Dirty Funker, Moo, A and P Project, Axer, Hardform, Dukes of Sluca, and Groove System. Most of these singles are released on his own labels, which include Mouseville, Pryda, and Pryda Friends. Under his own name, however, Prydz favors straightforward, club-oriented house with a line in remakes of mildly cheesy pop songs from the 1980s. Prydz's first release in this style was 2004's "Call on Me," a sensation in Europe upon its release. Built on the hook from Steve Winwood's 1987 hit "Valerie" (with new vocals by Winwood), "Call on Me" hit the top of the singles chart in both England and Germany, spurred in large part by a somewhat controversial video consisting of an overtly sexual aerobic routine that had no less a personage than U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair publicly commenting on its salaciousness. Prydz followed this in 2005 with "Woz Not Woz," a beat-heavy instrumental revamp of the 1980 Was (Not Was) single "Wheel Me Out" that was less commercially successful but more musically inventive. This was followed in 2006 by "Proper Education," a remake of Pink Floyd's smash "Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2" that set David Gilmour and the schoolchildren chorus to a considerably funkier backbeat. Prydz continued to issue singles on Pryda for the next few years, culminating in 2012's triple-disc Eric Prydz Presents Pryda. New material was presented on disc one, while discs two and three featured past material edited and mixed by Prydz. In 2015 he issued "Opus," a nine-minute, building track that became a hit, and then made news when Kieran Hebden, aka left-field producer Four Tet, tweeted out a request to do a remix. The request was granted, and in 2016, "Opus" became the title track to Prydz's debut studio album. ~ Stewart Mason

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