Tracklist
Just Want Another Chance | 5:13 | ||
Just Want Another Chance | 5:45 | ||
Just Want Another Chance | 2:30 | ||
Rhythm Tracks | |||
Untitled | |||
Untitled | |||
Untitled | |||
Untitled | |||
Untitled |
Versions
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8 versions
Image | , | – | In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory |
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Version Details | Data Quality | |||
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Just Want Another Chance
12", 33 ⅓ RPM
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Incognito Records – IR 111787 | US | 1988 | US — 1988 | ||||
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Just Want Another Chance
12", 33 ⅓ RPM
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Incognito Records – IR 111787 | US | 1988 | US — 1988 |
Recently Edited
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Just Want Another Chance
12", White Label, 33 ⅓ RPM
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Incognito Records – IR 111787 | US | 1988 | US — 1988 |
Recently Edited
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Just Want Another Chance
12", Reissue, Yellow Label
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Incognito Records – IR 111787 | US | 1998 | US — 1998 |
New Submission
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Just Want Another Chance
12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Reissue
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KMS – KMS153 | UK | 2014 | UK — 2014 |
New Submission
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Just Want Another Chance
12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Reissue, Repress, Clear
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KMS – KMS153 | UK | 2020 | UK — 2020 |
New Submission
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Just Want Another Chance / Rhythm Tracks / The Sound
12", Unofficial Release
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House Classics (2) – BR 493 | US | US |
Recently Edited
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Just Want Another Chance / Rhythm Tracks / The Sound
12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Unofficial Release, White Label
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Not On Label – BR-493 | US | US |
New Submission
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Recommendations
Reviews
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It was the clean intro to the A3 track (2:30) that allowed people to sample the reese bass before being able to create it themselves. Classic Drum and Bass tracks such as Renegade - Terrorist used this sample with killer effect.
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Wow I this tune but didn't know it was 1988! I thought for some reason it was either 90 or 91 because of the Reese bassline in this, but even then I questioned if it was even 90 or 91 as it was unheard of to hear that bass until around the jungle era. Either way this tune is ahead of its years! and I believe maybe the first ever to use that reese bass?
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Edited 6 years agoThere's no denying that bassline & all it has contributed to, no doubt; but when it comes to techno, and enjoyment, its the B-side all the way. Solid techno. 'Just Wan't Another Chance' is a beautiful, brooding sickly sweet ode to a broken romance. It's about as melancholic as things get, and some love to get down to that. Ill take the easy way out with some pounding 4X4 action courtesy of tracks 1-5 on the flip, I'm just that shallow ;-) Regardless, seminal Detroit release & definitive Kevin Saunderson. Kevin was 24 when this was released; I was 14, & waited 3 years until first hearing. The title track you could hear spilling over into regular club sets; the B-side? True heads material...
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I'm glad to see that this record has gained a wider acceptance as being
one of the best and most important early Detroit techno releases from
that era in time. I randomly acquired my copy out of a clearance bin for
25 cents around 1992. I hadn't the faintest clue who or what it was, but
It ended up being one of my favorite records to mix with because the
rhythm tracks go really well with just about anything you can match
it up with. In fact at one point I just leaving this disc on
one of my decks, and then literally proceeding to mix every single
12" I owned at the time with it just to see which ones sounded
the very best with it. Probably one of the very first DJ tools of
techno beats that ever existed. I rate it at 10 out of a 1 - 10 rating scale. -
Are the House Classics bootlegs/ represses any good?
I know the tunes are the nutz but what about the the quality of the pressing? -
Edited 12 years agoI've been into jungle/drum and bass since its inception and was a fan of Dillinja's Deadly Deep Subs but it wasn't until someone reviewing that tune spotted that it was a *cough* total rip off of this.
I'm ashamed to say that I had heard of the reese bassline and alex reece (obviously) but never put 2 + 2 together?!
D'oh.
I feel that as mentioned this record is truly a masterpiece and a building block of drum and bass.
It still sounds fresher than most dance music today.
Edit:Thanks for the replies - I know that Kevin Saunderson and Alex Reece are two different people but after hearing this tune it was clear to me that the Reese bassline came from this tune. It would have been impossible to have sampled Pulp Fiction for Dillinja's - DDS as it was released a year later.
I was just saying that I had heard of Alex Reece plus the Reese bassline and didn't make the connection before. i.e. that he was influenced by Kevin Saunderson. -
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Just want another chance without a great many people realizing it is probably as important to the genre of drum and bass as say, the winstons "Amen brother".
Because contained within is the original source sample of the Reese bassline.
As a techno record in its own right, this is frankly fucking enormous. The 909 drums sound like they were recorded in an aircraft hanger, Master reese's whispering vocals are fairly fitting, but it is the bass that sends this track into another dimension.
bounce across to version 3 of just want and you find what is more like a bass-a-pella and right there is that solo'd bass.
One of my first recollections of this being used in any drum and bass record has to be Terrorist's (Ray keith + Nookie) Renegade
on moving shadow which funnily enough is basically this bass sample and-you guessed it--the Amen brother break!!
And , This is a record from 1988--when it was all just house music, but man, we really are talking blueprint of techno here. Even some Transmat records (dare i say it) never ever sounded this good.
The master Reese undeniably pioneering.
Without some records, things would have been so different.
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