---
product_id: 177155612
title: "Orbital"
brand: "orbital"
price: "€ 34.31"
currency: EUR
in_stock: false
reviews_count: 8
category: "Music"
url: https://www.desertcart.at/products/177155612-orbital
store_origin: AT
region: Austria
---

# Orbital

**Brand:** orbital
**Price:** € 34.31
**Availability:** ❌ Out of Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Orbital by orbital
- **How much does it cost?** € 34.31 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Currently out of stock
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.at](https://www.desertcart.at/products/177155612-orbital)

## Best For

- orbital enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted orbital brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

Product description
        	  
        	  
        		  
        			Orbital - S/T - Cd
				    	
			    	
        		  
        		  
        	
          
              
        	  	  .co.uk
        	  
        	  
        		  
        			In the late 1980s, as American house and techno imports flooded Britain and the Acid House movement was sweeping the nation, brothers Paul and Phil Hartnoll were busy building Britain&apos;s own interpretation of the sound. Named for the illegal &quot;Orbital&quot; raves taking place around the M25, they dragged their equipment from party to party, playing live PAs of their homegrown dance music to enthusiastic crowds of revellers. Their 1990 single &quot;Chime&quot; was (and still is) the anthem of many a British raver, and their self-titled 1991 debut remains a classic. Opening with the exquisite mid-tempo anthem &quot;Belfast&quot;, and containing the &quot;Chime&quot;, &quot;Satan&quot;, and &quot;Fahrenheit 303&quot; singles, this album captures the innocence and energy of the nascent rave scene. --Matthew Corwine
				    	
			    	
        		  
        		  
        	
          
              
        	  	   Review 
        	  
        	  
        		  
        			When Orbital&#x2019;s self-titled debut (usually called &#x2018;the Green album&#x2019; to differentiate it from its similarly eponymous follow-up, &#x2018;the Brown album&#x2019;) emerged in 1991, the rave music that had fuelled 1988 and 1989&#x2019;s Summers of Love was starting to have mass appeal. Viewed in retrospect the early-90s were a golden age for electronic music, before the twin assaults of the government&#x2019;s legislation against &#x2018;repetitive beats&#x2019; in the 1994 Criminal Justice Bill and, with the death of the large-scale free party scene, the conformity of the superclub era.&#xA0; &#xA0;&#xA0;Orbital&#x2019;s debut single, Chime, was produced on a cassette player for the princely sum of &#xA3;2.50, a remastered version making it to number 17 in the singles chart in 1990. Alongside Rhythim is Rhythim&#x2019;s Strings of Life, Chime represents one of the most influential pieces of electronic dance music ever written. It appears in a live version on the Green album, underlining the Hartnoll brothers&#x2019; commitment to gigging at a time when most techno acts tended to stick in a DAT and goof around. The version here is as vital as the original single release, the sunlit stabs of its introductory passage shattering against that timeless, endorphin-firing descending metallic riff.Similarly striking, albeit more reflective, Belfast weaves a constantly phasing electronic squiggle &#x2013; the aural equivalent of a sparkler writing in the air &#x2013; and major-chord keys around a sublime choral sample from Hildegard von Bingen&#x2019;s O Euchari. Soundtrack to the end of countless weekends, the track sits exquisitely poised between a joyous beauty and powerful melancholy. As it slows in tempo during its last two minutes you can feel yourself slipping off into a weightless drift.The Green album contains several stunning individual tracks &#x2013; the aforementioned Chime and Belfast; the sleek machine that is Oolaa which, like so many Orbital productions to follow it, sounds like it has a core of pure crystal; the jaw-grinding rave dynamics of Speed Freak and The Moebius&#x2019; blocky trance &#x2013; but it remains very much a collection of standalones rather than an album that benefits from being heard in a single sitting. Indeed, the tracks featured were recorded over several years, with no particular intention of being grouped together.Later Orbital albums would be much more coherent in theme &#x2013; witness the anti-Criminal Justice Bill statements of Snivilisation or the environmentalist messages embedded in In-Sides &#x2013; but for all its disparateness, the energy and creativity at play on the Green album make it irresistible. --Chris Power Find more music at the BBC  This link will take you off  in a new window

## Images

![Orbital - Image 1](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/3115BDPBCEL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Three Stars
  

*by A***R on 1 December 2017*









  
  
    OK
  


### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Five Stars
  

*by L***T on 1 June 2017*









  
  
    Perfect wind down
  


### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    👍
  

*by D***  on 18 June 2019*









  
  
    👍
  


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*Product available on Desertcart Austria*
*Store origin: AT*
*Last updated: 2026-05-06*