Exactly 10 years after the release of the original 10“ record Systematic delivers you a strictly limited white vinyl repressing. Gourmets of old school house music become excited when they listen to „Love´s got me high“. The song, released in 1994, became a milestone in terms of soulful house, in the same way like Adeva´s „Respect“ and Urban Soul´s „Alright“. Marc Romboy has re-explored this pearl for his series „Lost Treasures“ and was able to convince Terrence to release it again, for the young generation and fort he old school lovers. The package comes along with a respectful interpretation of no one else than house master Jimpster (Freerange) and Marc´s remix.
Includes unlimited streaming of Terrence Parker - Love's Got Me High (Systematic presents Lost Treasures Vol. 1)
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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In 2011 Systematic Recordings chief Marc Romboy was set to deliver a cracker! He's softened his touch and lovingly reworked on of his favourite house records from the past... Terrence Parker's "Love's Got Me High."
"One of the most emotional and ground breaking house records of the early 90s was without question "Love's Got Me High“, produced by Detroit legend Terrence Parker. I have re-explored and signed this all-time-classic and given it a fresh face with two brand new interpretations." - Marc Romboy
Not only does Marc turning in two stunning rework's himself, vocal and dub. He has also drafted in one of the UK's finest in Freerange boss and all round Don of the deep, Jimpster who turns in equally fresh and respectful version himself.
Strictly limited to 500 copies 10" colored vinyl repressing!
DJ Magazine UK:
– KILLERS – An unlikely story, but it’s true. Tech house honcho, Systematic label-head Marc Romboy has dropped a touching re-edit of Terrence Parker’s soulful Detroit house groove ‘Love’s Got Me High’ onto an imprint usually reserved for bone-crunching beats, crystalline prog synths and whooshing rushes. Tapping in at around 117bpm (about 10 lower than the label’s usual crop), built over a skipping 4/4 and majestic piano chords, this lush, jazzy house weapon will inject a bracing does of soul into any tired dancefloor stuck in its grind. Jimpster’s version is even better. A deep-funk disco bassline, cut-up vocal calls and faint showering cymbals, it draws out and excavates the heartfelt vibe of the original, intensifying it tenfold.