After clinching the #2 spot on AvB's A.S.O.T. top 20 of 2004, Andy Moor & Adam White are back with the follow-up release of their massive The White Room, this time with a Vocal Trance release on their own WOOM Recordings (in addition to a Captivating Sounds release that includes the Enmass remix also reviewed below) that goes by the name of Someday.
[align=center]White Room featuring Amy Cooper ~ Someday [Vocal Mix][/align]
A solid beat gives this long-awaited gem a head start, with a driving bassline making its way through the second minute, followed by the typical White Room beeping sounds, and finally the vocals making their entrance a minute later... A sudden silencing of the buildup is reached in the early moments of the fourth minute, annoucing the onset of a breathtaking breakdown: enchanting vocals, those beeping sounds again, and a dreamy melody emerging from the depth, characterized by none-other than the intoxicating White Room sound we all fell in love with in their previous productions. The beat is dropped back in somewhere around the 5:00 mark, unleashing a symphonic harmony of Melodic Trance bliss. Even though the climas does later on recur, Someday still leaves you asking for more! Great stuff from this talented duo, a firm match to The White Room and their remix of Airwave's Save Me.
[align=center]White Room featuring Amy Cooper ~ Someday [Instrumental Mix][/align]
Vocal haters out there aren't to be kryptonited from this fine release as it does come with a Dub Mix, though it's really hard to imagine such a masterpiece without its original vocals; some vocals do ruin some tracks, but it surely isn't the case here... Anyway, an Instrumental Mix is available for whoever is interested...
[align=center]White Room featuring Amy Cooper ~ Someday [Enmass Remix][/align]
After the big success that Enmass accumulated with CQ & So Please, he has now returned with a remix of this vocal beauty. Bassless beat for the first minute, until the basslines finally gets implemented but doesn't stay on the spotlight for long, because after just a couple of measures the dreamy sounds start making their way through, and the journey into Trance begins. After a while, the elements start withdrawing, and the breakdown is reached at the 3 minute mark. A semi-muted drumline serves as the backup for the instrumental melody that we all heard and loved in the original, with the beat quickly making a comeback and throwing our hands up in the air with it! But it's not quite over here; a few beats later, the vocal choir (not lyrics) are heard on top of that semi-muted beat, paving the way for the return of the melodic climax! Good stuff from Enmass, but the original vocal mix still owns... I just don't see the point in removing those magical vocals!
The record is a smash for the biggest DJs in the world (Tiesto, AvB, Oakenfold...) and received phenomenal radio support worldwide; it is sure to be one of the biggest releases of 2005, even if the year has just started!