Selected Club Music 21 tracks, 1.23.01 MATH ROSEN on April 30, 2012 20:47
- 1. Destiny's Child - Nuclear (Math Rosen Remix) 4.40 1003 plays 114.0 BPM
- 2. What A Freak 5.34 63 plays
- 3. White Gold Teeth 3.22 94 plays
- 4. Hyp-no-tize 4.52 48 plays
- 5. Frank Ocean - Wiseman (Math Rosen Remix) 4.53 299 plays 108.0 BPM
- 6. Famelik - Built-in (Math Remix) 3.22 142 plays
- 7. Dragnet 3.01 215 plays 130.0 BPM
- 8. Fall On Day One 3.30 95 plays
- 9. Substantial Movement (Sage Vol. 1) 3.49 146 plays
- 10. Dragnet (Infector '97 Remix) 2.57 54 plays
- 11. Soulja Boy - Speakers Going Hammer (Math RMX) 3.20 469 plays
- 12. RLMDL - Pacific Blue (Math Rosen Remix) 3.09 159 plays
- 13. Nouveau Palais - Drama (Math Remix) 4.35 218 plays
- 14. ViciousCycle123 5.07 387 plays
- 15. Highway91 5.45 447 plays
- 16. Paramedics - On Fire // Not On Fire [MATH RMX] 4.19 409 plays
- 17. Edison - Forever Never Tired (Math Remix) 3.34 472 plays
- 18. Fall On Day One (Edison's Rome Remix) 3.15 458 plays
- 19. Fletch Theme 3.25 1542 plays
- 20. hyp-no-tize (dirty) 2.20 117 plays
- 21. HOT DAMN! 4.02 285 plays 100.0 BPM
Selected Film Music 13 tracks, 38.20 MATH ROSEN on May 01, 2012 15:33
- 1. High Park Tango I 3.41 71 plays
- 2. Ben 1.00 51 plays
- 3. Furstenau's Theme 3.43 189 plays
- 4. Jameson's Theme 2.04 46 plays
- 5. Bank of Canada (Arthur Erickson's Economic Echo Chamber Cathedral) 3.53 115 plays
- 6. The End (closing credits) 1.05 130 plays
- 7. Nothing Left To Say (closing theme) 1.41 85 plays
- 8. Garden Path 1.43 61 plays
- 9. Just a Phone Call 1.42 64 plays
- 10. High Park Tango II 2.33 65 plays
- 11. The Lengths (main theme) 4.57 103 plays
- 12. Interview With A Lost Cause 7.23 53 plays
- 13. The End (unmastered) 2.48 67 plays
About
Math Rosen has come a long way since his start in Ottawa's noise scene nearly a decade ago. Since then, he has been genre-bending across the country, from Vancouver's influential Low Indigo to Montreal's legendary Mutek and Igloofest.
Now settled in Toronto where he works as a composer for film, he continues to surprise audiences with his high-energy live performances, filtering deep house bass and hi-tech beats through a lifelong love affair with hip-hop and 70s synth-rock.
Math moves at his own tempo and brings a personal touch of musicality and drama to forward-thinking electronic music from across the map.