Skip to content

Yazoo - The 12 Inch Mixes -1993- -flac- - Up By... ^new^ ◎ < High-Quality >

| # | Track Title | Length | |---|-------------|--------| | 1 | Situation (The U.S. Remix) | 5:46 | | 2 | Don’t Go (Class X Remix) | 6:07 | | 3 | Other Side Of Love (12" Mix) | 5:19 | | 4 | Nobody’s Diary (12" Mix) | 6:06 | | 5 | State Farm (12" Mix) | 6:31 | | 6 | Situation (Re-Situated) | 9:15 | | 7 | Situation (U.S. Dubmix) | 5:46 | | 8 | Zoo-Mix (Megamix) | 9:18 | | 9 | The Shitmix (Megamix) | 10:33 |

Yazoo’s The 12 Inch Mixes (1993) is a historically important compilation that rescued rare extended versions from vinyl oblivion. Its circulation in verified FLAC format, often credited to specific “UP BY” uploaders, exemplifies the digital preservation ethics within electronic music collector circles. Future research should focus on locating the original 1982/83 analog master tapes to create a definitive, uncompressed 24-bit/96kHz transfer.

Unlike popular lossy formats like MP3, which compress a file by permanently discarding some audio data to save space, . This means it compresses the audio without removing any sonic information. As a result, a FLAC file is a bit-perfect copy of the source material, preserving the original's dynamic range , detail , and clarity . When a CD or a high-quality vinyl recording is ripped to FLAC, the listener can experience the music exactly as the artist and engineer intended. Yazoo - The 12 Inch Mixes -1993- -FLAC- - UP BY...

A rare gem that highlights the experimental side of Vince Clarke’s production. Why FLAC Matters for Yazoo

If you are searching for the term , it is likely you are looking for a specific user upload on a private tracker or a specific forum thread that hosted this content. Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, users like DANIEL1968 were central to distributing this rare content, often sharing it via MEGA links with specific passwords, ensuring that the legacy of Yazoo’s 12-inch era never truly died, even if the physical copies did. | # | Track Title | Length |

In the early 1980s, the 12-inch single was the ultimate canvas for electronic musicians. Unlike standard 7-inch radio edits, the 12-inch format allowed producers to extend tracks, experiment with sparse arrangements, emphasize heavy basslines, and create hypnotic grooves tailored specifically for club DJs.

In the vast and ever-evolving landscape of electronic music, few names resonate as profoundly as Yazoo, a seminal duo that left an indelible mark on the genre during the early 1980s. Comprising Mike Rutherford and Rick Nowell, Yazoo's brief but explosive career was characterized by innovative productions, distinctive vocals, and an uncanny ability to blend synth-pop with deeper, more experimental sounds. Among their most cherished contributions to electronic music are the extended, dancefloor-friendly mixes that have been immortalized in "The 12 Inch Mixes," a compilation released in 1993. This article explores the significance of Yazoo's work, the importance of "The 12 Inch Mixes," and why the 1993 FLAC release by UP BY... remains a treasured artifact for fans and collectors alike. Its circulation in verified FLAC format, often credited

FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is preferred by collectors for this release to preserve the dynamic range of the original 1980s analog synthesizers used by Vince Clarke .

Explain the Vince Clarke used for these remixes.

The definitive floor-filler. This mix stretches the iconic sawtooth bassline into a hypnotic groove that still sounds futuristic 40 years later.