The North Pole by Submarine is the only album released by ambient techno artist Bleep. Bleep was the one-time moniker of Geir Jenssen, who is more widely known as Biosphere. Shortly after North Pole was released, Jenssen moved in a far more ambient direction with his music, and changed the name under which he released his new music to avoid any comparison with "bleep house".
| The North Pole by Submarine | |
|---|---|
| Studio album by Bleep | |
| Released | 1990 |
| Genre | |
| Length | 52:19 (CD) 43:25 (LP) |
| Label | SSR Records |
| Producer | Bleep |
The album was released on SSR Records (sub-label of Crammed Discs) and Tokuma Japan Communications music labels.
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| The Virgin Encyclopedia of Dance Music | |
In his book Ocean of Sound (1995), David Toop described The North Pole by Submarine as "a promising Belgian New Beat/acid album" and noted how some of the record is sampled from radio transmissions.[1] In a retrospective review, John Bush of AllMusic wrote how the "pre-Bisophere album" contains "few ambient tones", instead focusing on "heavy house/pop rhythms and acid effects" to create music aimed exclusively at dancefloors.[2]
Biosphere | |
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| Albums as Bleep |
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| Albums as Biosphere |
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| Soundtracks and field recordings |
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| Authority control |
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