- Digital
Savage
Archives, Vol. 1
Indefinite Boundary
- Cat No: INBD002
- Release: 2026-04-24
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Savage - Manic
04:01 -
2. Savage - Thicker Than Water
03:12 -
3. Savage - Civilization
00:46 -
4. Savage - R&R
02:44 -
5. Savage - Standing Ovation
03:34 -
6. Savage - Old Town
01:08 -
7. Savage - Have At It
01:20 -
8. Savage - Alcatraz
02:29 -
9. Savage - Creep
03:07 -
10. Savage - Megaman
00:48 -
11. Savage - Green Dutch
03:05 -
12. Savage - The World
03:25 -
13. Savage - Never Die
02:25 -
14. Savage - Don't Forget
02:15 -
15. Savage - Deletion
02:48 -
16. Savage - Stardust
03:26 -
17. Savage - Get Out
01:23
24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Indefinite Boundary presents the debut release from Savage – a producer based in Pennsylvania with the greatest archive of beats no one has ever heard. While still currently producing music, Savage was most active during the early 2000s in Philadelphia, PA. His instrumentals found their way onto local mixtapes, radio sessions and underground events in West Philadelphia and Center City. Savage was part of a local crew of producers called Lab Rats which released a compilation in 2004 and co-hosted a regular radio show on WKDU 91.7FM.
Savage – Archives Vol.1 offers a comprehensive retrospective of the artist's output from 2003-2005. Clearly conveyed across the 17 tracks is a viscous middle ground between both prime-era Neptunes sheen and Definitive Jux grime. Savage worked to build beats primarily on the Korg Electribe-R – helping to sculpt a unique sound that is finally being heard on a wider platform more than two decades from creation. The tracks on Archives Vol. 1 are raw and with close listening reveal a distinct prog-rock influence that helps define and elevate the material to exist quite comfortably on one of the best beat tape releases to exist in years.
Savage – Archives Vol.1 offers a comprehensive retrospective of the artist's output from 2003-2005. Clearly conveyed across the 17 tracks is a viscous middle ground between both prime-era Neptunes sheen and Definitive Jux grime. Savage worked to build beats primarily on the Korg Electribe-R – helping to sculpt a unique sound that is finally being heard on a wider platform more than two decades from creation. The tracks on Archives Vol. 1 are raw and with close listening reveal a distinct prog-rock influence that helps define and elevate the material to exist quite comfortably on one of the best beat tape releases to exist in years.
