While the first two "chapters" in Classic's well-earned 30th anniversary retrospective were sprinkled with fairly well-known - biut nevertheless essential - underground classics, this third and final instalment tends a little more towards the lesser-celebrated corners of the imprint's vast back catalogue. It does a good job, for example, of highlighting the label's early-to-mid 2000s 'boompty' period (see JT Donaldson's tech-tinged 'Jiffy Pop' and Solid Groove's fantastically glitchy and sub-heavy rub of Roy Davis Jr's 'About Love'), while also showcasing eccentric brilliance (Tiefschwarz's rarely celebrated 'Acid Soul'), relatively recent treats (the bustling excellence of Dam Swindle's 'Hey Mister', which sounds like a Derrick Carter tribute) and slept-on brilliance (Luke Solomon and Amp Fiddler's aqua-funk gem 'Come On Over', Honey Dijon's Chicago crew cut 'Work').