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Showing posts with label 2Electro-pop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2Electro-pop. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2024

We Are Wolves - Non-Stop

Name: We Are Wolves
Album: Non-Stop Je Te Plie En Deuz
Year: 2005
Style: Electronic Party Rock, Indie, Tech/electro Rock
Similar Bands: Clinic, Liars, Faint
"One-Word" Review: all-night-techno-party-rager
Based Out Of: Montreal
Label: Fat Possum Records
Cover & Back Artwork, CD Tray & CD
Artwork pg 2-3, CD Back

Artwork pg 4-11
Non-Stop Je Te Plie En Deuz (2005)
  1. Little Birds 3:15
  2. L.L. Romeo 4:04
  3. La Nature 5:44
  4. Snake Me 3:25
  5. Namai-Taila Cambodge (60-Tabla-60) 5:37
  6. Non-Stop 3:02
  7. Moi, Rhythme Magique 0:24
  8. Vosotros, Monstrous 2:53
  9. T.R.O.U.B.L.E. 3:57
  10. We Are All Winners 2:57
  11. Glaze, Blaze (Glazed the Blazed) 1:27
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • James Duhamel - Recording
  • Alexis Farand - Recording, Mixing
  • Francois Page - Mixing
  • J. Duhamel - Mixing
  • J-F Jarry Thomas Augustin - Recording
  • Harris Newman - Mastering
  • Alexander Ortiz - Vox, Bass (Frvits, Rip Pop Mutant, Physical Congas)
  • Vincent Levesque - Keys, Vox (Paupiere, Bronswick)
  • Antonin Marquis - Drummer, Vox (Le Nombre)
Unknown-ness: There were a bunch of "Wolf" named bands back in the early 00's so i assume i had heard of these folks and saw the CD in a thift store a few years later, not knowing what they sounded like, but familiar with the name.

Album Review: Out of Montreal Canada, these electronic/techno clash artists have high party energy, and experimental effects all kept in line with solid guitar sounding melody and intense, driving tempos. Their buzzing synths and even some Ween-related sounds pump out coked-up, non stop rave vibes, like what i imagine Andrew W.K. to sound like. As of today (2024), their last record was out 5 years ago, but one look on their FB page shows they are still an active, touring band.

Stand Out Track: T.R.O.U.B.L.E.

Links:
Wiki

Thursday, December 23, 2021

United States of Electronica - s/t

Name: United States of Electronica
Album: s/t
Year: 2004
Style:  Electronic, Dance, Disco
Similar Bands: Basement Jaxx, Junior Senior, Andrew WK, Daft Punk, Parry Grip
"One-Word" Review: Non Stop Automated Party Rock
Based Out Of: Seattle, Washington
Label: Manaheim, Sonic Boom Recordings
CD & Inner Case
Front & Back
United States of Electronica (2004)
  1. It Is On 4:40 (single - Japan)
  2. Emerald City 4:05 (single)
  3. Climb the Walls (Umbrella of Love) 4:36
  4. All Sounds & All People 0:45
  5. Open Your Eyes 3:35
  6. Takin' It All the Way 5:14
  7. ...City of Stars 1:04
  8. Night Shift 4:58
  9. There's Always Music 4:33
  10. Vamos A La Playa 4:43
  11. ...the Chase 0:39
  12. La Discoteca 4:20
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Jason Holstrom - Guitar, Vox, Recording, Mastering (Wonderful, Aqueduct, Dolour, Bobby Karate)
  • Jon E. Rock - Drums, Vox (Wonderful, Dolour)
  • Peter Sali - Guitar, Vox (Wonderful, The Kalendar Band)
  • Noah Star Weaver - Keys, Vocoder  (Wonderful, Shane Tutmarc & Travelling Mercies, Rosie Thomas, Dolour)
  • Derek Chan - Bass
  • Carly Nicklaus - Vox (The Catch, Bruno Pronsato, Michael Vermillion)
  • Amanda Okonek - Vox
  • PJ Ramey - Additional Performance
  • Phil Peterson - Additional Performance (Portugal. The Man, The Bluebird, Sherri Youngward, Pedro the Lion, Rivulets & Violets, Nevada Bachelors, Sarah Shannon, Dear John Letters, Holly Figueroa, Kutless, Demon Hunter, Rosie Thomas, Late Tuesday, Holland, David LaMotte, Leroy M Bell, Wonderful, Dead Poetic, Seven Places. Ken Stringfello, Jeremy Camp, Mastodon, Verona, Lashes, Kutless, Harvey Danger, Acceptance, Brandi Carlile, J. Tillman, Ruth, Owl City, Posies, John Totten, Wavves, Maroon 5, Deniz Tek, Vance Joy, Benny Blanco, Rose Blossom Punch)
  • Shane Tutmarc - Additional Performance (Dolour, Gatsbys American Dream, Traveling Mercies, Star Anna)
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. Picked up the CD in a bin, probably based on the word Electronica in the name. I'm hoping this is a fun rock-electronic hybrid album that's catchy but not too much into the techno genre, even if the cover looks like a spray-painted template of a rave.

Album Review: The band formed as an experimental joke, part joke, part way to express a more fun musical environment, and when it was received well by the audience, the band Wonderful decided to start the side project. They only had this one album for a while, self released & funded, and eventually picked up & distributed. It performed well in Japan, and eventually released a follow up in 2009. Apparently they played a one-off reunion show in 2019, but the members still have side projects they work on.

The album is more mainstream acceptable with elements of pop rock and standard catchy party songs  than other full-on electronic bands, and the atmosphere they create is a care free fun world. It falls somewhere between Daft Punk ("Emerald City" borrows from "Around the World's" vocoder melody) and the amusing tongue in cheek silly songs of Parry Gripp, with a little Vengaboys + dicso thrown in. It starts strong and falters toward the end, whether it be out of tedium or a stronger, padded front.

Stand Out Track: Emerald City

Links:

Monday, April 5, 2021

Lil Pocketknife - Pants Control

Name: Lil Pockeknife
Album: Pants Control
Year: 2004
Style: Pop, Hip Hop
Similar Bands: Cibo Matto, The Go! Team, Le Tigre, Gravy Train!!!!, bis
"One-Word" Review: lo-fi geek-hop
Based Out Of: San Francisco
Label: Narnack Records

Cover
Back, Case Back, CD

Pants Control (2004)

  1. Disco Dancer 2:41
  2. East Coast / West Coast 2:09
  3. Red Hott 2:36
  4. 5'2" - 2:24
  5. A.D.D. 3:03

Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:

  • Lil Pocket Knife (Kristy Geschwandtner) - Vox
  • No Skills (Lynae Burns) - Drums
  • George (Patterson) - Keytar (Knodel)
  • Keren Richter - Artwork

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this artist/band. Just from the chosen artwork, who is given just about as much info as the band, i'd imagine the music will be whimsical, energetic pop, with a little darkness, thanks to the name. The artwork is a little reminiscent of  Of Montreal, and perhaps just because of the shared word knife in the name, i am also imaging a bit of a Shonen Knife sound.

Album Review: Lo-fi 8-bit keytar sounds and rhythms and a solid drum beat create a minimal, and sparse musical backing to Lil's rapping, sometimes harmonically layered. The themes on the record are mostly non-stereotypically hip-hop; rapping about disco, short but powerful height, A.D.D., Dungeons and Dragons, and astronomy. The one "rap-themed" song about East Coast / West Coast combines a polka accordion and weird synth blips all swirled together and even name drops the Atari. 5'2" steps up the 8-bit sounds with a synthesized vocal introduction to Lil Pocketknife. But the production feels empty, and the songs fall flat.

This San Fran band apparently offers a fun energetic live show, but that doesn't quite come across on the recording, which sounds more like a bedroom recorded project.  San Fran transplant from New Jersey, Lil Pocketknife was named so by bandmate No Skills, by saying "Kristy can cut like a knife, but not very deeply, and she is very practical like a toothpick and crafty like a pair of scissors." After playing the San Fran party venue circuit, they recorded this one and only album. Another one was planned for 2004 after this Ep was picked up by the label, but nothing materialized


Stand Out Track: East Coast / West Coast

Links:
Dragon Slayer Live performance Youtube
Discogs
Allmusic
Modern Fix Interview
Punk News.org
Rate Your Music
Pandora

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Taperecorder - Just Ramble & Think of Ghosts

Name: Taperecorder 
Album: Just Ramble & Think of Ghosts
Year: 2010
Style: Indie, House, Lo-fi
Similar Bands: Fatboy Slim, Tricky, Portishead, The Blow
"One-Word" Review: homespun indie lo-fi glitch danceloops
Based Out Of: Montreal Quebec
Label: Galactique Recordings

Cover, Record

Record, Back

Just Ramble & Think of Ghosts (2010)

  1. Gatineau 3:23
  2. Cold Spring 3:06
  3. Evergreen 2:27
  4. Denmark 3:53 /
  5. Meet Me In Montauk 3:59
  6. Don't Forget to Write 2:12
  7. Alight / Alone 4:43
  8. On the Wall 3:57 (Jesus & Mary Chain cover)

Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:

  • Marc Francis - Writer, Producer, Guitar, Beats, Electronics, Layout (Intergalactic Faerie Funk, Mossyrock)
  • Bethany Spires - Vox (My Epiphany, Mossyrock, Honeychurch)
  • Jeffro Richards - Bass, Mixing, Mastering (Intergalactic Faerie Funk)
  • James Apollo - Banjo 
  • Todd Degooyer - Guitar
  • Toof (Trey D'Amico) - Keys (Mossyrock)
  • Jessica Mailas - Writer
  • Loren Erdrich - Artwork

Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but by the nostalgic namesake, indie design and minimal liner notes, i'm guessing this is some bedroom recorded indie pop/rock. Probably quite fey and feel-good-y (or maybe the exact opposite, dark and depressing) either way, minimal production is my guess.

Album Review: So the bedroom project of Marc Francis relies on more of a trance/rave/house vibe than straight rock, (self-explained as "dancefloor shoegaze") but there are elements of indie in his work. From Quebec, now in Brooklyn. The album has beat breaks and glitchy skips or loops, infused with banjo and other homespun folky elements. The couple songs with female vocals are intimate and light and airy with some hopscotching electronic and guitar samples filling the background. Cold Spring is a solid indie pop song that musically feels like it is a stripped down demo for a Fat Boy Slim song.

Stand Out Track: Cold Spring

Links:
Discogs
Bandcamp
Soundcloud
Short book on how to build a home studio

Friday, June 26, 2020

Pop Will Eat Itself - This is the Day...This is the Hour...This is THIS!

Name: Pop Will Eat Itself 
Album: This is the Day...This is the Hour...This is THIS!
Year: 1989
Style: Electronic, Techno, Industrial, Rap
Similar Bands: Sigue Sigue Sputnik, EMF, B.A.D., M/A/R/R/S, Einsturzende Neubauten
"One-Word" Review: Eastern European Industrial Rap
Based Out Of: Stourbridge, England
Label: RCA, BMG
Cover & Record

This is the Day...This is the Hour...This is THIS! (1989)
  1. PWEI is a Four Letter Word - 1:12
  2. Preaching to the Perverted 4:25
  3. Wise Up Sucker 3:16 (single)
  4. Sixteen Different Flavours of Hell 1:23
  5. Inject Me 3:51
  6. Can U Dig It? 4:31 (single)
  7. The Fuses Have Been Lit 4:02 /
  8. Poison to the Mind 0:57
  9. Def Con One 3:59 (single, US #30 Mod Rock)
  10. Radio P.W.E.I 3:37
  11. Shortwave Transmission on "Up To The Minuteman Nine" 1:01
  12. Satellite Ecstatica 3:33
  13. Not Now James, We're Busy 3:08
  14. Wake Up Time To Die 6:41
Album Rating (1-10): 5.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Flood (Mark Ellis) - Producer, Mixing
  • Dave Pine - Engineer & Re-Mix Engineer
  • Karl Broadie - Asst. Engineer
  • Robin Goodfellow - Engineer
  • Mr. X & Mr. Y - Producer
  • Mark Dodson - Additional Production
  • D. Steele - Producer
  • A. Cox - Producer
  • Robert Gordon - Producer
  • Cenzo Townshend - Engineer
  • Frank Booth - Guitar (Situation B)
  • Kerry The Buzzard Hammond - Guitar (Yeah God!)
  • Twig the Wonder Kid - Backing Vox
  • Mastermix - Turntables (Hardnoise, Beatmasters, Cookie Crew)
  • DJ Winston (Hazel) - Turntables (Forgemasters, Supafix, The Step, Winston & Ross)
  • Vestan Pance - Words & Music Pseudonym for PWEI
  • This Is The Designerstar Republica - Sleeve Design, Artwork
  • Phil Wolstenholme - Computer Images
  • Kevin Cumings - Live Photos
  • Craig Jennings - Worldwide Rep
  • Paul Boswell -UK Agent
  • Ian Copeland - US Agent
  • Graham Crabb - Vox Keys (Golden Claw, Wild & Wondering, Je Suis Crabbi, Primitive Race, Vile Evils, Fuzz Townshend)
  • Adam Mole - Keys, Programming  (Wild & Wondering, From Eden, Kut Loaf, Vile Evils)
  • Richard March - Keys Programming (Wild & Wondering, Bentley Rhythm Ace, Charlatans UK, Wonder Stuff)
  • Clint Mansell - Vox, Guitar (Wild & Wondering, From Eden, Buddah Boys Choir, Cerebral Fix, NIN, Lavish, Vile Evils)
Unknown-ness: I have heard of them, but i know not what they are like...from the artwork ( i do like how the initials PWEI make up the 5 "monsters" attacking the biohazard clock in the middle), and mention of BPMS on the back, i imagine some sort of future-techno EDM band, but for some reason, i think they may sound like Nitzer Ebb or Low Pop Suicide or Stabbing Westward...maybe part of the industrial KMFDM / Front 242 genre, which is not a reach from the formerly listed bands. 

Album Review: This one required some research, as the style of music had an origin in the UK and is called Grebo Rock, a subculture and genre, adopted from a slang term for long hair bikers and/or rock music fans in the late 80's. When grunge and brit pop took hold in the early - mid 90's PWEI was shuffled over to the Industrial sub-genre, but they were a posterband for the Grebo niche. Their big trivia bit is that they were the first Western independent band invited to play the Soviet Union in 1988. The songs on this album are similar to the back of the album: a collage of bits and pieces strung together with samples, turntables and beats that bear a strong association with cold, mechanical industrial sounds. Sometimes the vocals have melody, sometimes, they are like an Eastern European cold wave rap. Def Con One uses samples of "Funky Town" and "The Twilight Zone" among a string of other musical borrows. They are still around, as a 2020 tour was planned in NZ, alas, everything was postponed Mar/April to Oct, so maybe?

Stand Out Track: Def Con One

Links:
Wiki

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Hammer - s/t

Name: Hammer
Album: s/t
Year: 1979
Style: Light Rock, Powerpop, Electronic/Synth Pop
Similar Bands: Brian Eno, Yes, Peter Gabriel,
"One-Word" Review: Unpredictable Power-Synth Pop
Based Out Of: NY
Label: Elektra Asylum, Warner
Cover, Sleeve, Record
Back, Lyrics, Record
Hammer (1979)
  1. Goodbye 3:37
  2. I Got You 5:50
  3. Oh, Pretty Woman 3:41 (Roy Orbison Cover)
  4. One Day 4:38
  5. Vaporize Me 3:42 / 
  6. Nowhere to Go 5:46
  7. Forever Tonight 4:46
  8. Highway Made of Glass 3:14
  9. Rainbow Day 5:38
  10. Sister Louisiana 3:14
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Jan Hammer - Writer, Producer, Keys, Synth, Vox, Engineer (Mahavishnu Orch, Jeff Beck, Al Di Meola, Neal Schon, Sarah Vaughan, Mick Jagger, Carlos Santana, Stanley Clarke, Elvin Jones, Junior Trio more
  • Colin Hodgkinson - Bass, 12 String Guitar, Vox (Back Door, Barlin Blues Band, Electric Blues Duo, Jon Lord Blues Project, K2, Ten Years After, Hofner Bluenotes, Spencer Davis Group, Tramline, Whitesnake, Alex Korner, Konstantin Wecker, Pete York, British Blues Quintet, Alexis Korner, Eric Delaney, Alan Randall, Joan Bptista Humet, Joji Hirota, Neal Schon, Schon & Hammer, Cozy Powell, Mick Jagger, Stefan Grossman, James Young, Phil Carmen, Pete Maffay)
  • Gregg Carter - Drums (Edgar Winter)
  • Glen Burtnick - Lead/Backing Vox, Guitars, Tambourine (Cats on a Smoth Surface, Helmet Boy, Jersey Artists For Mankind, Styx, The Orchestra, The Sides, The Weeklings, Schon & Hammer, Eric Troyer, Bystander, Celine Dion, Meat Loaf, Johnny Popstar Luv Explosion, Lita Ford, Marshall Crenshaw, Jonathan, Tonio K, What If, Patty Smyth, John Waite, Don Henley)
  • Bos Schachner - Additional Engineer
  • Ron Coco - Art Direction & Design
  • Johnny Lee - Art Direction & Design
  • Chris Callis - Photography
  • Elliot Sears - Mgmt
Unknown-ness: Never heard of Hammer, and with such a general name, that does not give any hints. However, the chosen imagery does...lets see...smashing through into a women's (pink) locked apartment with said "hammer" as she seems to be hiding/running from the obstructed assailant. This does not paint a very understanding band, and far from today's PC standards. So i guess the music will be testosteronly aggressive. The back image of the band, being chased by the attacked female down the stairwell (per her retaliating shadow), shows energy, but also perhaps a lighter (weaker) side. When it comes down to the year and label, i can only surmise it will be power-pub rock.

Album Review: Apparently, this is basically a Jan Hammer, most famous for the 2-Grammy winning Miami Vice theme, album. Although he is not the lead singer, he has written, produced, and engineered the full album, aside from the bass heavy version of the Roy Orbison cover "Pretty Woman." The vocals are weak and kind of flat compared to the aggressive drum and bass - which carries through the album: locked in a tug of war between light and heavy super smooth production. In "Vaporize Me" the synth bass line that leads into a Monkees-like tambourine chorus sounds great (also like Brian Eno) and is really catchy. "Forever Tonight" also has a catchy computer-synth bass line and chorus. It is apparently is the first version (sounding like a demo version with lyrics) of the hit instrumental song featured in Miami Vice. The last track sounds a bit like a Beatles-Kinks hybrid song.

Stand Out Track:  Vaporize Me, Forever Tonight

Links:
youtube full album
wiki
website
imdb
facebook
discogs
allmusic
grammy
billboard
sound on sound
miami vice wiki
unofficial site
1979 NY Times poor live review (and description of his"unwieldy keyboard-contraption" "slung over his shoulder")

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Volumen - ~Cries From Space *Erika EP

Name: Volumen
Album: ~Cries From Space
* Erkia EP
Year: ~2002, *2001
Style: Electronic Pop Punk
Similar Bands: Robbers on High Street, Dismemberment Plan, Captain Beefheart, Pixies, Tub Ring, Walkmen, Jonathan Fire Eater
"One-Word" Review: Synthy Space Pop Rock
Based Out Of: Missoula, MT
Label: Wantage
 Cover, Record, EP
Back, Record, EP
~Cries From Space (2002)
  1. Daddy's Other Finger 6:31
  2. Sexy Astronaut 3:49
  3. Type O Girl 4:38 /
  4. Long Haul 3:50
  5. Metallia 2:16
  6. Nymph...Blood...Wine 2:36
  7. Snakes 3:23
*Erika EP (2001)
  1. Erika 2:10
  2. Face 2:20
  3. Something for the Monkey 3:04
  4. Foreskins Over Fargo 1:37
Album Rating (1-10): 8.5

Members & Other Bands:

  • Volumen 1 Shane Hickey - Vox, Guitar, Megaphone (Professor 3d6)
  • Volumen 2 Doug Smith - Vox, Guitar (Two Year Touge)
  • Volumen Beta Bob Marshall - Drums, Cowbell (Bacon & Egg, Spanker, Prosciutto, Saved for this Dark Dawm, Bobokraft 2000)
  • Volumen Bkawck! Chris Bacon - Synth, Vibes, Tambourine, Wurlitzer, Piano, Vox (Bacon & Egg)
  • Volumen Squared Bryan Hickey- Bass (Bacon & Egg)
  • Tim Green - Recording
  • Greg Twigg - Cover Layout
  • Josh Vanak - Themes & Designs
  • Colin Hickey - Photos
  • Daniel Webb - Flash & Enhanced CD work
  • John Golden - Mastering


Unknown-ness: Never heard of Volumen. But based on their cover artwork and packaging, it looks like they are something like Man or Astroman meets the Faint...that is to say, Emo Math Rock

Album Review: Volumen are made of a complex concoction of musical sources...sometimes it is piano based pop, or loungy melodic music, or space prog, to Prince-like Devo, to power pop metal. Throw in the oddness of Captain Beefheart at times, and you are still nowhere closer to deciphering what they sound like. The EP that was tucked into the full album is much more straight forward synthy, dancy power pop-punk.

Stand Out Track: Long Haul

Links:
Discogs
Missoulian
Rate Your Music
Wantage
website
Facebook
Myspace

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Yellow Magic Orchestra - s/t

Name: Yellow Magic Orchestra
Album: s/t
Year: 1979
Style: Chip Music, Electronic Pop, Techno
Similar Bands: Hot Butter, Chromolodeon, The Advantage, Ghostwriters, Bruce Haack, Cornelius, Kraftwerk
"One-Word" Review: Atari Disco
Based Out Of: Tokyo Japan
Label: Horizon, A&M, ALFA Records
 Cover, Record
Back, Record
Yellow Magic Orchestra (1979)

  1. Computer Game "Theme from the Circus" 6:38
  2. Firecracker 0:02
  3. Simoon 6:28
  4. Cosmic Surfin' 4:27
  5. Computer Game "Theme From Invader" 1:00 /
  6. Yellow Magic (Tong Poo) 6:20
  7. La Femme Chinoise 6:05
  8. Bridge Over Troubled Music 1:00
  9. Mad Pierrot 4:22

Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:

  • Harry Hosono - Producer
  • Kunihiko Murai - Executive Producer
  • Tommy Li Puma - Supervisor
  • Ryuichu Sakamoto - Keys, Electronics, Percussion, Orchestration, Happy End, others)
  • Yukihiro Takahashi - Drums, Percussion, Electronics, Vox (Sadistic Mika Band, others)
  • Haruomi Hosono - Bass, Electronics, Keys, Arrangements (Happy End, Yosui Inoue, Osamu Kitajima many  more)
  • Hideki Matstake - Micro Computer Programmer (Isao Tomita, Akhihabara Electric Circus, Beat Musik, NML: No More Landmine, Oriental mechanic Band, Purple Project)
  • Shunichi Hashimoto - Vox (Izumi Kobayashi)
  • Masayoshi Takanaka - Electric Guitar (Bacco, Brush!?, Flied Egg, Sadistic Mika Band, Sadistics)
  • Tomoko Nunoi - Sexy Vox
  • Nori Yoshizawa - Engineer
  • Atsushi Saito - Engineer
  • Al Schmidt - Mixing
  • Mike Reese - Mastering
  • Shunsuke Miyazumi - Recording Coordinator
  • Roland Young - Art Direction
  • Amy Nagasawa - Design
  • Chuck Beeson - Design
  • Lou Beach - Cover Art
  • Masayoshi Sukita - Back Cover

Unknown-ness: At the time of buying this record, i had not heard of them. The image looks like it is going to be Asian computer sci-fi: with the wires pouring out of the sunglasses-laden Geisha's head. From a PC standpoint, the name seems to be a little racist, amplified by the yellow highlighted suits on the back of the record. But what do I know?

Album Review: So YMO is one of the first bands to include the electronic noised from what sound like Atari games into modern music, which leans disco for the time. Today, it's referred to chip music: folks that include 8 bit sound into their compositions. Their pioneering expands beyond that into J-Pop, Electro-Pop, SynthWave and techno. Their name is apparently satire of Japan's obsession with Black magic in the late 70's. The idea was to fuse oriental exotica with modern electronics. A section of Simoon sounds a lot like Ween's Mexican instrumental Fiesta.

Stand Out Track: Computer Game "Theme from the Circus", Firecracker

Links:
Wiki
Spotify
Discogs
Allmusic
Website
Vice
Facebook
Moog Music
Fact Mag

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Flaunt It

Name: Sigue Sigue Sputnik
Album: Flaunt It
Year: 1986
Style: New Wave, Electro, Techno
Similar Bands: EMF, Quintron & Miss Pussycat, New York Dolls, Adam & the Ants, Thompson Twins, Yaz
One-Word Review: Dystopian-Future-Pop
Based Out Of: London, England
Label: Manhattan Records, Capitol Records, EMI
 Cover, Lyrics-Liner Notes, Record
Back, Liner Notes, Record
Flaunt It (1986) [as listed on the record]
  1. Love Missile F1-11 4:48 
  2. Atari Baby 4:56 (T3,S1 on album)
  3. Sex Bomb Boogie 4:46 (T4,S1 on album)
  4. Rockit Miss USA 6:05 (T1, S2 on album)/
  5. 21st Century Boy 5:11 (T2, S1 on album)
  6. Massive Retaliation 4:56
  7. Teenage Thunder 5:20
  8. She's My Man 5:35

Members & Other Bands:
  • Martin Degville - Vox (Sputnik 2, Sigue Sigue Sputnik Electronic)
  • Tony James - Space Guitar 2000 (Generation X, Sisters of Mercy, Carbon/Silicon, Fin de Siecle, London Cowboys, Sci-Fi Sex Stars, Bizet Boys, Rawhides, London SS)
  • Neal X - Big, Big Guitar (Marc Almond Band, Montecristos, Adam Ant, Sex Gang Children)
  • Ray Mayhew - Electro Drums (Mayhem Deranged, Sci-Fi Sex Stars)
  • Chris Kavanagh - Electro Drums (BAD II, Sci-Fi Sex Stars)
  • Yana Ya-Ya - Effects (Sci-Fi Sex Stars)
  • Giorgio Moroder - Producer
  • Brian Reeves - Engineer
  • Laslo - Programming
  • Hugh-Scott Symonds - Video
  • Andy Kemp - Off Life Editor
  • Grant @ MPL - Online Editor
  • Bonnie Anderson - MM Tech VDX
  • Tony Sellinger / Gibbo - Video Game
  • Paul Smith - Suits
  • Touche Ross - Accountants
  • Brian Carr - Design, Illustrations
  • Graham Ball - Illustration
  • Mike Morton - Illustration
  • Frank Griffin - Design
  • Joe Shutter - Cover
  • Syd Brak - Cover
  • Peter Paul Hartnett - Illustration
  • Rob Hallett - Attorney

Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Unknown-ness: Never heard of them. But if you can dig through all the info and imagry on the record, you get the sense that they are going for the futuristic sound of Times Square in the year 2000 (it being 1986). I imagine something like music from a Blade Runner or Total Recall type universe. So what that might include is anyone's guess...I'm banking on futuristic-industrial music with electronic effects and advertisements sampled and layered throughout their songs.

Album Review: As expected, it is a chaotic, over-stimulation of the ears, with lots of little catchy bits layered over top of each other, and advertisement samples separating some of the tracks and layered in the songs. The vocals are of a snotty new wave variety. And at the base of all their songs are good melodies and dance-able rhythms. I imagine this is what folks though the future of rock would be in the Dystopian futures as shown by the films listed above. The lead track was featured in Ferris Bueller's Day Off/ Their look, somewhat of a futuristic, enhanced Billy Idol makes sense since Tommy James was in Generation X. And some of the ad that bookend the tracks were, in fact, actually purchased by companies...L'Oreal & i-D Magazine specifically, and the Discogs link lists the ads split out from the tracks.

Stand Out Track: 21st Century Boy

Links:
youtube
website
discogs
allmusic
Guardian Interview
IMDB
1986 article in People
Sputnik Music

Friday, March 13, 2020

Man Parrish - s/t

Name: Man Parrish
Album: s/t
Year: 1982
Style: Electronic, Hip-Hop, Pop, Dance
Similar Bands: Chromeo, Herbie Hancock, Harold Faltmeyer, Go! Team, Bruce Haack, M/A/R/R/S, Yellow Magic Orchaestra
One Word Review: Dance-Funk-for-Androids
Based Out Of: NYC, NY
Label: Importe/12
 Cover & Record
Back & Record
Man Parrish (1982)

  1. Hip Hop Be Bop (Don't Stop) 5:36
  2. In The Beginning 1:00
  3. Man Made 5:01
  4. Together Again 3:36
  5. Hip Hop, Be Bop (Part 2) 3:11/
  6. Six Simple Synthesizers 5:37
  7. Techno Trax 4:12
  8. Street Clap 2:11
  9. Heatstroke 5:34
Album Rating (1-10): 9.5

Members & Other Bands:

  • Raul A. Rodriguez - Producer
  • Manuel Joseph "Man" Parrish - Producer, Vox, Keys
  • Mark Berry - Engineer
  • Herbie Powers - Mastering
  • Jim Shelton - Plating
  • Klaus Nomi - Additional Vox
  • Cherry Vanilla (Kathleen Dorritie) - Additional Vox
  • Michael Harron - Additional Vox
  • Michael Rudetsky - Additional Vox (Culture Club, Boy George, Alisha, Hool & the Gang, Joan Jett, Aldo Nova, Stephanie Mills)
  • Rain Sisters - Additional Vox
  • John Robie - Additional Keys (Baker/Robie Project, Black Gold, Guru, Quadrant Six)
  • Robbie Kilgore - Additional Keys (Beatmaster, Maz & Kilgore, Mick Jagger, James Taylor, Eric Clapton, Cyndi Lauper)
  • James McElwaine - Sax (JMJ Band, Skandalous All-Stars)
  • Steve Kroon - Additional Percussion (Ron Carter Nonet)

Unknown-ness: Never heard of Man Parrish. I think i got this in a mix of a bunch of Calypso records, and because I am not familiar with the label, i believe it will be in a similar vein/ I do really like the simple line-analog VHS look of the logo and simple color scheme. I also appreciate the passive aggressive threat on the back "Home taping from disk or radio will not reproduce the full range of sound encoded on these quality pressings"

Album Review: Man Parrish is a blend of Hip Hop, Dance and Pop, through Synthesizers and moog effects, and was one of the founding pioneers in many genres that came after. The songs are fantastic for 1982, and there are so many genres the artist brings into the folds on nearly every song. I used to love a band called Gil Mantera's Party Dream, and the vocal digitizing sounds nearly the same. I cannot stress enough how great the song "Together Again" is, and how rewarding the hook's delivery feels. Hip Hop Bee Bop is actually a somewhat popular song, given play in Shaun of the Dead and Grand Theft Auto. The nickname Man was bestowed upon Manuel by none other than Andy Warhol, from their hangings out at Studio 54. He has worked with producing and mixing many artists from Boy George to the Village People.

Stand Out Track: Together Again 

Links:
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Wiki
IMDB
website
discogs
Ransom Note
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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Trans X - Message on the Radio

Name: Trans X
Album: Message on the Radio
Year:1983
Style: Dance, Electronic, New Wave, Synth Pop
Similar Bands: New Order, Sparks, OMD, Lime, Devo, Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream, Crash Course in Science
One Word Review: Nonstop Dancing Futureistic Computers
Based Out Of: Montreal, Ca
Label: Matra
 Message on the Radio - Cover, Record
Message on the Radio - Back, Record
Message on the Radio (1983)
  1. 3-D Dance 5:53
  2. Nitelife 7:15
  3. 21st Century 5:29 /
  4. Living on Video 5:52
  5. Message on the Radio 5:10
  6. Josee 5:46
  7. Digital World 3:34
Album Rating: 9.0

Members & Other Bands:
`Pascal Languirand - Vox, All Instruments
`Anne Brosseau - Additional Personnel
`Chiffon - Additional Personnel
`Liz Tansey - Additional Personnel
`Linda Benoy - Additional Personnel
`Ian Lebofsky - Additional Personnel
`Steve Wyatt - Keys, Programming,
Laurie Ann Gill - Vox (Nudimension)
`Christian Traut - Art Direction
`Carmine Nicodemo - Exec Producer
`Dominique Nicodemo - Exec Producer
`Claude Allard - Mixing, Engineer
`Carole Arsenaul - Hair
`Daniel Poulin - Photography
`Michel Cloutier - Asst. Photography
`Lisa Fizzano - Make-Up
`Daniel Bernier - Prodcer
`Pierre Bernard - Programming
`Gaetan Desbiens - Recording
`Pierre Lacoste - Percussion, Drums (Isinglass)
`Guy Abrassart - Guitar

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band. But it looks like they are Canadian, which really does not mean anything for the style of music the album may contain. I like the angular basic shape artwork on the front, and the back looks like it might have disco elements. But from the album and band name, there might be some electronic elements.

Album Review: Apparently, this is the Canadian version of the album, as other versions around the world were retitled Living on Video, since it was the big international hit, even covered by many different bands. Pascal Languirand is the main force behind the band, controlling who is his partner, and deciding when the band is together and when it is on hiatus. The name is taken from the Kraftwerk song “Trans Europe Express.” There are two classic albums, before he retired the band, but picked it up at different times to release more albums under the name. He also recorded solo albums that are more ambient, space music in genre. I’m imagining Sparks and OMD teaming up to cover New Order songs.

“3-D Dance” was the third single released by the band. It starts with a synthesized drum beat. Swooping synth effects fly across the speakers and a fun bouncy synth hook starts wiggling into your ears. It is dotted with OMD style synth notes. The vocals start, and represent part disco, and part Sparks. The bass is driving and thumping, augmented by the nervous keyboard sounds and pulsing synth beats. There are female vocals exchanging lines in the first verse, and in the second verse, digitized, deep monster vocals exchange lines with the lead. The song is like a sped up, energetic version of Men W/O Hat’s “Safety Dance.”
“Nitelife” begins with a dark, rumbling warning synth hook, reminding me of Crash Course in Science. Then a keyboard alarming sound is added in, which reminds me of Martha & the Muffins. The effects keep changing, and get squeaker and catchier. The chorus is a call in response with the singer and himself, only a slightly deeper pitch echos the original, Devo-ish call. Synth effects zig and zag, creating a little jazzy section of the song, all the while the drums and dark bass synth keep the tempo driving. It keeps coming back to the familiar elements that are laid down in the beginning, just in continuous variation. By the end of the song, the alarming keyboard sound warbles from left to right speaker.
“21st Century” begins with a somewhat disco bass and hand clap-like percussion start. Then with a genuine OMD twinkling keyboard melody, the upbeat song takes shape. Crystalline/angelic hums fade in and out on rotation. The vocals sound quite excitable. The song follows on this Sparks (vocal melodies) plays an OMD style song. It tends to get a little tedious in its repetitive structure.

“Living on Video” was their first, biggest single, covered by many and topping the charts in the US and Europe on top of Canada. It starts off with a strong “Blue Monday” New Order bass line, with crystal synth twinkles and space warp effects. Then another OMD keyboard hook builds in to repeat, and the final hook is added, a synthetic slide whistle is the best way to describe it. The vocals are all quite calculated, and some are digitized and some have an alluring unisex tone. Once the song breaks, the New Order bass line comes into full swing, and it is wonderful. More space and digital effects are layered over, along with vocal (some like Ladytron) cruising by. The song tears itself down, and builds itself back up numerous times, and keeps coming back to the incredibly catchy elements.
“Message on the Radio” was also a single, and the album title for most of the world. Different styles of digital hooks are used here, again, bringing OMD to mind, mostly. The vocals again remind me of Sparks. The song is built on a standard template of lyric-instrumental stanza on repeat until it reaches the chorus. The chorus is a burst of excitable vocal energy. Halfway through the song, an instrumental breakdown begins, with some sections experiencing a controlled breakdown, but it always comes back to the main supportive hooks. The song fades out with the energetic chorus in a fade.
“Josee” starts with a bass and drum beat, and breathy, futuristic automated female vocal samples. The song kicks in with another playful and upbeat OMD style synth line. The lyrics have a big emotional exertion, again, similar to Sparks. Once you make a connection, it is hard to shake it. The song sonds like a reprise on a couple of songs that came before it. The breathy vocals play a much bigger role here, for an instrumental breakdown, they speak over in a French(?) accent, like they are speaking over a phone call. There is a bit of an industrial effect breakdown, and some soaring electric guitar notes, and the male Oh-whoa-oh-oh vocals perform a call and response with the female vocals. The song returns to its previous structure, and plays out with the bouncy synth effects carrying it through to the fade out
“Digital World” has an anxious looping keyboard hook, accompanied with a drum machine tempo that is steady feels like it is about to pick up. Drive-by zooming synth effects lift off, and the song takes a leisurely futuristic drive, with a few vocal samples that cruise by, lost in the song’s momentum. This instrumental song continues with the nervous, driving synth tones, allowing the listener to visualize passing through art deco-futuristic city-scapes. It feels like I should be playing a game like Stun Runner. 

Stand Out Track: Living on Video

Links:
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Pascal Facebook
Akai Pro
Inner Edge Music Interview
Jorge Munnshe (Spanish) 
Allmusic
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Thursday, February 12, 2015

Plushgun - s/t ep

Name: Plushgun
Album: s/t ep
Year: 2008
Style: Electro-Pop, Chip Music
Similar Bands: Steve Burns, Bicycle, Marxy, Lincoln, OMD, Grandaddy
One Word Review: Twee-Rave
Based Out Of: Brooklyn, NY
Label: Tommy Boy
 Plushgun - Front and Back
Plushgun - Centerfold & CD
Plushgun (2008)

  1. Just Impolite 3:48
  2. 14 Candles 4:14
  3. How We Roll 4:02
  4. Without a Light 3:37

Album Review (1-10): 9.0

Members & Other Bands:
Daniel Ingala - writer
Beth Newell - Art

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band when I got the album. But based on the artwork: Nintendo controller and a bird, I imagine this is some cutesy hipster shit. But when I saw the artwork, I still had to pick it up from the pawn shop I found it in and see what it was like.

Album Review: I remember seeing that this band was playing a bar nearby and even through I had listened to the EP a few times and liked what I heard, I was unable to make it out. They are still active, planning to release their third album sometime this year (2015). Much of their early popularity is attributed to being involved in a popular webseries called We Need Girlfriends, and that was supported by other songs being featured in other shows and commercials.

“Just Impolite” was featured in a Comcast commercial as well as MTV's The City. The song begins with a pulsing synth crystal beat and light heart-thumping drum. The lyrics, set back and distorted with a little polite fuzziness, follow the catchy rollicking beat. The harmless, precious and delicate vocals glide along, and feel organically intuitive.
“14 Candles” fades up with a twinkling Walkmen like synth, and the synth drum beat feels like it is right out of Megaman. As the song reaches the chorus, the drum beat picks up adding the electronic snare. The vocals speed up, but still remain cool and calm. A second female voice is added echoing the lead, giving depth to the song and a male-female paring that supports the lyrical feeling.
“How We Roll” was featured on MTV's Real World Brooklyn series. It starts with a Japanese-anime like zoomy synth, creating an urgent electro dance pop experience. The vocals are rushed, reminding me a little of Tullycraft, but still retain a clear purposeful collectiveness. The urgency in the backing synth drives the song, with other 8-bit effects (promoting the use of the Nintendo controller on the front?) are employed in the song. Immensely danceable, the music could create a genre of entertainment and listeners called Twee-Rave
“Without a Light” fades up as well, with grand synth effects that interweave, and feel right at home having listened to the first three tracks. Then a steady driving beat begins, and OMD like synth hooks take form. The coldness in the vocals mixed with the electro music makes me think of what Grandaddy cold do if they went in a dance direction. The song exhausts itself in segments, reverting to a quiet, ambient section, building up energy to start over again. This song feels more anthemic than the rest of the album by a very small margin.

Stand Out Track: Just Impolite
How We Roll

Links:
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Wiki
Facebook
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Discogs

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

(the) Penelope[s] - Priceless Concrete Echoes

Name: (the) Penelope[s]
Album: Priceless Concrete Echoes
Year: 2009
Style: Indie Pop, Electronic
Similar Bands: New Order, Daft Punk, old Depeche Mode, Bryan Ferry, Human League, Joy Division, Air, the Drive soundtrack, Tricky, LCD Soundsystem.
One Word Review: Pleasant, Funky Synthetic Washing
Based Out Of: Paris, France - London
Label: Citizen, Module, Le Plan
Priceless Concrete Echoes: Cover, Notes, CD
Priceless Concrete Echoes: Liner Notes, Back
Priceless Concrete Echoes: Lyrics
Priceless Concrete Echoes: Liner Pictures
Priceless Concrete Echoes: Lyrics
Priceless Concrete Echoes: Liner Notes

Priceless Concrete Echoes (2009)
  1. Stuck in lalaland (feat. Morpheus) 4:39
  2. Demian (feat. Dierdre) 3:30
  3. Licked by Love (feat. Morpheus) 3:46
  4. Circle of Seasons 4:46
  5. Saved (feat. Morpheus & Malka Spigel) 4:21
  6. Joey Santiago 4:50
  7. Sabotage (Beastie Boys) 3:58
  8. Long Black Fly (feat. Morpheus) 5:02
  9. The Heat Goes On (feat. Morpheus) 4:33
  10. Concrete 4:04
  11. Your Plan For Happiness 5:04
Album Rating (1-10): 9.0

Members & Other Bands: 
Axel Basquiat - Vox, Composition, Badd, Gutiar, Keyboard, Programming, Larsen, Lyrics, Mixing
Vincent Tremel - Beats, Keyboard, Sounds, Treatments, Programming, Larsen, Lyrics, Mixing
Morpheus (Samy Birnbach) - Vox, Writing Composition (Earth, The Gruesome Twosome, Minimal Compact, The Morphtwins, Oracle)
Dierdre Dubois - Vox (Ekova)
Malka Spigel - Vox (Earth, Githead, Host, Immersion, Intens, Minimal Compact, Oracle)
Arnaud Rebotini - Producer (Black Strobe, More, Sartrouville, Krell, Grand Crue, Swamp)
Benjamin Beaulieu - Drums (Animal Machine, Black Strobe)
Mr. Claude - Reworking, Mastering
Jean-Francois Sanz - Illustrations
Yann Le Marec - Sleeve
Peggy Baunay - Photographs
Oliver Martinez - Photographs

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of them, but from the names, and the liner notes, it seems like it will be electronic produced dance music (programming, treatments, etc) or rap (all the featuring spots). I like the simple design and yellow and blue color scheme, and it looked quite indie when I bought it. Plus the name comes into play too, sounding bouncy and fun, yet the album title sounds deep and complex. It will be interesting to see what is on this 25 cent album.

Album Review: The Penelopes are a French indie-pop band that incorporates electronic and disco into their mix. This record of theirs is listed as a side project collaboration with Morpheus, as he is featured on almost half of the album. They have been spreading out their talents lately, remixing other popular songs (Pet Shop Boys, Lana Del Ray, David Bowie, the Cure) and scoring films (La Contribution, Misunderstood) that were featured at the 2014 Cannes film festival. They use the vocals to carry melodies, but the effects surrounding and used upon them render them unintelligible. The music creates a general white washing feel of pleasantry over the listener, in a somewhat slow motion pace.

“Stuck in lalaland (feat. Morpheus)” shimmers as it begins with guitars and synthetic drums. A watery melody is added and “heys” punctuate the song. The vocals begin, and have a dark wave sense about them, although the song is quite cheery. A bass and drum breakdown slows the song almost to a halt, before monotone, computer-ish voices build the song back up, and accompanied by the repetitive melody, the song returns. The song ends with a dark wave beat.
“Demian (feat. Dierdre)” starts with a rolling alarm like keyboard hook. The smooth, pleasant female vocals throw a pop hook over the electric backing track, reminding me a little of Stereolab & Belle & Sebastain. The track really grooves like ocean wave vocals where the bass line functions as the undertow. The repetitiveness in the bleak breakdown sucks the air out of the song, and loses all momentum. So the beat is brought back, and the song returns to its harmonized, layered melody and pleasantness.
“Licked by Love (feat. Morpheus)” sets the tone for a futuristic driving song. The vocals remind me of Joy Division at first, and they have a very Peter Hook bassline, but they transition into something prouder and content. The synth beat is vibrating just beneath the surface, giving the song support to build from. Another synth alarm is added in the background, and it repeats over and over. The vocals are somewhat deep, and rather nasally.
“Circle of Seasons” starts with a steady cymbal beat, and a smooth running bass line. The wavering, deep nasally Male vocals are paired with female vocals that sound like they are strained in trying to reach for the microphone. At first, the song was trying to find its place, but it really comes into its own by the 2 minute mark as a steady driving duet. The song finishes out with the female vocals morphing into a cartoonish growl, singing “It’s so brutal” on repeat. The bass line and one hit drum beat finish the song out.
“Saved (feat. Morpheus & Malka Spigel)” is airy and spacey-futuristic, and feels like it is right off of the Drive Soundtrack. It grows in spirit, and blossoms in slow motion with a chorus of harmonized, ethereal vocals that are barely intelligible. This is one dimensional, feel good, waking up music.
“Joey Santiago” is named after the Pixies’ bass player. It brings back the funky fun, with a dynamic bassline harkening back to old school hip hop. Effects are added to the track one at a time, including bubbling synths, and shockwaves of sirens zooming from ear to ear. Miniature walls of sound crest and then fall away in this instrumental track. Synthetic power tools pick up the rising and falling melody and give a new take on the hooks.

“Sabotage” is a cover of the Beastie Boys hit. It takes the guitar and strips it down into a synthetic, 8-bit hook. The drums are synthetic pinpoints of percussion, rather than the crashing real sound. The original’s energy is frozen in this version, and a Tricky-like loopy trip-hop glaze is extracted with their version. Even the build-up of “Listen all-o-yall itza sabatoge” is muted here.
“Long Black Fly (feat. Morpheus)” has a heavy, static-zipper bass line, and the vocals are Parliment-funky. The static bass changes over to a richer, yunkier sound. And the pause and start up, accompanies with the “Ohs” reminds me of what it would be like for LCD Soundsystem to cover Funkadelic. A bit of chaos is created at the end with all the elements building up together, including yells, the chorus, the bass beat on repeat, and a soaring wall synth that is poised for complete sonic take over.
“The Heat Goes On (feat. Morpheus)” starts with synthesized vocals (SFA), and a cold-yet-pleasant, computer melody. The vocals then become drowned out in echo, and the synth elements rise up all around them, enveloping the vocals and drawing them back down.
“Concrete” fades up vocal chorus of “Ah-oh, oh-Ah-oh’s” with an accompanying vocal mixed low to create a minimal dark wave vibe. This reminds me a little of the Fad Gadget stuff I’ve reviewed earlier. The verse is reserved, but building energy, which lifts off into the chorus. The vocals are again the deep nasally style, that reminds me of Chuck Mosely (singer of FNM before Patton) “Your Plan For Happiness” is a smooth slice of futuristic synth pop, with spoken word dialogue like Pulp over the cruising melody. The sexy smooth French vocals, are juxtaposed against a female giggling uncontrollably. There is a New Order breakdown of synthetic industrial beats, and it picks right back up into the soaring synth-phony. It is a techno song that could theoretically go on forever, continuing jumping from tonal scale to the next before resetting and starting over. 

Stand Out Track: Demian (feat. Dierdre)
Links:

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Meco - Music Inspired By Star Wars

Artist: Meco
Album: Music Inspired By Star Wars
Year: 2005
Style: Disco, Electronic, Soundtrack
Similar Bands: there is nothing quite like this.
"One-Word" Review: Fanboy's-musical-diorama
Based Out Of: Johnsonburg, PA
Label: DM Records Group
Music Inspired By Star Wars - Cover, CD, Back
Music Inspired By Star Wars - Liner notes, CD Tray

Music Inspired By Star Wars (2005)
  1. I Am Your Father 3:09
  2. Star Wars Party 3:12
  3. Across the Stars / Princess Leia's Theme (Star Wars Love Themes) 4:03
  4. Star Wars Theme (New Star Wars) 3:08
  5. The Imperial March (Empire Strikes Back) 3:32
  6. Yoda's Theme (You Are Reckless) 3:22
  7. Jedi Knight 4:05
  8. Lapti Nek 3:25
  9. Live Your Life 3:19
  10. Boogie Wookiee 6:25

Album Rating (1-10): 3.0

Members & Other Bands:
Meco Mondardo - Producer, Arrangements, Programming, Recording, Mixing (Eastman School of Music Jazz Band, Tommy James, Diana Ross)
Peter Frank - Vox, Character Vocal Re-enactment, Guitar Solo
Jeff Jenkins - Character Vocal Re-enactment
Kim Weiss - Vox, Character Vocal Re-enactment
Yamira Santieli - Vox
Sal Vecchio - remix
David Watson - Executive Producer
Mark Watson - Executive Producer
Brian Fleniken - Mastering
Joe Corcoran - Licensing & Copyright Administration
Karl Braun Esq. - Legal Advisor
Herman Moskowitz CPA - Accounting

Unknown-ness: I have heard of Meco, sure. Being a fan of Star Wars, and growing up with the original 3 as my template to compare all other movies to, I was a fan of the Cantina Band version Meco produced. But that song is nowhere on this 2005 version, which professes to have music inspired by all 6 episodes of the dual trilogy. I doubt it is good, since Meco is generally a Disco-related producer/musician, and although 1977 music could lend itself to the genre, I don’t see how the newer three will translate. But it is worth a few minutes of time to find out.

Album Review: So more to the history of Meco…he went to school for music, even formed a band in school with friends Chuck Mangione and bassist Ron Carter. In the mid 70’s as disco was emerging, he was producer to a couple of Gloria Gaynor hits. But it was his love of sci-fi growing up that lead him to making dance versions of familiar soundtrack themes. All that aside, this is a horrendous album. It is incredibly embarrassing, almost more so than hearing the Mini-Pops sing about “making love.”

“I Am Your Father” starts with an echoing cymbal, Darth Vader’s famous breathing, and a sensuous light jazz backing melody. Vocal/quote samples are spoken/layered over the music. The song is not even dancey. It brings in Vader’s melody via synthesized string sections. Luke’s “that’s impossible” line is added in, and there are lots of washed quotes, and a guitar solo for no reason. The song is chaotic and is like a child’s magazine cut up collage for 3rd grade.
“Star Wars Party” is just an embarrassing attempt at rapping about how great a star wars party is. It’s general, never really explaining what exactly a star wars party is, except that it involves dancing Jedi and Wookies helping R2. There is a flat produced quality about the song: nothing sounds crisp or “real.” The melody for the chorus feels Christmassy. The chorus fades out in the end.
“Across the Stars / Princess Leia's Theme (Star Wars Love Themes)” uses more rattling cymbals. The familiar Leia’s Theme is played with fast tempo marching drums played to make it more dancey. The tone is solemn, and it sounds like an 80’s TV show.  There are more quotes layered over the music of Darth Vader, the Emperor, then Obi-Wan. The rest of the cast joins in with one off quotes, taken out of meaning or sequence. But the Han, Luke and Leia voices don’t sound very identifiable. Not a good song, or really, a song at all.
“Star Wars Theme (New Star Wars)” begins like it’s going to be a new age pop song, and features star fighters swooping by, and a loose representation of the star wars theme is synthesized behind more vocal samples. The song grows stagnant quickly, and tried to just carry a drum beat beneath more rearranged character dialogue. Rather than songs inspired by Star Wars, this is more like a bastardized version of your childhood memories.  
“The Imperial March (Empire Strikes Back)” has a dark, metallic quality beneath the familiar march. This feels closer to music, as it is more like a game show version of the theme. There are disco stings accenting certain measures, and the only movie sounds are lasers shots and light saber battles. Later R2 sounds are added as the song rises out of the dark, and moves to positive territory. It is definitely the most creative and musically interesting interpretation of the familiar themes.

“Yoda's Theme (You Are Reckless)” starts with mediocre-to-poor vocal impressions of Yoda over a floating dream like sequence complete with harp playing and a new age or medieval like melody. This again could be the actions of a 15 yr old making a tribute to Yoda with self-made audio clips. At the 2:10 mark, the familiar Star Wars themes are mashed together in disco fashion with sound effects added at random moments.
“Jedi Knight” is a sung song, it is a driving, yet light female sung number that is slightly disco, slightly Japanese, and pretty toe tapping. If it did not have the Weird Al like embarrassment of partial knowledge and selected information of a topic, it might be a generally ok song. The chorus reminds me of Village People, with the chorus of male “sailors” saying to fight behind the female vocals. It follows a good pop music template of music.
“Lapti Nek” reaches more funky disco territories, and is another actually sung song that harkens back more accurately to the disco era. There are creature samples of monsters from Jabba’s Palace. The synthesizer flourishes make this into an interesting audio song. The tempo is danceable and driving, and if the annoying Jabba sounds were removed, it might be a stand-alone tolerable song.
“Live Your Life” starts with a tinny drum beat and dialogue clips overlayed. The mellow melody is very thin, and cruises along for the first minute, until the chorus hits after about a minute, and the sung vocals are raise from the background. This song feels like a fleshed out version of one single thought.
“Boogie Wookiee” fades up with a jungle drum beat and a complex melody with overly synthesized effects and short singing Ooos and other bursts of lyric. The overall general is world music, and not nearly as funky as the rhyming title would suggest. About half way through the tempo and melody shifts up a notch and although it is still a world music beat, it is done in a video game (toe-jam and earl) spirit for a minute. After that, the music falls away leaving an angelic vibe and maraca percussion. It has dropped most of the boogie, and has become a floating cloud of mechanically created choir. 

Stand Out Track: Jedi Knight

Links: