Friday, June 29, 2007

Simian Mobile Disco - Attack Decay Sustain Release

Album Review
Village Voice
June 29, 2007
Link

Populist jams for blogs and dance floors both.

Electroclash never promised to cure loneliness. As two-thirds of now-defunct U.K. psych-poppers Simian, James Ford and James Shaw kinda did. Remixed by French electro duo Justice, Simian's "We Are Your Friends" (née "Never Be Alone") has kept clubgoers company worldwide, with an award-winning video that made Kanye West act out like a jilted John McEnroe.

Under goofy sideline name Simian Mobile Disco, Ford and Shaw have now taken Justice's house-as-rock approach someplace even friendlier: house-as-pop. The English twosome's early singles got their acid-squelched synths and icy beats down, all right. But they never skimped on hooks, either, and neither does Attack Decay Sustain Release, whether it's the Go! Team's Ninja cheerleading through "It's the Beat" or New York singer Char Johnson provoking the RIAA on "Hustler." It's love song "I Believe," though, that really sets the group apart from 2007's other big-beat revivalists, draping ex-Simian bandmate Simon Lord's FutureSex'd croon in Italo-disco shimmer. By keeping its heart, the result edges out Justice's more brutal for most exciting, um, "blog house" debut of the year.

It could've been "nu rave." Ford produced U.K. indie-dance hypes Klaxons, not to mention Arctic Monkeys. Like those bands, though, Simian Mobile Disco probably logged more hours at rock festivals than raves. Barry Dobbin of former U.K. indie-poppers Clor calls out between laser-synth swoops on "Love," while "Hot Dog" takes "It's the Beat" to its logical schoolyard conclusion. Orbital-esque soundscapes "Wooden" and "Scott" clear the floor without losing the melodic flow. Always dilettantes, never snobs, Ford and Shaw here even edit their club singles down to three-minute pop songs. It's economy, stupid. Friends, indeed!

Simian Mobile Disco plays Studio B July 7, clubstudiob.com

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Swizz Beatz - One Man Band Man

Album Review
SPIN
June 2007
Link
3.5 stars

Cover Art: Swizz Beatz,  'One Man Band Man'









And you thought DMX was the unstable one.

"My album's crazy," boasts Kasseem Dean, a.k.a. Swizz Beatz, throughout his second solo record. While other rap/R&B producers turned performers have been disappointingly uneven lately -- Timbaland, WTF? -- One Man Band Man makes schizophrenia a virtue. Gaudy beats start and stutter on party joints like the delirious single "It's Me Bitches." Swizz turns socially conscious on the piano pep talk "Part of the Plan," assisted by Coldplay's Chris Martin. But by the chest-thumping "Bust Ya Gunz," the Beyoncé hit-maker is back to his Ruff Ryders roots. Crazy? Possibly.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Dan Deacon - Spiderman of the Rings

Album Review
SPIN
June 2007
Link
3.5 stars

Cover Art: Dan Deacon,  'Spiderman of the Rings'  









Baltimore goofball packs ingenious sonic punch.

Dan Deacon may look like Bill Nye the Science Guy, but he's more like Dr. Demento. This one-man A/V club party makes low-budget electronic pop that's as bizarre as it is uproarious. Deacon's first proper album (after several limited releases) tricks out Devo-esque new wave with eight-bit beats, cartoon sound effects, and munchkin-pitched Ludacris quotes. While a classically trained background shows through the blissed-out drones of "The Crystal Cat," Deacon's weird-science experiments more often test your funny bone -- and shake your moneymaker.

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Press Mentions

"Goes over the top and stays there to very nice effect."
-- David Carr, The New York Times

"I wasn't fully convinced. But I was interested."
-- Rob Walker, The New York Times

"...as Marc Hogan wrote in Spin..."
-- Maureen Dowd, The New York Times