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May 9, 2008 in Download by tyas | Enter your password to view comments
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So then, here in 2007, Rock ‘n Roll Mafia returns, with a new formation (some members have left the band, one departed to – gulp! – The Titans). Now they consist of a female singer, a male singer/guitarist, and a multi-instrumentalist (and a handful of additional players onstage). And with their album, RNRM once again joins the array of bands who want to reclaim the dance floor for indie kids – not only for ‘clubbers’.
While fellow indie dance kings, Jakartians Goodnight Electric, are more cheerful in general (witness their amazing Laser Gun Electro Boy), RNRM sounds bleaker, with themes like love scandals and loss (1000 Times Love Theme is a song for a grandmother who passed away a week after the song was written). Their new album, with songs like Dancing in the Echoes, Translove and Zsa Zsa Zsu, is mature and has a sense of direction, instead of a string of songs merely jumbled into an album. The sound production is astonishing, and like my friend said, perhaps ‘Outbox’ is the best record Fast Forward ever published. I begin to think that RNRM is even better than LCD Soundsystem. OK, some improvement is needed in lyrics section, but once you get the beats going, probably you won’t care too much about the words.
Credits must also go to the designer of the sleeve. (It is of interest that the growth of
Hey, you remember that TIME magazine earlier this year hailed
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A hall of records, or numbers, or spaces still undone. Ruins or relics, disciples and her young
Well it can’t be helped. Any review on Klaxons records will always, always mentions about sunken cities, lost civilizations, ruined ancient buildings, future love, time travel, Cyclops, centaurs and magic. Any such review will also quote the lyrics of Four Horsemen of 2012: There’s a half-man half-horse that still polutes my thoughts as he rides on a flame in the sky….
That’s what Klaxons, the most visionary band in the last decade, are all about. This is the band that describes their music as ‘when Buzz Aldrin returned to Earth and became a Muslim’. They have a vision, perhaps visions. Their debut album, aptly titled Myths of the Near Future, contains music that has the potential to change the shape of Music forever. Klaxons have actually done it earlier last year, when they woke Britain up with the siren at the beginning of Atlantis to Interzone and helped the birth of so-called new rave. But as lesser bands come and go, Klaxons hid in their studio and poured every ammunition they have into the album – and so they have come out with a groundbreaking record that surpasses anything ever happened in new rave. And, probably, in Music. Punk-meets-dance has reached its peak with Klaxons. Read the rest of this entry »
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