(Untitled)

Jul 22, 2009 23:05

Dots and Loops is just as good, if not better, than Emperor Tomato Ketchup and I will explain, in depth, if anyone (no one) is curious (doesn't respond because they (are afraid) don't care).

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i need to hear this ! tdaschel July 23 2009, 04:34:47 UTC
.. because i'm not sure whether i ever actually owned the record. i am familiar, at least, with a remix of "Ticker-tape of the Unconscious." just speaking from Memory, i probably played Mars Audiac Quintet more than ETK. .. thing of it is, though, i'm more likely t'be playing High Llamas' Hawaii than anything by Stereolab. this comes from Peer Pressure, from hanging out too much with "Brianistas."

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shady_lamarr July 24 2009, 01:17:24 UTC
The highlights of "Emperor Tomato Ketchup" are better than any of the highlights of "Dots and Loops" ("Metronymic Underground," "Noise of Carpet," "Percolator," and the glorious and perfect "Cybele's Reverie") but "Dots and Loops" holds up better as an album. It was a step backwords back into space age bachelor pop and a lighter and more bubblegum approach, plus it has the best finish to any Stereolab album... it's like a perfect marriage between what Tim Gane does and what Sean O'Hagan does. Speaking of, I really hope someone comes along and compiles like a "Singles Going Steady" or "Steve Miller Band Greatest Hits 1974-1978" for the High Llamas, who basically coasted on mostly mediocre albums with a few gorgeous killer songs on each, which led to me purchasing several albums which I love one song, like two others, and can't remember a damn thing about the rest of the album except it was enjoyable and pleasant. They've got a great, and I mean a close-to-perfect, singles collection in them, if they can find a guy willing to pan ( ... )

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vorozheya July 24 2009, 22:35:25 UTC
Stereolab was one of the best live shows I've ever seen (saw them on the Sound-Dust tour) and I was really impressed with how they transformed "Metronomic Underground" and "Cybele's Reverie" into live performances; you can sort of get the idea from the terrific compilation album, ABC Music.

You kind of hit the nail on the head about what I was getting at, but it's also the fact that Dots and Loops is more of a daring, and completely successful, departure for them than ETK. ETK is like the pinnacle of their early-middle period, but Dots and Loops takes them into outer-space lounge jazz territory. "Miss Modular" is one of the best singles of their entire career, "Refractions in the Plastic Pulse" is their best long-form effort and "Rainbo Conversation" is one of the few tracks where Sadier's voice actually carries a great deal of passion.

I'm in the minority with Stereolab fans in that I also really think that Cobra... gets pandered unfairly (thank you, Pitchfork - seriously, that review and the head guy's review of a GYBE! album ( ... )

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vorozheya July 24 2009, 22:50:23 UTC
oh, also, while I'm on the subject of that album: thanks to the digital age, it's possible to recreate an album the way you think it should be. In my iTunes, I've chopped a third of the tracks off (and almost half the total time, which is telling w/r/t my assertion above about their songwriting shift), leaving it at a manageable 43 minutes and very listenable. It makes it a really good album! Like, 7 or 8 out of 10. Here's the listing if you're interested.

1. Fuses
2. People Do It All The Time
3. The Free Design
4. Blips, Drips and Strips
5. Infinity Girl
6. Op Hop Detonation
7. Puncture in the Radax Permutation
8. Strobo Acceleration
9. The Emergency Kisses
10. Come and Play in the Milky Night

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shady_lamarr July 27 2009, 04:33:12 UTC
Upon another go-round with "Chemical Chords," the song I loved was actually "Self Portrait with Electronic Brain". I really do wish bands would try as hard as possible to include song titles in their lyrics, it's just way too much work otherwise.

I feel that Stereolab is sort of like a modern day Fall, always different, always the same.

Anyway, if there's a time in the hopefully near future where you and I, and Fagen and Becker, are all alive and healthy, we absolutely HAVE to see Steely Dan perform together, like no excuses other than births, weddings, or funerals!

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