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Substance
: essential recording:It's a simple concept--the first dozen singles by New Order collected, a couple of them rerecorded--but it's also a totally entertaining seven-year history of the band that married British post-punk alienation to the relentless hedonism of the dance floor. The band's hits were always deeply unconventional (like the haunting 'Blue Monday,' essentially a seven-minute drum machine test with a short lyric that alluded to the Falklands War), but they were brilliant productions, layering dozens of electronic countermelodies and percussion tricks over Barney Sumner's uncertain warble and Peter Hook's lead bass parts. ...
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The Wedding Singer Volume 2: More Music From The Motion Picture
: :Is it forgivable that the second volume of songs from Adam Sandler's mid-'80s-revival comedy begins with Kajagoogoo's famously limp 'Too Shy'? Not really, but the rest of the disc does a good job of recapitulating worthy memories from the era of torn-sweatshirt necks and mulletheads--not just with new-wave novelties but with Madonna and Hall & Oates staples ('Holiday' and 'You Make My Dreams,' respectively) as bouncy and glossy as anything the also-present Depeche Mode ('Just Can't Get Enough') and Dead or Alive ('You Spin Me Round [Like a Record]') ever put on the ...
from: Maverick
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The Mystery Of Santo Domingo De Silos Gregorian Chant From Spain
: :Is it forgivable that the second volume of songs from Adam Sandler's mid-'80s-revival comedy begins with Kajagoogoo's famously limp 'Too Shy'? Not really, but the rest of the disc does a good job of recapitulating worthy memories from the era of torn-sweatshirt necks and mulletheads--not just with new-wave novelties but with Madonna and Hall & Oates staples ('Holiday' and 'You Make My Dreams,' respectively) as bouncy and glossy as anything the also-present Depeche Mode ('Just Can't Get Enough') and Dead or Alive ('You Spin Me Round [Like a Record]') ever put on the ...
from: Deutsche Grammophon
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Inquisition Symphony
: :Is it forgivable that the second volume of songs from Adam Sandler's mid-'80s-revival comedy begins with Kajagoogoo's famously limp 'Too Shy'? Not really, but the rest of the disc does a good job of recapitulating worthy memories from the era of torn-sweatshirt necks and mulletheads--not just with new-wave novelties but with Madonna and Hall & Oates staples ('Holiday' and 'You Make My Dreams,' respectively) as bouncy and glossy as anything the also-present Depeche Mode ('Just Can't Get Enough') and Dead or Alive ('You Spin Me Round [Like a Record]') ever put on the ...
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Millennium
: :For their hard-core under-18 fans, of course, the Backstreet Boys are all that, and a bag of chips and free soda to boot. Millennium, the follow-up to the quintet's umpteen-million-selling debut, offers more reasons why so many of the rest of us have found a place for them in our hearts. The Boys' ultrapackaged look and up-to-date production underscore the quality of their best tracks; only a churl could deny that 'I Want It That Way' is one fine radio-aimed declaration of love, or that 'Larger Than Life' makes the most of its ...
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Tribal Derivations
: :For their hard-core under-18 fans, of course, the Backstreet Boys are all that, and a bag of chips and free soda to boot. Millennium, the follow-up to the quintet's umpteen-million-selling debut, offers more reasons why so many of the rest of us have found a place for them in our hearts. The Boys' ultrapackaged look and up-to-date production underscore the quality of their best tracks; only a churl could deny that 'I Want It That Way' is one fine radio-aimed declaration of love, or that 'Larger Than Life' makes the most of its ...
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Portishead
: :The bad news is that there is no 'Sour Times' to equal the first album's greatness. Lead single 'Cowboys' doesn't do the trick, not with its '50s sci-fi dub vibe and the Yma Sumac stylings of Beth Gibbons. The upside is that this bold sophomore release is, even at this late date in trip-hop's evolution, still startling, thanks to the mix of Geoff Barrow's soundscapes and Gibbons's haunting wail. --Jeff Bateman
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No Pussyfooting
: :The bad news is that there is no 'Sour Times' to equal the first album's greatness. Lead single 'Cowboys' doesn't do the trick, not with its '50s sci-fi dub vibe and the Yma Sumac stylings of Beth Gibbons. The upside is that this bold sophomore release is, even at this late date in trip-hop's evolution, still startling, thanks to the mix of Geoff Barrow's soundscapes and Gibbons's haunting wail. --Jeff Bateman
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The Midnight Organ Fight
: :They call themselves Frightened Rabbit, but there's nothing shy or timid about this Glasgow trio. On The Midnight Organ Fight, singer/guitarist Scott Hutchison says what he thinks--what he feels--and he doesn't hold anything back. That doesn't make the follow-up to 2006's Sings the Greys a difficult or painful listen. It's cathartic. In 'The Modern Leper,' Hutchison laments that 'a cripple walks among all you tired human beings,' while in 'Good Arms vs Bad Arms,' he admits that 'I might not want you back, but I want to kill him.' For all the unvarnished ...
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The Best of OMD
:Album Description:Out of print in the U.S. UK reissue of this 1988 compilation from the Liverpudlian Synthpopsters featuring two tracks not available on the original U.S. pressing: 'Telegraph' and 'Genetic Engineering'. Released at the height of their success, this collection spanned their career up to 1988, beginning with the 1980 single 'Electricity' and ending with 'Dreaming', a track recorded specifically for this collection (and the final track released from the original duo since they split up shortly after this album was released). 18 tracks including 'Messages', 'If You Leave', 'Tesla Girls', 'Enola Gay' ...
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