September 26, 2009

AZLTRON 500th Post Spectacular! Part 2!

It’s been a long time since the beginning of this blog, which is now well into it’s third year. I just realized not too long ago that the 500th post was coming up fast, and wouldn’t you know it, here it is. In a celebratory fashion I thought I would write about ten of the albums that I’ve listened to over the years that have changed the way I listen to music. I have three criteria for this list: These albums must be albums that came out during my lifetime (that means no collections or retrospectives), the albums must be albums that I discovered myself through word of mouth or research and the albums must be albums that I listened to almost religiously. Here is the second half of the list in chronological order:

6. The Faint – Wet From Birth (2004)

I had already heard of and loved The Faint from their previous releases Blank Wave Arcade and Danse Macabre for their ingenious integration of hard hitting electro beats with indie rock and punk flourishes. But Wet From Birth is something special, even if the band feels that some parts of it are a bit overcooked.

I can still remember my first listen of the album. I had travelled to the city of Rochester in the fall with some newfound college friends and somewhere along the tour we ended up at a record store. I picked up The Faint’s Wet From Birth and The Notwist’s Neon Golden. Both albums were excellent, but from the opening of the first track on the new album, “Desperate Guys”, the glorious strings stabbed in adding an aura of class and sophistication to a track that is basically about hooking up at a party. The irony is beautiful. Next is the most aggressive use of ambient electronics I have ever heard, “How Could I Forget”, followed by one of the album centerpieces “I Disappear” whose distorted bassline, swirling keys and guitar funk make it one of my favorite tracks of all time. I don’t think I’ve gone more than a few weeks without listening to this song. Since 2004.

The next track, “Southern Belles in London Sing” is the closest thing The Faint will ever release to a straight up love ballad. From the muted trumpet intro to the classy violin I don’t think there could ever be a more beautifully macabre dance track. Which is ironic because the very next track, “Erection”, deals with probably the raunchiest subject matter The Faint have to offer, although they still do it with some class. The Faint rounds out the album with all strong tracks, the fuzzed out electro jam “Paranoiattack” that they played on Jimmy Kimmel, The reggae influenced “Phone Call”, the relentless blood pumping “Dropkick the Punks”, “Symptom Finger”, which is perfect for the current health care controversy, and arguably the most epic song The Faint have ever released; “Birth”. I remember I loved (and still love) everything about this album, from the bright colors on the album cover to the innovations in sound (A fork in the speaker? Brilliant!).

7. The Walkmen – Bows and Arrows (2004)

I first heard The Walkmen watching David Letterman while waiting for my laundry to dry. They played “The Rat” from Bows and Arrows. They played with such intensity and originality that I had to check them out. Soon after I had their album. I admit that I didn’t understand it at first. There was a lot of distorted droning and simple pop structures. It took a lot of listening right into the Christmas season before I had an epiphany. All of the songs on this disc are like taking something that has been shattered, destoyed, obliterated, then sewing it back together and making something timeless and beautiful out of it. Like taking Bing Crosby and putting him in the radiator with the woman with distended cheeks from Eraserhead so that they could sing about how their childhoods really were.

The song “The Rat” is obviously the big draw on the album because of it’s dramatic guitar work and drumming, and listening to it now it’s extremely apparent why it hooked me so much. Hamilton Leithauser wails about nerves and favors and going out alone and all those other dramatic things and the result is something that is truly exhilarating. The alternationg between these brazen rock numbers and delicate piano plunking ballads makes “Bows & Arrows” truly something special.

8. LCD Soundsystem – LCD Soundsystem (2005)

I became aware of LCD Soundsystem after learning about the band The Rapture and the DFA production team of James Murphey and Tim Goldsworthy which had produced their single “House of Jealous Lovers” and their debut LP “Echoes”. That album was a lesson in the diversity of a sound that became to be called “Dance Punk”. A genre that the DFA label (Owned By Murphey and Goldsworthy) continues to specialize in.

LCD Soundsystem is the pet project of “Dance Punk” producer James Murphey. From the opening blast of “Daft Punk is playing at My House” off of LCD Soundsystem’s self titled debut LP it’s clear that the album is a lesson in raw repetition. The album also showed me that an album could be very simple at times and still be good and not annoying, as long as there was a heaping helping of wit involved in the songwriting process. It is because of this that James Murphey also proved to be a fascinating front man. At the time of the release of the debut LP Murphey was in his late 20′s, slightly overweight and not the best singer in the world by far, but he made it work. The secret ingredient to his contagious dance-punk stew is his completely self aware lyrics. For example in his song “Movement” he sings that “A fat guy, in a T-shirt, is doing all the singing!” He is clearly talking about himself, and that kind of humorous observation in dance music didn’t exist prior to his debut album. You take that and combine it with all kinds of old school recording studio wizardry and you’ve got a timeless treat. If you doubt it, might I suggest the subwoofer workout “Disco Infiltrator”.

9. Secret Machines – Ten Silver Drops (2006)

I first heard of The Secret Machines my freshman year of college when they played a show literally right next to my campus. Unfortunately I was ignorant to their greatness and missed the show. Which to compound insult to injury was also a free show. I made my way over to my school store however and picked up a copy of their debut album “Now Here is Nowhere” which I proceeded to put in heavy rotation in my dorm room. I particularly liked the tracks “Now Here is Nowhere”, “Lights On” and “The Road Leads Where it’s Led” (In part thanks to it’s stunning video). Although I felt at times that the album had become a little overblown, like on “First Wave Intact” and “Now Here is Nowhere” due to their repetitive nature and long running time.

However on their second album “Ten Silver Drops” the Secret Machines had learned how to let a song unfurl itself with a long running time but also kept it compelling. I had also learned that when they come to town, I should get tickets (I did manage to see them in Syracuse). Some of the tracks on “Ten Silver Drops” that are really long but don’t seem it due to excellent songwriting were “Alone Jealous and Stoned”, “I Hate Pretending”, “I Want to know if it’s still possible”, “Faded Lines” and the album’s lead single “Lightening Blue Eyes”. All of these songs envelop you in psychedelic reverb and thump along in perfect rhythm that the lyrics wrap around like a sushi roll. Add into that the cool concepts of some of the songs, like the aforementioned “Alone, Jealous and Stoned” which is about waiting for a girl to call who never does. Or the song “I Hate Pretending” which is about robbing a bank with a girl with bright orange hair. The extra space in each song lets your imagination create the scene for all of these songs. Plus they are pretty rockin’. The Secret Machines recently lost their original Guitarist and he went on to found The School of Seven Bells, so The Secret Machines have had a bit of an identity crisis on their most recent album with it being so hard and dissonant, but I think they’ll continue on and do great work.

10. Thieves Like Us – Play Music (2008)
I first heard of Thieves Like Us through the excellent blog Big Stereo. I saw their video for “Drugs in My Body” and saw that they described the group as influenced by both Daft Punk and New Order. Which immediately grabbed my attention. The track “Drugs in my body” was so simple, so repetitive, but there was something about it that was so fresh. Whether it was the almost spoken word vocals or the clever samples that the band collected. Either way I had to hear more. I began searching the internet for any remix or b-side that had been done by Thieves Like Us. I found a few things, but I had to wait for what felt like a year before they released their “Your Heart Feels” EP which was followed shortly after by their full length album “Play Music”.
“Play Music” was not purely a party album. Granted there were lots of great dance songs, but each track had a different emotion embedded in it. Some of the songs are angry, some are sad, some are menacing but all of them are compelling. Thieves Like Us took inspiration from artists such as Dr. Dre, David Bowie, and obviously New Order (Their name comes from a New Orde song) to create music with a minimalist thump and intellectual bite. The vintage synthesizers echo and modulate subtly all over the place as Andy articulates his delicate poetry in a way that is far less embarassing than some of those old lyrics that Bernard Sumner of New Order came up with way back when. One very bright spot on the album in contrast with all the moody retro electronica is the quasi-rap “Miss You” which makes reference to David Bowie and his ex wife Angela over a funky bass and those ever addictive moody synths. The whole construction of their songs is so authentic. Unlike bands that take New Order and Daft Punk influences and twist them into some kind of bizarre hyrid, Thieves Like Us brings in the influence straight up, and somehow in that they’ve created something totally fresh. Their music is very electronic, but it feels very organic. Their streak of compelling releases is continuing as they released a new EP over teh summer called “Really Like to See You Again” which featured tracks with the Blue Monday (New Order song) influence on high. Thieves Like Us are surely in store for great things in the future if they stay on their current trajectory.

June 12, 2009

Theives Like Us Remix Miss Kittin & The Hacker!

Filed under: miss kitten,the hacker,thieves like us — AZLTRON @ 10:14 am

It is quite good. Enjoy below.

June 5, 2009

Thieves Like Us would "Really Like to See You Again"! New EP!

Filed under: EP,play music,really like to see you again,thieves like us — AZLTRON @ 7:34 pm

Thieves Like Us, the American/Swedish electro rock group, are set to release a new EP called the Really Like to See You Again EP next Tuesday, which features three new tracks and Desire from their debut Play Music fleshed out with more rhythmic punch. Opener Really Like to See You Again and closer To Joy sound remarkably similar, with the former sounding like the New Order Blue Monday remix of the latter. Also, it looks as if TLU(Thieves Like Us) have set out to promote American airway travel with their hot new track “American Skies”. If only the executives of American Airlines would take heed of this song and promote air travel with a new series of commercials of air hostesses dancing in silver shoulder padded uniforms with big hair… To quote another famous line of commercials, “Hey, it could happen.” Either way, if you’ve got some surplus cash in this downed economy, shell out some coin for “Really Like to See You Again” and enjoy some of the finest electronic music of recent times.

But don’t take my word for it:

March 24, 2009

New Video! Thieves Like Us’ "Your Heart Feels"!

Filed under: 80's,Daft Punk,Joy Division,thieves like us,video,your heart feels — AZLTRON @ 7:43 am
Thieves Like Us has released a new video for their epic electro song “Your Heart Feels”, that uses footage from an old film depicting many youths with drugs and drama affecting their brains all set to a neon nightlife background. Pretty neat.

January 4, 2009

Exclusive! 10 Questions with Thieves Like Us!

10 Questions with Thieves Like Us (#2 Best album of 2008!)
By: Aaron Z. Lee

Thieves Like Us is an electro band that’s two thirds Swedish, and one third American that creates indie electro pop that’s akin to a sonic mix of New Order and Daft Punk. I corresponded with their singer, Andy.

1. You’ve said that Play Music is your autobiography. What kind of events and experiences do you draw from to write a song?

Most of the songs on the album were about breaking up. The three of us were living in Berlin. I had gone there expecting a crowded German metropol… I hadn’t even done my research that the town had been bombed. And I thought everything would look like Christiane F. But. The town was empty. People were only listening to techno. No pretty girls would talk to me. The music scene sucked. But, there was this promise, that you could make something in Berlin. AS, it wasn’t a “finished city” like NYC or Paris. The three of us were all down, I suppose. Bjorn and I hated everyone and everything. I was binge drinking. Every day. Starting at noon. All through the night. Luckily Pontus stepped in. He wasn’t on this mad romp in substance abuse like Bjorn and I were. I had met a sexy Austrian girl. she sang in Sex In Dallas. Which I thought were shit. But she was good in bed. And seemed to love me. I was acting stupid. And I freaked out one night cos of the booze. She just split up with me. And then, I think most of the songs were about losing. We are a band of losers. I think Miss You is the only up song on the album. That one is about being a waitress in a nightclub and also about Angela and David Bowie (I had a dream about them). I don’t want to keep writing about losing, though.

2. The sonic vocabulary you guys employ on Play Music is like a rediscovered language of electronica, beyond New Order, where do you guys look for inspiration?

Bjorn and I were sampling our favorite records. And I had two really expensive old delay pedals. I don’t know. At that time. We wanted to sound like some late seventies kraut record. I think now… hmmm. We are listening to a lot of seventies stuff. I think Hate it Or Love it by 50 cent is a great example of a song which combines this sixties soul feeling with some modern keyboards. I also think V-2 Schneider and Sound and Vision on the Low record by David Bowie are a really cool fusion of 60s soul and “THE FUTURE”. So, I guess we want to combine the past with the far future.

3. How is it to work with bandmates who are from different countries? What unique influences do each of you bring to the music?

Bjorn and Pontus are more pop or up than me. If it weren’t for them, I think every song would sound like Broken Heart by Spiritualized. Bjorn is always researching some older obscure music, to look at. Pontus. He. I think he had listened to alot of R and B and soul. He started drumming at 8.

Bjorn and I aren’t real musicians. Or we were just hobbyists. We were both big fans of the edge. He saw u2 in 1992 in Malmo and I saw them in 1992 in Denver.

4. While you were in Germany DJing you confused clubbers by mixing into some hip hop and rap into the mix. Can you describe their reactions?

But back then. In 2003…. They hated it. I was working in a hip hop club in nyc as a bus boy. I would take a plane on the weekends sometime to Berlin and play the same songs. This was 2003 before everything was up on the web. So a song would come out in the states and not get released in Europe until six months later. It was like having secret weapons. But a lot of people hated hip hop and r and b. They are so serious. Hmmm. I remember somebody in Berlin getting really angry. Grabbing me by the head and telling me not to play Nigger Music. Fuck. I used to say we were trying to wipe out fascism by playing all those snooop songs.


5. When you were recording the album in Berlin, London, New York City and Stockholm was it all together as a group or did you record parts and send them to each other via e-mail?

It was mostly as a group. I had very little to do with Desire and Miss You actually. I wrote the singing parts after the backing tracks were done.

6. Do you remember the moment that you as a group decided that you could make music that was better than the stuff you heard in nightclubs night after night?

Hmmm. Well that must have been my first month in Berlin. I saw some really silly guy get up with a cd for a backing track. People loved it. I hated it cos it was so tongue and cheek. I was listening to Blonde Redhead a lot. And I think I had this idea for a kind of slightly galmerous but tragic disco band. THat would be us. Hopefully we will morph into the bee gees and make some momey soon.

7. Your songs are so minimalist yet so funky, one of the best examples is the infectious jam “Miss You” that’s one part 80’s rap and one part new wave, how do you make songs so danceable with so few parts?

We work on an Akai MPC. Which has limits. Which is good. It’s like Dre’s “STILL DRE”. It’s pretty minimal. Or xxplosiv. I think these are good examples of how to compose.

8. I love the spoken word on “Program of the Second Part”, it’s like reading poetry to the Blade Runner soundtrack. Where did the idea of spoken word in this interlude come from?

We had the instrumental first. And I think I was too proud, somehow. I wanted lyrics for everything, so I wrote a poem for it. I always want our lyrics to be printed. Lyrics are important. Language is important. Poetry is important. That song is maybe about watching time fade away.

9. The Video for “Program of the first Part” works so well with the footage from the Tron movie, did you guys write the song with that in mind, or did it all just fall in place?

Hmmm. It was probably in the back our heads when we made the tune. So, a gift from God maybe.

10. What’s in store for Thieves Like Us in 2009?

We are making a second record, which we want to have out before the end of the year. And hopefully we will tour a lot. If we can get some extra finances, I’d like to see us pimp out our stage show with some lights and special effects.

December 26, 2008

AZLTRON New Year’s/Birthday Dance Mix!

December has to have the highest concentration of holidays in the fewest number of days. I mean… Hanuka, Christmas, Kwanza, New Year’s Eve, Boxing Day, and of course my birthday, which happens to coincide with New Year’s eve. That’s a lot of holidays! So I’m posting this ahead of time since I will probably be consumed with festivities on December 31st as I’m sure many of you will as well. So here is my birthday/new year’s gift to you, a mix of some of the best remixes I’ve heard this year. Bon nouvelle année et joyeux anniversaire à moi!

Lykke Li – Breaking It Up (Punks Jump Up)

Cut Copy – Faraway (Hundreds and Thousands Remix)

Love Motel – Je Pleure (Cryptonites Remix)

Santogold – L.E.S. Artistes (Left/Right Remix)

DatA – Rapture (Edwin Van Cleef Remix)

The Faint – The Geeks Were Right (DIOYY Remix)

Fast Computers – Gejius – So Sad (Gravity/Love Remix).mp3

Peter Bjorn & John – The Chills (Thieves Like Us Remix)

Cicada – Metropolis [The Twelves' B-LIVE Rio Mix]

Wallpaper – EvrytmWeDoIt(RACMauryRemix)


Cobradukes – airtight aeroplane remix

Heads We Dance The Human Touch (Sidechains Remix)

December 24, 2008

AZLTRON Top 30 Albums of 2008 (10-1)

This year has been a surprising one for music. After last year I thought to myself, “How could this year possibly be better than last year for music?” And you know what? Album after album I was shocked, no musical lull in sight. Nothing but quality as far as the eye could see. Well, quality in terms of the albums I was looking for. In particular, bands that released somewhat unimpressive sophomore albums came back this year with some intense and riveting releases. Bloc Party, The Stills, The Killers, and Longwave all regrouped and recalibrated to create releases that will please initial fans as well as fans of their new directions.

Without further ado I bring you the AZLTRON Top 10 Albums of 2008.

10. The Notwist – The Devil, You & Me

The Notwist released their first album since their 2002 stylistic breakthrough Neon Golden this year. This album features a more linear song structure, less blips and clicks, and it is all the better for it. The best songs are built off of acoustic guitar chords and Marc Acher’s saccharine voice. Added into the mix occasionally are emotionally charged tremolo strings and minor key flourishes. A listen to the album from beginning to end runs a full emotional gamut from uncertainty, to sadness, to elation. The Notwist have done it again.

The Notwist – Gloomy Planets



The Notwist Myspace

9. M83 – Saturdays = Youth

M83 came back this year in a big way. Anthony Gonzalez continues to plug away after the departure of Nicolas Fromageau and the towering sound of M83 has never been more accessible. Emotionally charged piano instrumentals to full on 80′s pop songs surge and percolate throughout the entire album. If there is a director out there trying to ellicit intense emotion from viewers using only music, there’s not an album out there that can reduce a listener to tears and then convert those tears to joy by the end of the album.

M83 Myspace

8. Boo Hoo – Hypermarché

Boohoo has crafted an album that combines two of my favorite genres, delicate indie pop as well as touching electro pop. Normally you’d think that bleeps and blips next to glockenspiel and acoustic guitar and heavenly melodies wouldn’t normally work. Normally, you’d be right. Boohoo combines them together in such a way where it makes sense somehow that solo acoustic guitar song should come right after an electro twee jam. It’s a further testament to the album that the topics of the songs revolve around television shows, tabloid magazines, and of course grocery stores. Fans of Peter Bjorn & John and Jens Lekman will find a lot to love here.

Boo Hoo – Gokutensoku

Boo Hoo Myspace

7. The Killers – Day & Age

The Killers hung up their Vegas suits and synths and grew moustaches. Their music morphed into christian country tinged post punk imitations of Bruce Springsteen in an attempt to prove that they weren’t a one trick pony at the new wave revival ranch. They accomplished this mission with their sophomore release Sam’s Town and even unleashed an epic single to rival anything they’ve done in When You Were Young. But where were the sleek synths and dance rhythms that drew so many people into their music in 2004? They were present, but with about a pound of sawdust draped over them. On Day & Age, they haven’t abandoned their new found dusty direction, but they’ve enhanced it with everything that they know they do well with a pinch of a spicy something new. Now, not only huge guitars, smooth synths, and dancebeats mark the album but saxophone and steel drums make an appearance as well. The Killers have reabsorbed their best influences and show of some new influences to make an album that is undoubtedly all killer and no filler.

The Killers Myspace

6. Mason Proper – Olly Olly Oxen Free

Mason Proper had a busy year this year; releasing not only their Shorthand EP, Jonathan Visger’s North South EP, but also a brand new full length entitled Olly Olly Oxen Free. The first song The Fog is a great rallying point for the rest of the album because it seems as if all the musical elements in this release are floating around in the atmosphere as a phosphorescent gas that they’ve somehow managed to capture and contain in a magical cauldron of musical goodness. Every element in their songs seems buoyant somehow, guitar riffs ring in the air and the vocals increase the precarious altitude of each song like helium in an untied balloon. Like riding in a glass elevator, Olly Olly Oxen Free is meticulous, utilitarian and spine tingling. Look down all you like.



Mason Proper – Point A to Point B

Mason Proper Myspace

5. David Byrne & Brian Eno – Everything That Happens Will Happen Today

Where else are you going to find two artists who are not only veterans of popular music but legends in thier own right, who continue to redefine the boundaries of what their music entails? Nowhere. David Byrne and Brian Eno have crafted a masterpiece here. Christening this new work as electric gospel. The term fits perfectly, the work here is largely uplifting major chords and David Byrne somehow manages to create an uplifting message out of lyrics like “I heard the sound of someone laughing, I saw my neighbor’s car explode”. Rife with bass percolation, soothing harmonies, and clever lyrics, you’ll be hard pressed to find an album this diverse that can please so many people.

Everything that Happens Will Happen Today Official Site

4. Walter Meego – Voyager

Walter Meego’s Voyager is a cornucopia of electronic pop goodness. The first track Forever acts as the guy who starts the wave at a big stadium concert. It makes a big feel good splash that carries through till the end of the album. Justin Sconza’s helium tinged vocals accent perfectly the heavily phased bass processed synths. This album feels good to listen to. This isn’t just a feel good party starter, undoubtedly if you’re looking to get a party started you won’t find a better primer than Walter meego but, just as much attention is paid to the atmosphere and melodies as it is to beats. I’ll leave you with this: listen to Keyhole, it will blow your mind.

Walter Meego – Keyhole

Walter Meego Myspace

3. Longwave – Secrets Are Sinister

Longwave came back in a big way this year. Longwave was previously dropped from RCA after the departure of two of their band members. Even when they were unsigned and the future of the band was uncertain, Steve Schiltz and company strove to continue recording and playing. The Indie Label Original Signal

intelligently picked up Longwave and put out their latest album Secrets are Sinister which is such an incredible return to form you have to hear it to believe it. All the shoegaze elements from The Strangest Things are not only present, they are turned up to eleven. The guitars soar, the bass grinds with foundation shaking ferocity and Schiltz’s uplifting lyrics in the face of certain doom and gloom makes this one of the best releases of 2008.

Longwave – Satellites

Longwave Myspace

2. Thieves Like Us – Play Music

Few artists these days can transport you to other worlds through just a few notes. Thieves Like Us does just that. We as the listeners are transported, after just a few finely produced arpeggio notes, into a world of not only late night debauchery and good times but also a land of neon grids and nobility. There is a majesty to the way that the electronic elements combine here. The synths just don’t play over the beats. They crash over them like waves on a rocky shore. The songs play out like an epic play. At times the beats kick in with reckless abandon, but the song after will masterfully describe the cost of living that way. The persistent bass throbs like a hangover after a heavy night of drinking or it pounds in your mind like a guilty conscience. It’s the songs that come after the more heady dramatic ones that stand out though, the songs of reconciliation, of coming to terms with what has transpired and making the best of it. These songs make Play Music an intensely emotional album and a collection of songs that I would be proud to have score the soundtrack of my life.

Theives Like Us – Miss You

Thieves Like Us Myspace

1. The Faint – Fasciinatiion

It’s been four long years since The Faint released a new full length album. But, luckily as soon as the bass on Get Seduced kicks in, you know the Faint are back and we are in for a treat. Todd Fink’s astute observational lyricism is this time directed at all kinds of sociological structures. From tabloids to religion, to the origin of the universe, to arguments with others and even arguments within yourself. Whenever I describe The Faint to people who have no idea what electronic/indie/punk is, I always say that their songs are very direct, very confrontational but also extremely intelligent, and Fasciinatiion has undoubtedly solidified that notion inside my skull. The Faint pick up right where they left off with Wet From Birth and without warning surge into uncharted territory like the rap-esque Fulcrum And Lever, to the razor sharp ballad Fish in a Womb. Every note of Fasciinatiion has been looked over, every effect finely tuned after endless tweaking. The album is wrapped in a warm blanket of sonic experimentation that will make it a gem for decades to come.

The Faint – Machine in the Ghost

The Faint Myspace

For More Top Albums of 2008 Click Below



October 23, 2008

Thieves Like Us’ "Play Music" Pulsates with Elation, Energy and Determination

Filed under: Daft Punk,Electro,Joy Division,New Order,Post Punk,thieves like us — AZLTRON @ 8:00 am

It’s often said that electronic music lacks the warmth and feeling of more organic instruments, which is why I’m so glad there are so many musicians setting their sites on completely destroying the validity of that notion. One such band that has injected their electronic compositions with an immense amount of emotion and passion are Thieves Like Us.

Thieves Like Us is an electronic post-punk band that has a uniquely international origin. Two thirds of the band, named Pontus and Bjorn, are Swedish and one third of the band, named Andy, is American by way of New York City. The trio first met in Berlin nightclubs and shared the same feeling that they could create more engaging and imaginative music than what they heard in their nightly debauchery. So together they formed Thieves Like Us, which is in itself is a shout out to the original post-punk electro pioneers, New Order, who released a song of the same name in 1984. This song was featured in an emotionally poignant scene in the popular Molly Ringwald film “Pretty In Pink”.

Thieves Like Us have stated that thier debut album Play Music, which was recorded in Berlin, Stockholm, New York City, and London, is “Not an album of easy going club tracks, these songs encompass the emotional highs and lows experienced in day to day life.” Thieves like us emphasize that they “exist as people outside of the clubs” and that they “are sometimes shy, lonely, nervous, insecure and broke” and that “Sometimes we feel good and sometimes we are drunk and crazy”, and their debut Play Music is their autobiography.

Just like the song that they get their name from, Thieves like us do employ an intensely emotional sound.” Play Music” does embody the highs and lows of life. The opening track “Program of the First Part” ripples with energy and determination. The track starts modestly with just a few spare claps before the driving bass and swirling delayed keyboards surge into place. Their use of minimalist elements creates a strikingly stark and aggressive track. Arpeggios and synths crash over intimate revelations like “You need me, admit it” before the track falls apart in a spectacle of synth and percussion. Thieves Like Us also released a music video for this track that is notable because of it’s use of footage from the seminal 1982 Disney Film Tron. The song races along to Tron’s signature light cycle races and adds much pathos to scenes from the movies’ climactic Identity Disk Battles.

Thieves Like Us inhabit a space in electro/punk that is at once calm and dramatic, like the hero of a Greek tragedy heading to war well aware of the probable outcome. While at the same time their sound is fused at the hip to intensely danceable bass grooves and soothing waves of synthesizer, making a trip to the dance floor seem like an epic journey. There are many examples of this unique sonic combination. One exciting example is the driving number “Lady” where the band adds significant pathos through atmospheric synths and a dramatic drum machine. Following that track is a remarkable spoken word track, called “Program of the Second Part”, that features sound sculpting similar to the Blade Runner soundtrack written by the composer Vangelis. Another standout song that fuses serious subject matter with serious beats is “Your Heart Feels”. This song creates an atmosphere as big as a stadium and hooks to match, halfway through the song you’re sure to be singing along.

The biggest highlights of the album are the songs that retain the serious lyrics, but where the sound lightens up significantly. Like the lead single “Drugs in My Body” that bounds along with a giant beat and a repetitive hook reminiscent of Daft Punk. Perhaps the best song on the album is the electro pseudo rap of “Miss You”, that features a theme of reconciliation in a relationship and grooves along on disco bass that would make legendary Italian electro producer Giorgio Moroder bob his head.

Thieves Like Us has released an album of sounds that makes you think as much as it makes you move. The glorious vintage synths wash over each song, intricately wrapping each track in a shimmering wall of elation, love and determination. Thieves Like Us has the most authentic early 80′s synth sound I’ve heard from a modern band and while they might not be the best band from 1981, they certainly are a contender for 2008. Their album drops November 7 on the Kitsune-Maison Label.

Thieves Like Us – Miss You

Thieves Like Us -Fass

Thieves Like Us Myspace


September 2, 2008

Love Motel

Love Motel is an electro/rock/glam group from Geneva, Switzerland. As you might figure, a band from a country that has four national languages (French, German, Italian, Romansh) has a lot of inspiration to draw from. On the Italian front, the band cite Giogio Moroder as an influence and you can definitely hear the blip arpeggios and synth washes that are informed by Mr. Moroder. The band utilizes stark German minimalism, Delicious french pop and… I’m not sure what they import from the Romansh language, that could be the wild card. Their new album “Mind The Void” is chalk full of rocking electro and chugging ambient jams.

Love Motel – Dial God (USA)


Love Motel – Cosmic Love (Fisk Remix)


Love Motel – Nothing Hurts (Shane Fontane Remix)

Love Motel – Mind the void (Baxter Beez edit)

Love Motel Myspace

August 21, 2008

Thieves Like Us: Your Heart Feels

Thieves Like Us have released a new EP entitled “Your Heart Feels” and it’s filled with the minimalist electro grooves that I’ve come to love them for. Chalk full of of almost spoken word lyrics reminiscent of Factory Records’ vocal style, in particularly that of Bernard Sumner in the early days of New Order, except the lyrics and delivery of Thieves Like Us’ vocals are never tacky or embarassing with simple predictable rhymes. The new EP is cool and breezy, like an autumn day, I have a feeling that their new album, set for release in october, will be the soundtrack of fall.

Thieves Like Us – Your Heart Feels

Thieves Like Us – Für Judith

Thieves Like Us Myspace

Buy Your Heart Feels EP

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