Product Details
Cobra and Phases Play Volt. .

Cobra and Phases Play Volt. .
Stereolab

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15 new or used available from CDN$ 7.85

Average customer review:
(85 )

Track Listing

  1. Fuses
  2. People Do It All The Time
  3. The Free Design
  4. Blips Drips And Strips
  5. Italian Shoes Continuum
  6. Infinity Girl
  7. The Spiracles
  8. Op Hop Detonation
  9. Puncture In The Radax Permutation
  10. Velvet Water
  11. Blue Milk
  12. Caleidoscopic Gaze
  13. Strobo Acceleration
  14. The Emergency Kisses
  15. Come And Play In The Milky Night

Product Details

  • Released on: 1999-09-21
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
On this bemusingly titled album, Stereolab toss around small chunks of music as catchy and irresistable as anything they've ever recorded. The warm Moog synth that leads off "Infinity Girl" or the horns that burst out of Laetitia Sadier's dry, layered voice in "The Free Design" will significantly boost your serotonin levels. The deconstructions these sonic scraps undergo and the analog keyboard textures around them are radically broad-minded, unveiling a separate and equally engaging architecture all their own. The ear follows one, then the other, first harmonically together, then suddenly cacophonous, all wrapped up in that familiar, '60s-a-go-go ambience. The scrupulous sensibilities of coproducers John McEntire and Jim O'Rourke are all over this record, incorporating the Chicago post-rock electronic sound and left-field musical influences at the heart of their work. Yet just when the song is sure to fall apart, Stereolab rediscovers the melody at the core. Take "Puncture in the Radax Permutation": a descending string melody mingles with a plunking xylophone-like pattern, the blend getting more and more abrasive. Suddenly the strings rise up with the drum track and a dreamy little tune reveals itself. It's not a record that's easy to get one's head around. Repeated listens, however, expose the diamonds in the rough, though the rough itself proves just as valuable. --Matthew Cooke