Rock/Pop
LPレコード

Bitch Don't Let Me Die

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フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2015年10月29日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルMVD
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 5034752
SKU 782388099516

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Accusing them of bombast is to thoroughly misunderstand the Electric Six and their approach -- these guys use bombast as a medium, much as an artist works in oil paints or marble, and on their 11th studio album, 2015's Bitch, Don't Let Me Die, their epic-scale swagger and towering walls of guitars, keyboards, drums, and attitude show they haven't come close to running out of ways to make use of their favorite form. Dick Valentine's lead vocals ring forth with the operatic intensity that has become his trademark (not many singers in this day and age could get away with opening a song with "Hark! He sees the night!"), and the band's purposefully cheesy mixture of arena-ready hard rock figures and walloping but dance-friendly beats still sounds huge and suitable for a certain sort of dancefloor. While there was a dash of pop in the group's formula early on, Bitch, Don't Let Me Die is less concerned with melodic hooks than with more gaudy thrills, though there certainly are memorable tunes here, such as the mock operatic "Big Red Arthur," the manic square-dance rhythms of "Dime Dime Penny Dime," the slightly deranged funk of "If U R Who U Say U R," and "Two Dollar Two," which is built from riffs rescued from any number of hard rock standards. What it all means is anyone's guess, but you'd have to go back to Urge Overkill to find a band that gamed the form/content formula with as much goofy smarts and legitimate enthusiasm as Electric Six, and while Urge Overkill were a shell of themselves by the time they finished their fifth album, Electric Six sound like they're still firmly in the swing of things after 11 albums in a dozen years, and the production by guitarist Johnny Na$hinal is as big and busy as it needs to be. Electric Six are still throwing the biggest and craziest party in town, and Bitch, Don't Let Me Die is the sound of the spiked punch kicking in hard. ~ Mark Deming

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      Drone Strikes

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    2. 2.
      Two Dollar Two

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    3. 3.
      Kids Are Evil

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    4. 4.
      Roulette!

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    5. 5.
      A Variation Of Elaine

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    6. 6.
      Slow Motion Man

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    7. 7.
      Big Red Arthur

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    8. 8.
      Dime, Dime, Penny, Dime

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    9. 9.
      If U R Who U Say U R

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    10. 10.
      When Cowboys File For Divorce

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    11. 11.
      Take Another Shape

      アーティスト: Electric Six

    12. 12.
      Electric Six

      アーティスト: Electric Six

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Electric Six

商品の紹介

Accusing them of bombast is to thoroughly misunderstand the Electric Six and their approach -- these guys use bombast as a medium, much as an artist works in oil paints or marble, and on their 11th studio album, 2015's Bitch, Don't Let Me Die, their epic-scale swagger and towering walls of guitars, keyboards, drums, and attitude show they haven't come close to running out of ways to make use of their favorite form. Dick Valentine's lead vocals ring forth with the operatic intensity that has become his trademark (not many singers in this day and age could get away with opening a song with "Hark! He sees the night!"), and the band's purposefully cheesy mixture of arena-ready hard rock figures and walloping but dance-friendly beats still sounds huge and suitable for a certain sort of dancefloor. While there was a dash of pop in the group's formula early on, Bitch, Don't Let Me Die is less concerned with melodic hooks than with more gaudy thrills, though there certainly are memorable tunes here, such as the mock operatic "Big Red Arthur," the manic square-dance rhythms of "Dime Dime Penny Dime," the slightly deranged funk of "If U R Who U Say U R," and "Two Dollar Two," which is built from riffs rescued from any number of hard rock standards. What it all means is anyone's guess, but you'd have to go back to Urge Overkill to find a band that gamed the form/content formula with as much goofy smarts and legitimate enthusiasm as Electric Six, and while Urge Overkill were a shell of themselves by the time they finished their fifth album, Electric Six sound like they're still firmly in the swing of things after 11 albums in a dozen years, and the production by guitarist Johnny Na$hinal is as big and busy as it needs to be. Electric Six are still throwing the biggest and craziest party in town, and Bitch, Don't Let Me Die is the sound of the spiked punch kicking in hard. ~ Mark Deming
Rovi

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