Rolling Stone - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Justice are The New York Dolls to Daft Punk's Rolling Stones -- brilliantly thieving acolytes whose giddily primitivist steez reminds you of what made their increasingly-baroque role models great in the first place."
Paste (magazine) - "[T]hey sweated over remixing the songs and mashing things together to create a flow and maintaining a consistent energy that would keep audiences engaged and, most of all, dancing through it all."
Rovi
収録内容
構成数 | 5枚
合計収録時間 | 02:49:12
It's customary for Justice to release a concert album at the end of each of their tours, but with Woman Worldwide, they add a twist: instead of releasing an especially inspired live set, this time Xavier de Rosnay and Gaspard Auge recorded the arrangements they came up with for Woman Worldwide in the studio. While Woman Worldwide might be missing some of the audience energy of a true live album, it keeps the focus on Justice's formidable skill at mashing up sounds. Using a decade's worth of albums and remixes as fodder, de Rosnay and Auge are at the peak of their mixing powers, combining their body of work with architectural precision and coming up with dynamic new forms along the way. As they reinvent "Safe and Sound" and "D.A.N.C.E." into an impressive opening salvo, they balance Woman's streamlined approach with the crowd-pleasing energy of Cross. Indeed, Justice's debut album provides the glue that holds together several of Woman Worldwide's standouts, whether it's the duel of "Heavy Metal x DVNO" or the complex layers of "Waters of Nazareth x We Are Your Friends x Phantom 2," which also throws in the duo's remix of Simian's "Never Be Alone" for good measure. As head-spinning as the mixes can get -- "Pleasure x Newjack x Civilization" spans nine years of the duo's career within minutes -- Justice's meticulous craft never detracts from the excitement of these new juxtapositions of familiar sounds. A celebration of the duo's music, Woman Worldwide rewards fans who want to delve into its musical connections as well as those who want to get lost in its momentum. ~ Heather Phares