Album Review: Light Sound Dance - The Bang Gang Deejays

BlackPlastic heart Modular and has meant to give some love to Light Sound Dance, mixed by their resident party crew Bang Gang, for pure time. Music may change but good taste remains constant.

We'll be brief: Light Sound Dance (see what they did there? No? Nevermind...) contains almost every track that has filled a dancefloor in the past 18 months.

The beauty is in having them all in one place and as such you can find SebAstian's destruction of The Rapture's 'Get Myself Into It' doing the bad thing all over Punks Jump Up's 'Beep Beep', the Nite Version of Soulwax's 'KracK', Mehdi's ubiquitous 'Signatune' and two remixed Klaxons tracks.

But what this mix is two things:

1. The less obvious choices. Plan B's 'More Than Enough' fits in very nicely, thank you, and it is fantastic to hear Modular label mates The Avalanches again in any form. Hear we get them twice, once with their bells, whistles and kitchen sink remix of Wolfmother's 'Woman' and once on the forever gorgeous and pulse quickening 'Live At The Dominoes'.

2. The somewhat rustic, cut and paste, come and have a go if you think you're hard enough approach. This mix is one of those that genuinely sounds like a ball was had whilst it was made. Light Sound Dance sounds like a good friend playing all your favourite records at once. It's not as defining an Album as As Heard On Radio Soulwax Part 2 but, with 70 songs across two CDs, it just might be the closest anyone has come to that feeling since.

See you on the dancefloor.

BP x

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Album Review: Beat Pyramid - These New Puritans

Hotly tipped for 2008 yet having spent a longtime bubbling under the surfaces of the Nu-Rave current, These New Puritans finally get around to releasing their debut album.

Well known for their soundtracking of fashion shows, These New Puritans usher in Beat Pyramid with a dose of trademark pretension in the form of a two part track, 'I Will Say This Twice', which bookends the album. Indeed looking through the tracklisting and artwork quickly reveals a band that may be trying just a little too had to carve out an image.

Still, never judge a book: Beat Pyramid is a good effort. Early tracks 'Numerology' and 'Colours' feature the trademark angular guitars but the switches and cuts into a more melodic bridge in each track lifts these efforts into something more worthwhile.

More exciting are the floaty 'En Papier' and the just re-released but almost-as-old-as-old-rave 'Elvis'. The former manages to add to IDM clicks and distortion and a dash of post-rock melancholy to the proceedings whilst the latter is simply a clattering cacophony or a record, the juxtaposition of the incessant spoken vocal component to the more reflective breakdown creates a real highlight. It is always the more reflective moments that get closest to greatness - see 'Mkk3' for example.

What this demonstrates is either a band that are trying too hard, unable to concentrate on creating a consistently great record due to all the time spent worrying over details, or simply an average band that got lucky in a couple of places. BlackPlastic hopes this is a case of the former but there is still much to play for.

BP x

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Album Review: Made In The Dark - Hot Chip


Whilst Hot Chip insist on making albums at the same rate that other bands pay their publicist to make MySpace posts (once every 16 months-ish) it is always a joy to get a peak at the next thing to come out of their cannon. Both 'Shake a Fist' and 'Ready For The Floor' have been doing the rounds for pure time now - in fact if you put a pin in a calendar at the exact mid-point between sophomore release, The Warning, and Made In The Dark you probably have the date when BlackPlastic first got jiggy to the bad-ass synths of 'Shake a Fist'. BlackPlastic knows, you're jealous and you want to be our friends. Add eleven more cuts and you have an album.

Made In The Dark features several tracks that the band have recorded live, all in one take, as if they needed to prove their slight-OCD tendencies, and as such things sound a little rawer. Opener 'Out At The Pictures' has been made to open festival sets. It sounds like that wonky pub-rock band you Dad tried (failed) to make on your Casio keyboard when you were seven and it makes BlackPlastic want to stomp its feet and down pints of beer.

The synths on 'Shake a Fist' still scare the crap out of people round BlackPlastic's way yet it all manages to make a little more sense within the flow of the album. 'Ready For The Floor' still sounds like fly girls having good times with cheap keyboards.

Made In The Dark stands out the most from The Warning in that it sees a return to the ballads of Hot Chip's debut, Coming On Strong. Whilst The Warning had slower, more contemplative moments none compared to emotional honesty of 'We're Looking For A Lot Of Love' here nor the frankly slightly scary darkness of 'Crap Kraft Dinner' on their debut. For the most part the slower tracks work fantastically well, breaking up the album and giving a little more depth. Not even BlackPlastic is sure where things are serious or ironic but that is likely to be half the point. Indeed, part of Hot Chip's charm is their refusal to be neither wholly serious nor a novelty band. 'Made In The Dark represents perhaps Hot Chip's finest effort at a ballad since 'Defeated By Technology' backed the 'Playboy' EP.

Both 'Wrestlers' and 'One Pure Thought' stand out as obvious choices for a future single. 'Wrestler' is a camp flirty love song that represents perhaps Hot Chip's most unadulterated pop moment yet. 'One Pure Thought' on the other hand sounds like Duran Duran getting lost inside Pulp's 'Sorted For Es and Whizz' on children's Saturday morning television. Scrazy, but honest fun ladies and gentlemen. The chorus owns everything it touches and as BlackPlastic has previously pointed out, like most good songs it sounds like three songs forced to live together amongst their will. BlackPlastic could listen to this for several days.

So there you have it, another Hot Chip album, another pop masterpiece. Is it as good as The Warning? Possibly. Is it good enough to soundtrack lots of TV programmes? Definitely. Will it improve your life? Of course.

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