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Chez toi

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Download links and information about Chez toi by Electronicat. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Bop genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 50:15 minutes.

Artist: Electronicat
Release date: 2007
Genre: Electronica, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Bop
Tracks: 11
Duration: 50:15
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Du vent 3:47
2. Chez toi 3:38
3. Seveneves 3:55
4. Je pleure j'ai peur 5:24
5. Nu Day 3:31
6. Pancake Lady 3:32
7. The Delphins 1:33
8. Angers 6:59
9. Lost Gigabyte 7:04
10. In Limbo 2:55
11. She's a Queen 7:57

Details

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Electronicat's 2007 album finds Fred Bigot (aka the titular artist) tackling aggressive, unworldly electronic/guitar pop once again in a deft balance between the engagingly acceptable and the completely gone. Saying that Electronicat has been doing a fine tribute to the likes of Fad Gadget for years is an oversimplification but captures the essence of what makes his music work — there's something engagingly brutal and brittle about tracks like "Du Vent" and "Angers," to name two excellent high points, which avoid both overclean synth exercises and generic rock band instrumentation in a one-man band mode. Often something straightforward enough, like the opening guitar figure of "Pancake Lady" or the clipped beats of "Seveneyes," one of a few tracks with a vocal cameo (in this case Masumi Kobayashi), will get a massively higher volume bass-synth crunch stomping over it. But there's also a sense of queasy psychedelia at play, one that often appears in everything but the guitars themselves: vocals echo into the middle distance; the beats often crunch with shuddering impact somewhere on a continuum between the Silver Apples and Meat Beat Manifesto. "She's a Queen," a slightly older track reappearing as the album closer, rocks a schaffel beat with enjoyable élan, while the exuberant "Lost Gigabyte," with lead vocals from Miss LeBomb, is a perfect combination of retro new wave via the Go-Go's, computer chop-ups, and a full-on acid rock-meets-goth guitar solo. A couple of tracks are just there, but otherwise this is a sharp effort from an equally sharp performer.