We Don't Just Disappear
Download links and information about We Don't Just Disappear by Future Conditional. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Electronica genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 54:15 minutes.
Artist: | Future Conditional |
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Release date: | 2007 |
Genre: | Electronica |
Tracks: | 10 |
Duration: | 54:15 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Bright Lights & Wandering (feat. Dan Matz) | 8:47 |
2. | Broken Robots | 4:56 |
3. | We Don't Just Disappear (feat. Bobby Wratten) | 4:27 |
4. | The Switchboard Girl (feat. Melanie Pain) | 4:53 |
5. | Substance Fear | 6:41 |
6. | Crying's What You Need (feat. Angèle David-Guillou) | 4:54 |
7. | The Volunteer (feat. Bobby Wratten) | 4:17 |
8. | The Last Engineer | 4:29 |
9. | Typos | 4:29 |
10. | Your Love Leaves Me Colder (feat. Bobby Wratten) | 6:22 |
Details
[Edit]As Future Conditional at base consists of two members of Piano Magic, it's not a total surprise that the album cover art calls to mind Artists' Rifles a bit. But We Don't Just Disappear has a slightly different focus than that fantastic album, instead functioning as an equivalent to Stephin Merritt's 6ths efforts, where various guest vocalists come in and take a turn over the musical constructions Glen Johnson and Cedric Pin create. Very unsurprisingly, the elegant, haunted atmosphere of Piano Magic's best efforts definitely has an echo throughout. Rather than simply being gently melancholic synth-pop along the lines of the Postal Service, say, there's something wracked and lost about songs like "Bright Lights and Wandering" and the compressed guitar samples on "Substance Fear" which reaches a depth that most working in the field can't reach. That said, the ghosts of artists like Kraftwerk and any number of Factory recording artists hang heavy as well, and the resultant combination can be addicting — high speed twinkle and tension set against sorrowful lyrical sentiments is a classic gambit which the title track plays well. The strongest musical and singing moment is the excellent "The Switchboard Girl," with a perfect arrangement that is pure Man-Machine into Computer World and a female-sung lyric that's incredibly affecting. The surging "Crying's What You Need" isn't far behind, though, a classic lost anthem for an '80s teen movie blockbuster that never was.