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We Should've Never Released This.

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Download links and information about We Should've Never Released This. by Peachcake. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 32:02 minutes.

Artist: Peachcake
Release date: 2006
Genre: Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 9
Duration: 32:02
Buy on iTunes $8.91

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I Hope We Don't Get Exploded. (2004, Chain Letter Ep.) 4:02
2. Hundreds and Hundreds of Thousands. (2004, Chain Letter Ep.) 2:59
3. Beware of Switching Movie Theatres. (2004, Chain Letter Ep.) 2:58
4. I Fell in Love With You While Listening to My Favorite Morrissey 2:21
5. All You Need Is a Computer, and a Little Belief in Yourself. (20 3:26
6. This Blackout Makes Me Wanna Makeout. (2004) 3:20
7. Hahahaha! Woah! Wtf? Where Have You Been? How's It Going? 4:56
8. Hundreds and Hundreds of Thousands. (2005, Lucid Skies Remix.) 3:29
9. Hundreds and Hundreds of Thousands. (2004, Chromatest Remix.) 4:31

Details

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Many jaded rock critics, given the wide open target of the title of Peachcake's debut full-length, must have been tempted to give it a one-sentence drive-by non-review like "No argument here" and go back to searching the torrent streams for Radiohead bootlegs. Their loss, because this Phoenix-based duo is making some of the most joyous, tuneful electro-pop of the era. Barely out of high school and therefore too young to have experienced the first golden age of synth pop first-hand, John O'Keefe and Stefan Pruett approach their likely inspirations — the holy trinity of Vince Clarke groups, Depeche Mode, Yaz, and Erasure foremost among them — with a complete lack of nostalgia. There is no arch '80s revivalism on We Should've Never Released This, merely a solid set of catchy, playful pop songs that happen to be performed on synths and sequencers. Basically an expansion of the duo's self-released 2004 EP Chain Letter with some extra material and a pair of remixes of the album's best song, "Hundreds and Hundreds of Thousands." We Should've Never Released This is a bracing blast of old-school electronic beats married to sugary-sweet melodies and Pruett's winsome, boyish vocals. Fans of other modern-day synth revivalists like LCD Soundsystem and Junior Senior should be all over danceable pure-pop gems like "This Blackout Makes Me Wanna Makeout" and "I Hope We Don't Get Exploded."