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Pull the Rabbit Ears

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Download links and information about Pull the Rabbit Ears by PINE * Am. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 37:34 minutes.

Artist: PINE * Am
Release date: 2005
Genre: Electronica, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 37:34
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Mackerel Sky 4:04
2. Starlight, Star Bright 4:05
3. Rhyme Mime 2:20
4. Pull the Rabbit Ears 1:11
5. Cosmic Glider 3:05
6. Honey 0:51
7. Cactus 3:20
8. Red Car 2:31
9. Do I Know You 2:38
10. Get a Choco 3:22
11. Afterglow 4:36
12. Gymnopedie 0.1 5:31

Details

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One term that is sometimes used in connection with the more bubblegum side of Japanese pop/rock is animé pop. Animé, for the uninitiated, is Japanese animation; a lot of animé is obsessed with cuteness (the Pokemon cartoons, for example), and the cuteness factor is a major component of animé pop (a term that has been applied to everyone from Pink Lady to Shonen Knife). Of course, not all Japanese pop/rock is bubblegum — some of it is just the opposite, in fact — but Pine*am's Pull the Rabbit Ears is definitely the type of fun, frivolous Japanese recording that sounds like animé with a beat. Some rock critics, quite frankly, are going to hate this female trio; the hyper-intellectuals who believe that all music has to be as profound and deep-thinking as U2, Bruce Springsteen, John Coltrane, or Public Enemy won't have any use for Pine*am's musical animé. However, those who don't take themselves way too seriously for their own good will find a lot to like about this 2005 release, which draws on influences ranging from dream pop/shoegazer music (as in Lush and the Cardigans) to disco, synth pop, new wave, and Europop. Lush are a definite influence, but Pine*am are much more eccentric and a lot more girlish — and the threesome obviously has a soft spot for the Tom Tom Club, Devo, the B-52's, and other quirky new wave groups that were popular in the late '70s and/or early '80s. If you're going to provide ear candy, there is no need to apologize; just be creative about it and do it well. Pine*am's three members are good at what they do, and their pop/rock animé is generally likable and infectious on Pull the Rabbit Ears.