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Music For Parties

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Download links and information about Music For Parties by Silicon Teens. This album was released in 1980 and it belongs to Electronica, New Wave, Alternative genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 45:47 minutes.

Artist: Silicon Teens
Release date: 1980
Genre: Electronica, New Wave, Alternative
Tracks: 16
Duration: 45:47
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Memphis Tennessee 2:23
2. Yesterday Man 2:39
3. Do Wah Diddy Diddy 3:01
4. TV Playtime 3:25
5. You Really Got Me 3:05
6. Chip 'n' Roll 3:15
7. Do You Love Me? 2:22
8. Let's Dance (1) 2:51
9. Oh Boy 2:03
10. Sweet Little Sixteen 3:18
11. State of Shock, Pt. 2 3:11
12. Just Like Eddie 2:42
13. Red River Rock 2:53
14. Judy In Disguise 2:29
15. Let's Dance (2) 1:51
16. Sun Flight 4:19

Details

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Who would have thought that the same gent responsible for the Normal's "Warm Leatherette" — the classic, whip-cracking electronic ode to J.G. Ballard's auto-erotic novel Crash — would follow it up several months later with a small clutch of singles covering '50s and '60s rock classics? And who would have thought that it would lead to a full LP? Inspection of the artwork fools you into thinking that the Silicon Teens are a quartet of Darryl, Jacki, Paul, and Diane. Though it sounds like a group of enthusiastic youngsters bent on giving straight-faced, faithful synthpop renditions of tunes like "Memphis, Tennessee" and "You've Really Got Me," the concept of the group is illusory. There's actually one Silicon Teen — Mute honcho Daniel Miller. Music for Parties is an undeniably fun record in its complete lack of irony and shameless giddiness. The covers aren't jokes; it sounds like a group of kids having a blast with classic rock & roll. It's well produced, well played, and well intentioned — no winkie winkie here, à la Moog Cookbook. There's a handful of originals as well; "T.V. Playtime" is sinister, sounding like a commercial for a board game; "Sun Flight" is hallucinatory with Darryl sounding like a cross between Gizmo and Darth Vader. The sound is dated after all, but with the mid- to late-'90s resurgence of the '80s synth sound, one could definitely think it to be a product of modern times. Acts like the Rentals and the Pulsars (who even devoted a song to the Silicon Teens) certainly took a cue from this. There's more life in this record than plenty of guitar-based efforts of the era. Four months after the release of Music for Parties, Miller/Darryl signed a group of waif-ish youths by the name of Depeche Mode.