| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||||
The Hype Machine follows music blog discussions.
Every day, thousands of people around the world write about music they love — and it all ends up here. Learn more »
| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||||
|
|
|
Divided by Night [Digipak] (CD - 2009)( UPC: 00852967001107)
As low as $15.68 from CD Universe Artist: Crystal Method Label: Tiny E Records Genre: Electronic - Electronica Album Description: Personnel: Stefanie King Warfield (vocals); Justin Warfield (guitar); Jon Brion (synthesizer); Samantha Maloney (drums).Audio Mixer: Crystal Method. Audio Remasterer: Brian "Big Bass" G... Read More |
User Reviews Not RatedWrite a Review |
| Album Description | |
| Personnel: Stefanie King Warfield (vocals); Justin Warfield (guitar); Jon Brion (synthesizer); Samantha Maloney (drums). Audio Mixer: Crystal Method. Audio Remasterer: Brian "Big Bass" Gardener. Always a staunch supporter of the guest shot, the Crystal Method packs its fourth studio album, DIVIDED BY NIGHT, with high-profile appearances, resulting in another round of dynamic big-beat tracks that manages to be a bit moodier than past outings. Taking a break from battling with his former bandmates in New Order, Peter Hook lends his signature bass lines to the pulsing "Dirty Thirty" and the funky "Blunts & Robots," while Justin Warfield of Joy Division acolytes She Wants Revenge contributes vocals to the dramatic "Kling to the Wreckage." Other performers include Matisyahu (the brooding "Drown in the Now"), Metric's Emily Haines (the slinky "Come Back Clean"), and ex-Grandaddy frontman Jason Lytle (the dreamy"Slipstream"), all artists that receive reverent treatment at the nimble, knob-twiddling hands of the L.A.-based electronica duo. The Crystal Method have gradually shed the glossy big-beat techno that made their name in the late '90s as one of the few mainstream American answers to the Chemical Brothers and Daft Punk, and they've also matured as producers, which has resulted in better albums (but fewer dancefloor-filling singles). They may still grab influences from the best in '90s dance music, but they've become increasingly adept at constructing albums with more ideas (and subtlety) than the usual dance act. Divided by Night is indeed varied and polished, and it includes guest features by the bucketful, but it reveals again that, more than anything, the Crystal Method are merely clever regurgitators of the past, particularly chained to making extroverted dance music that never innovates and rarely excites. (Granted, this has happened to virtually every dance act of their generation, from the Chemical Brothers to Fatboy Slim.) The title track opener is a promising slow-burn start, but instead of exploding into the next track, the Peter Hook feature "Dirty Thirty," the record sputters with pedestrian breakbeats. Matisyahu makes "Drown in the Now" moderately fresh, and the longtime L.A. man about town Justin Warfield attempts to channel Phil Oakey on the future shock "Kling to the Wreckage," but these are yet more danceable electronica of the paint-by-numbers variety. There's a feeble attempt at an acid-techno burner on "Double Down Under," and wasted opportunities for a pair of indie crossovers with vocals by Metric's Emily Haines and Grandaddy's Jason Lytle. As they've matured, the Crystal Method have become an act who can occasionally beguile listeners, but they've easily been lapped by far better contemporaries and even overtaken by younger acts like Simian Mobile Disco and the Qemists. ~ John Bush The Crystal Method have gradually shed the glossy big-beat techno that made their name in the late '90s as one of the few mainstream American answers to the Chemical Brothers and Daft Punk, and they've also matured as producers, which has resulted in better albums (but fewer dancefloor-filling singles). They may still grab influences from the best in '90s dance music, but they've become increasingly adept at constructing albums with more ideas (and subtlety) than the usual dance act. Divided by Night is indeed varied and polished, and it includes guest features by the bucketful, but it reveals again that, more than anything, the Crystal Method are clever regurgitators of the past. (Granted, this has happened to virtually every dance act of their generation, from the Chemical Brothers to Fatboy Slim.) The title track opener is a promising slow-burn start, but instead of exploding into the next track, the Peter Hook feature "Dirty Thirty," the record sputters with breakbeats that have been heard hundreds of times before. Matisyahu makes "Drown in the Now" moderately fresh, and the longtime L.A. man about town Justin Warfield attempts to channel Phil Oakey on the future-shock "Kling to the Wreckage," but these are yet more danceable electronica of the paint-by-numbers variety. Still, as they've matured, the Crystal Method have become an act who can beguile most listeners. ~ John Bush |
|
| Track Listing | |
| 1. | Divided by Night |
| 2. | Dirty Thirty - (featuring Peter Hook) |
| 3. | Drown in the Now - (featuring Matisyahu) |
| 4. | Kling to the Wreckage - (featuring Stefanie King Warfield/Justin Warfield) |
| 5. | Smile? |
| 6. | Sine Language - (featuring LMFAO) |
| 7. | Double Down Under |
| 8. | Come Back Clean |
| 9. | Slipstream - (featuring Jason Lytle) |
| 10. | Black Rainbows - (featuring Stefanie King Warfield) |
| 11. | Blunts & Robots |
| 12. | Falling Hard - (featuring Meiko) |
| Album Information | |
UPC: |
00852967001107 |
| Release Date: | May 12, 2009 |
| Type: | Performer |
| Genre: | Electronic - Electronica |
| Label: | Tiny E Records |
| Distributor: | Fontana Dist |
| Producer: | The Crystal Method; The Crystal Method |
| Engineer: | Josh Hearst |
| Country of Origin: | USA |
| Original Release Year: | 2009 |
| # of Discs: | 1 |
| Studio / Live: | Studio |
| Mono / Stereo: | |
| Read the PriceGrabber.com Disclaimer and Privacy Policy Contact PriceGrabber at PriceGrabber Support |
||
| Certain supplemental information provided by |
| © 1981-2009 Muze, Inc. All rights reserved. For personal use only. |