• 'Give it Up' • 'True Stories' • 'The Pretender' Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating (7.2/10) Red is the second studio album by duo, released on June 8th, 2009. Track listing [ ] • 'The Blog' (3:11) • 'Give It Up' (2:47) • 'True Stories' (2:49) • 'Dance!' (3:38) • 'Molly' (3:20) • 'Do It Your Way' (1:47) • 'In the Red' (3:34) • 'Fear of Death' (2:15) • 'Amarillion' (4:20) • 'The Pretender' (3:08) • 'Back in the Seventies' (3:00) • 'Not Me' (3:46) • 'New Days Dawn' (3:08) Useage in Media [ ] Their song also featured in game twice such as True Stories in and Give it Up in. External links [ ] Wikimedia Commons has media related to. • This 2000s pop album-related article is a. You can help Wikipedia. Red is the second studio album by Norwegian dance-punk duo Datarock, released on June 8th, 2009. More Datarock albums Datarock Datarock. Computer Camp Love. Show all albums by Datarock Home; D; Datarock; Red. Tracklist with lyrics of the album RED [2009] from Datarock: The Blog - Give It Up - True Stories - Dance! - Molly - Do It Your Way - In the Red - Fear of. Countless bands hedge their music with heaps of irony (arguably vice versa in some cases), but few buttress it with Datarock's technical prowess. Sure, the Norwegian duo has its eye-rolling moments about night flights to Uranus or dancing with their daddies, but they also sport some of the slickest dance production in the biz, not to mention their effortless traversing between neurotic post-punk licks and coked-to-the-gills 1980s synth pop. While convention would say sophomore LP Red will have its share of 'growing up' moments, there's already something artistically mature and high-concept about two guys jury-rigging their own sub-genre of kitsch disco to one-up the legions of more 'serious' Talking Heads/Eno knock-offs floating around today. Red isn't exactly austere, but its lapses into wistfulness jolt Fredrik Saroea and Ketil Mosnes out of the bizarre but stable niche they carved out on their 2005 debut. As a quick glance at the track listing shows, Datarock's going pop on Red, boiling their songs down to a compact three minutes rather than going nuts with the dramatic dancefloor builds. These songs also have premises beyond shouting goofy shibboleths. There's a song consisting entirely of Talking Heads song titles ('True Stories'), an electro metal album opener about the Internet ('The Blog'), and a chilly kraut-funk apostrophe to Molly Ringwald ('Molly'), to name a few. While the lyrical craft here ain't exactly Dylan-esque, the duo shows off a level of cleverness that previously tended to level-off at wordplay and dick jokes. Depeche mode tour. The (minor) drawback: Datarock didn't have to dumb things down this much to become catchier. Datarock Red CoverWhile tightly wound tracks like 'Give It Up' or 'Dance!' Bring the energy, they're the kind of easy-to-swallow electropop hipness you can get from, like, Chromeo, which isn't a bad thing, just that Datarock's usually a lot tougher to pin down than that. To their credit, though, there are also flashes of songs I didn't think the band could pull off. 'Back in the Seventies' backs up its gushing nostalgia with crisply replicated plastic soul, and aforementioned 'The Blog' soups up the headbanging outro from previous standout 'Princess', creating an apocalyptic maelstrom of fuzzy bass riffs and soundbytes of computer pundits talking about the Internet. Datarock Datarock cooled down with two overlooked but nonetheless solid IDM tracks, but on Red the duo's softer side gets a lot more shine. 'Amarillion' would sound at home on Saturdays=Youth, a John Hughes-y serenade full of watery guitars and shout-outs to girl-ensnaring junior high mixtape staples like 'Take On Me' and '(I Just) Died in Your Arms'. 'Fear of Death' is an equally zealous 80s tribute, lifting lines from Don DeLillo's White Noise and chord progressions from Robert Smith to produce a stinging existential ballad.
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