Search - Electrelane :: Rock It to the Moon

Rock It to the Moon
Electrelane
Rock It to the Moon
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, International Music, Special Interest, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Originally released on Electrelane's own label Let's Rock in 2002, `Rock It To The Moon' received much critical acclaim and established Electrelane's as a unique and powerful band. Shunning conventions and expectations, it...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Electrelane
Title: Rock It to the Moon
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Too Pure
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 10/31/2005
Album Type: Import
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, International Music, Special Interest, Pop
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Europe, Britain & Ireland, Experimental Music, Dance Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 644918016922

Synopsis

Album Description
Originally released on Electrelane's own label Let's Rock in 2002, `Rock It To The Moon' received much critical acclaim and established Electrelane's as a unique and powerful band. Shunning conventions and expectations, it is a primarily instrumental record that builds with passion, intensity and atmosphere at every twist and turn. `Rock It To The Moon' is a pulsating, spiralling and emotive beast where dirty metal-derived guitar riffs, heavy bass-lines, omnipresent intoxicating Farfisa organ and a centred, building drum beat weave and climax in a thrilling nu-wave, garage-rock and Krautrock-esq combined assault. At once avant-garde, yet also toying gently with a pop aesthetic - the animated organ on `Film Music' and `Blue Straggler' and the chugging guitar, hand-clapping and harmonising on `Spartakiade' - each track is unforgettably infectious.

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CD Reviews

Electrelane - 'Rock It To The Moon' (Mr.Lady)
Mike Reed | USA | 01/25/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Coming to you straight out of Brighton,UK.'Rock It...' is the all-female electronic/Avant Garde band's first release,as they have one other that came out as it's follow-up.The gals were supposed to play a pub in my area fairly recent,but the gig was apparently cancelled.If this CD is any indication,they should be decent to see live.Tracks that I thought carried some weight were "Gabriel"(nice keyboard work),"Blue Stranggler",the krautrock-ish "Long Dark" and "U.O.R.".Line-up:Mia Clarke-guitar,Rachel Dalley-bass,Verity Susman-keyboards and Emma Gaze-drums.Might appeal to fans of Sonic Youth,Stereolab,PJ Harvey and KaitO.A very decent find."
Hardly groundbreaking, but worth a listen.
skytwo | Boston | 04/13/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This insturmental British quartet seems largely known for the number of bands to which they've been compared. I think the comparisons are a little overblown, but the album more than anything resembles a slightly unfinished work. Without vocals (there are some small exceptions here and there), the group just doesn't really manage to carve out its own niche. It lacks a unique sound that lets you know that you're definitely NOT listening to something by another group.All told, if you enjoy the samples, you'll probably enjoy the album in its entirety. While consistent, it's a real mishmash of electronic, punk, and occasionally ambient sounds with a little bit of vocal harmonizing here and there. Not exactly upbeat, not exactly downbeat. It's a little bit of everything without standing out from the crowd-- which makes it difficult to give Electrelane's debut a higher rating."
Rockin' indeed
Keir H. Fogarty | fort collins, colorado United States | 06/16/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)

"so I read the other review, and mostly agree with what was said, I think comparisons to Mogwai and Godspeed You Black Emporer! are a bit of a stretch---this band resembles early Stereolab much more than either of the two previously mentioned bands--its a hard rocking interplay of rhythmic guitar groove, feedback-laced good times--a great background, rocking type of album--wear it jogging, listen to it in the car on a road-trip--you won't be humming catchy riffs per se, but you will tap your foot in time and love the energy--its got that feedback lounge type of feel that makes one think that the girls grew up listening to Stan Getz just as much as the Velvet Underground--Bridgette Bardot followed by Sonic Youth--Esquivel with equal parts Ramones--well...you get the idea"