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Darkdancer
Les Rythmes Digitales (Jacques Le Cont)
Darkdancer
Genre: Dance & Electronic
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

Limited Edition features a bonus DVD (PAL/Region 0). While his debut album ran with the Wall of Sound crowd to the detriment of some interesting ideas, Jacques Lu Cont came into his own with the second Les Rhythms Digitale...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Les Rythmes Digitales (Jacques Le Cont)
Title: Darkdancer
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Wall of Sound
Release Date: 11/28/2005
Album Type: Enhanced, Extra tracks, Import
Genre: Dance & Electronic
Styles: Electronica, Big Beat, Trip-Hop
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2

Synopsis

Album Description
Limited Edition features a bonus DVD (PAL/Region 0). While his debut album ran with the Wall of Sound crowd to the detriment of some interesting ideas, Jacques Lu Cont came into his own with the second Les Rhythms Digitales album. Consider Darkdancer as Lu Cont's senior thesis in the major course of study: History of Dance Music: The Early to Mid-'80s. And give him straight A's because he's obviously done his homework and actually studied the texts, without resorting to rote memorization and subsequent regurgitation come test time. Every club-oriented stylistic speed-bump of the decade is right here, including the era of female dance-pop before Madonna (yes, it did exist) with 'Take a Little Time', an earnest little electro-groover that earns Lu Cont bonus points for utilizing the crucial '80s diva Shannon. 'Hypnotise' is a nice little electro-paranoia track to fit in with Bambaataa's 'Planet Rock' and 'Brothers' takes on streamlined dance intellectualism a la New Order (with a straining pseudo-bassline to match). The house era is probably best represented, with nods to Chicago jacking house -- complete with stuttered vocal tags -- on the standouts 'Jacques Your Body (Make Me Sweat)' and 'Music Makes You Lose Control'. Even when he strays into territory last inhabited by Level 42, as on "Sometimes" (with Nik Kershaw on vocals), a great song and a great production rescue Lu Cont from anything potentially cringe-worthy. That's the secret of Darkdancer; well-written songs and excellent production skills -- plus a sense of fun that takes no prisoners -- make artistic originality nothing more than an academician's game. The DVD features the 10 tracks including remixes of 'Jacques Your Body (Make Me Sweat)' (club mix), 'Music Makes You Lose Control' (LRD remix), 'Hey You What's That Sound' (LRD remix), 'Sometimes' (Junior Sanchez remix), 'Jacques Your Body (Make Me Sweat)' (Cassius remix edit) plus 'Steps Ahead', 'Energy', 'Nancy Jamaica' and the videos for 'Hey You What's That Sound' & 'Sometimes'. 2005.

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CD Reviews

Nu-Disco to the max!
APB | Ann Arbor, MI | 10/24/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"If you're man enough to embrace your love of the 80's and combine it with your (very possibly secret) love of bumpin' house music, then you will absolutely LOVE Darkdancer. This CD is fantastic! I have no idea how I stumbled across it, because no radio station in its right mind would play this stuff, but nonetheless, this CD gets you moving! Money back guarantee right there. Pop this in at a party and watch people start to jam. Either that, or get your ass kicked, but you'll have fun regardless."
More than just a fun 80s throwback
Steward Willons | Illinois | 07/15/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Jacques Lu Cont (aka Les Rhythmes Digitales) predates the electroclash movement, but gets lumped in Fischerspooner and Felix da Housecat just the same. Regardless of your opinions of electroclash, JLC was always obsessed with recapturing that special 80s sound and "Darkdancer" is his masterpiece. It's the sort of album that you can't really repeat or it would be cliche, but on its own, it's special. JLC revisits the 80s with a non-self-concious abandon. It's not a "wink wink - look how clever I am" effort - not at all. One of the reasons 80s throwbacks can be so tedious is that they're constantly reminding us that it's okay for them to be cheesy because they're being *intentionally* cheesy. JLC has no such pretensions. He's simply happy to make fun music in his favorite style.



There are a lot of great tracks here and only a few forgettable numbers. It's happy, carefree, and fun. If you grew up in the 80s and you still secretly jam out to the classics, you'll enjoy Darkdancer a lot."