Chemical Chords Extra Tracks EP
Three additional tracks lifted from the same sessions that brought you Stereolab's eleventh album, Chemical Chords, this EP length offering condenses complexity - the likes of which is ordinarily confined to '70s prog - into a shiny pop context. Stereolab sound in tighter form than they have in years, managing to balance their lofty sonic ambitions with a necessary succinctness. 'The Nth Degree' sounds positively jubilant, full of piercing harpsichord sounds, elaborate glockenspiel lines and slick jazz-inspired chord changes. Meanwhile, 'Magne Music' slips into bloopy electronic funk mode, illuminated by off-kilter Raymond Scott synth sounds, only for 'Spool Of Collusion' to chirp in with its playful beat combo psychedelics and peppy organ riffing.
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Three additional tracks lifted from the same sessions that brought you Stereolab's eleventh album, Chemical Chords, this EP length offering condenses complexity - the likes of which is ordinarily confined to '70s prog - into a shiny pop context. Stereolab sound in tighter form than they have in years, managing to balance their lofty sonic ambitions with a necessary succinctness. 'The Nth Degree' sounds positively jubilant, full of piercing harpsichord sounds, elaborate glockenspiel lines and slick jazz-inspired chord changes. Meanwhile, 'Magne Music' slips into bloopy electronic funk mode, illuminated by off-kilter Raymond Scott synth sounds, only for 'Spool Of Collusion' to chirp in with its playful beat combo psychedelics and peppy organ riffing.
Three additional tracks lifted from the same sessions that brought you Stereolab's eleventh album, Chemical Chords, this EP length offering condenses complexity - the likes of which is ordinarily confined to '70s prog - into a shiny pop context. Stereolab sound in tighter form than they have in years, managing to balance their lofty sonic ambitions with a necessary succinctness. 'The Nth Degree' sounds positively jubilant, full of piercing harpsichord sounds, elaborate glockenspiel lines and slick jazz-inspired chord changes. Meanwhile, 'Magne Music' slips into bloopy electronic funk mode, illuminated by off-kilter Raymond Scott synth sounds, only for 'Spool Of Collusion' to chirp in with its playful beat combo psychedelics and peppy organ riffing.
Three additional tracks lifted from the same sessions that brought you Stereolab's eleventh album, Chemical Chords, this EP length offering condenses complexity - the likes of which is ordinarily confined to '70s prog - into a shiny pop context. Stereolab sound in tighter form than they have in years, managing to balance their lofty sonic ambitions with a necessary succinctness. 'The Nth Degree' sounds positively jubilant, full of piercing harpsichord sounds, elaborate glockenspiel lines and slick jazz-inspired chord changes. Meanwhile, 'Magne Music' slips into bloopy electronic funk mode, illuminated by off-kilter Raymond Scott synth sounds, only for 'Spool Of Collusion' to chirp in with its playful beat combo psychedelics and peppy organ riffing.