Product Details
Aluminum Tunes: Switched On, Vol. 3

Aluminum Tunes: Switched On, Vol. 3
Stereolab

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Pop Quiz
  2. Extension Trip
  3. How to Play Your Internal Organs Overnight
  4. Brush Descends the Length
  5. Melochord Seventy-Five
  6. Space Moment
  7. Speedy Car
  8. Golden Atoms
  9. Ulan Bator
  10. One Small Step
  11. Iron Man
  12. Long Hair of Death
  13. You Used to Call Me Sadness
  14. New Orthophony

Disc 2:

  1. One Note Samba/Surfboard
  2. Cadriopo
  3. Klang Tone
  4. Theme from Get Carter
  5. One Thousand Miles an Hour
  6. Perocolations
  7. Freestyle Dumpling
  8. Check and Double Check
  9. Munich Madness
  10. Metronomic Underground [Wagon Christ Mix]
  11. Incredible He Woman

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #112661 in Music
  • Released on: 1998-10-20
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Given Stereolab's predilection for art-rocky '60s pop ditties and penchant for creating a compelling variety of absurdity, this double-CD B-sides and rarities collection manages to be less a meandering collection than glorious, mix-and-match fluff. Encompassing more of the French language than a 101 college course, Laetitia Sadier's melodic, singsongy vocals entrance the Francophile within and somehow ideally complement the fragmented nature of the typical Stereolab composition. On half-realized wanderings like "Klang Tune" and zippier pieces of melodic debris like "Munich Madness," the album flows by quickly, getting by on speedy and disjointed yet memorable flashes of structure. In fact, given the hodgepodge nature of Stereolab's musical mentality, the record feels like a serendipitous mix of content and format and treats Stereolab fans to perhaps their best album yet because of it. --Matthew Cooke

URB
It's full of bubbly, leftist drone-pop, retro-futurist frolicking in the streets of Paris, heady blip-blop experimentation and some help from their pals John McEntire and Luke Vibert.


Customer Reviews

make this the centerpiece of your collection5
About 18 months after buying this collection, I've realizedthat Aluminum Tunes is an absolute masterpiece. The packaging is oddly minimal for such a collection and beautifully printed, and the album and song names are as responsible for their collective mystique as the music itself. Disc one begins with a series of string-laden ballads, originally released to compliment an art exhibit, and continues with several songs from their "mars audiac" era. "Pop Quiz", "The Extension Trip", "You Used to Call me Sadness", and others are actually waltzes; "Space Moment", "Iron Man" and "Ulan Bator" are droning songs; "One Small Step" is very accessible.

Disc two begins with something akin to their newer, wilder material with "One note Samba/Surfboard", with the song's latter section the true attraction. Several fairly nondescript tracks build towards the stringy "Seeperbold", the anthemic "Check and Double Check" and "Munich Madness", my personal favorite. This one is classic Stereolab, as a largely capable pop-rocker becomes a jazzy drone for no apparent reason. The album's closer is the album's, and maybe this band's, lyrical highlight in its appaling lack of sense: Sadier sings a dreamy song above Mary Hansen's bubblegum background vocals about the virgin mary's nine-month transformation into christ, detailing her physical metamorphosis ("month one mary grows a mustasche, in the second she grows a beard). That right there is worth your $ alone.

Eclectic Stereolab5
This is yet another consistent release from one of my very favourite bands- Stereolab. The sheer amount of material they have out is astounding, and even more astounding is that it is all, for the most part, very good. Being prolific and consistent is quite a feat. And they've done it again with the third collection of rarities and b-sides, Aluminum Tunes. I loved this album at first sight, with the weird blue cardboard packaging. It's great, even if the cd's don't stay in too well. Kicking off the album is the collection of six songs for the Amorphous Body Study Center. It is very well done, and I wish I could have seen the art exhibit. My favorite is How To Play Your Internal Organs Overnight, a string-drenched Stereolab classic. The second half of the disk is nice as well, containing an even more beautiful, longer version of New Orthophony. Other favorites are One Small Step and You Used To Call Me Sadness(although inferior to the horn-driven version on Flourescences). The second disk starts off with a cover of Jobim's One Note Samba, which is wonderful, revealing the light-hearted side of Stereolab. In the same track is another cover, Surfboard. It was great on Esquivel's "Space Age Bachelor Pad Music," but Stereolab somehow makes it even better. For me, the highlight of this collection is the last half of the second cd. You have the melancholy Seeperbold, the upbeat numbers, Check and Double Check and Munich Madness, and the masterful Metronomic Underground remix by Luke Vibert (aka Wagon Christ). And finally is the catchy (and very lyrically interesting) The Incredible He Woman. This compilation is a good sampler for the different, but all similar, styles of Stereolab, from droning Krautrock to jazzy space pop. This variety is good, but as a previous reviewer said, there are some jarring song transitions. There are a few clunckers sprinkled throughout, of which Klang Tone is the worst. It's really quite painful to listen to, with a loud irritating lack of melody. But the few bad eggs are far outnumbered by usual Stereolab genius. By the way, the samples on the track listing at the top of the page are really screwed up. I think someone switched the disks accidentally. And the track listing for disk one in the actual cd case is a little hard to follow as well. After the Amorphous Body Center songs, the list moves to the right and then back to the left for the final four tracks. At first glance, you want to read all down the left and then move over to the right. For the longest time I had the wrong titles with songs. I was surprised that there was a song called Speedy Car, but on a later track that I thought was Iron Man, the words "a speedy car out of nowhere" were repeated over and over. Then I noticed You Used To Call Me Sadness was on Flourescences, so when I first listened to that record, I heard what I thought was Ulan Bator. I was very confused, but after consulting the case again, I solved the mystery. I still hear people who have those songs mixed up. I hope I could help. Anyway, it's a great starter and a must for any 'lab fan.

I Have Been "Switched On"4
CD
If you are a fan of Stereolab, regardless of which phase of their career, you will want to own this. This 2-disc set includes the "Amorphous Body Study Centre" EP in addition to almost 20 other non-album tracks. Oddities, remixes, and guest appearances by the beautiful flute of Herbie Mann on "One Note Samba". Stereolab blends their influences into their own unique sound better than any band I've ever heard. I have only been into them a few years, and I've never fallen in love with a band this quickly. Beautiful, groovy, thoughtful, complex, and never boring.