Made In the Dark (CD/DVD)
|
| Price: |
21 new or used available from $1.95
Average customer review:Product Description
Made In The Dark is Hot Chip's third full-length release and the follow up to their critically acclaimed album The Warning. This new installment shows Hot Chip at its best-
wonderfully quirky, clever, soulful and poppy. The sound of the band has evolved towards a wilder, heavier electronics, though still coupled with a signature pop aesthetic.
This tougher sound is no more evident than on the single 'Shake A Fist' which created a massive stir when it crept out at the end of 2007 on a limited etched 12" 'Ready
For The Floor' and 'One Pure Thought', add pure, unadulterated head rush pop into the mix. Made In The Dark also shows that the band is equally at home creating songs
of intimacy and melancholy as they were dancefloor fillers.
The band come together with Owen Clarke's signature guitar and keyboard riffs, Al Doyle's high caliber musicianship and Felix Martin's programming skills combined
with the considerable talents of Joe Goddard and Alexis Taylor in a way making the songs even more propulsive, repetitive, rhythmical, methodical, wonky, intimate and
beautiful than before.
Throughout Made In The Dark there are echoes of earlier songs and styles, steps forwards, backwards and sideways. The band recorded several tracks on the album live
in one take such as 'Hold On' and 'Out At The Pictures' which is rare for any band these days, but even more so for an electronic-pop band.
Hot Chip straddle the line of electronic and pop so well as we feel there is appeal for the band in many musical tastes. The hipsters who found and love Hot Chip will still
be lured in by their originality and inventiveness, whereas the undeniable infectiousness and catchiness of their music should bring them a wider audience.
Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Out At The Pictures
- Shake A Fist
- Ready For The Floor
- Bendable Poseable
- We're Looking For A Lot Of Love
- Touch Too Much
- Made In The Dark
- One Pure Thought
- Hold On
- Wrestlers
- Don't Dance
- Whistle For Will
- In The Privacy Of Our Love
Disc 2:
- Shake A Fist (Live at Melt Festival)
- Boy From School (Live at Melt Festival)
- Hold On (Live at Electric Ballroom)
- One Pure Thought (Live From Glastonbury)
- Over And Over (Live From Glastonbury)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #98055 in Music
- Released on: 2008-02-05
- Number of discs: 2
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
If Daft Punk and Flight of the Concords collaborated on the soundtrack to a fabulous movie about wrestling, such an effort might approach Hot Chip's sublime and goofy Made in the Dark. This British five-piece's third album is its most ridiculous and excessive; it's also their best thus far. Some really weird things go on here: nu-rave numbers segue into lovely ballads with the tempi of cough syrup, then into bizarre yet poppy feet-moving anthems. What if Ween were less lazy and less overtly heterosexual, or if the Beta Band fell in love with the dance floor and again made more music as good as their first EPs? Because of the alleged obnoxiousness of Hot Chip's audience, there are those who have a problem with this incredibly talented group. But if we only listened to music based on audiences, we'd probably never listen to Neil Young or Madonna, either, and what would life be like then? No fun, that's what it would be like. And Hot Chip is, quite simply, music for people who like fun. --Mike McGonigal
Customer Reviews
We're in each other as hand in glove
Personally, I've never been happy with most electropop and dance music -- they take a beat, repeat it for five-to-ten minutes, and add in some lame lyrics about dancing. No thank you.
But after two albums of doing the exact opposite, Hot Chip.... are STILL not doing it in their third full-length album, "Made in the Dark." Instead, they sound even quirkier and wilder, and their songs are crammed with deliciously tight electropop, some wild flourishes and beats, and occasionally... a soft little reflective pop ballad.
"It's on every street/It's funky, cheap... Are you at the pictures?/Or out at sea?/It's better this way/Trust, do you believe me?," Alexis Taylor sings over a funky, angular melody. But the mind-bending really sets in with "Shake A Fist," a dark rhythmic pop song that mutates halfway through into a colourful, insane tangle of jabbing synth.
Apparently Hot Chip are aware that their audiences' brains might explode with more songs like that. So after the warm, catchy electropop of "Ready for the Floor," they try some easier fare -- clattery rock'n'roll, razor-edged electronica, rambling electropop tied in twisting rock riffs, and a shimmying electropopper that evolves into a shimmering... video game theme. Yeah, that's what it sounds like.
And there are a couple softer songs woven in there -- a gently catchy ballad wound in twitters and streams of synth, little soft ballads, and the closing song "Whistle For Will," which is all echoing synth and solemn piano.
There was obviously a lot of time and care taken with "Made in the Dark," because this album has few -- if any -- weak spots. In fact, the only one I can really take issue with is "Bendable Poseable," for its schizophrenically catchy sound -- and even then, I strongly suspect that Hot Chip intended for it to sound that way.
Their music is all tight, dancey, sharp-edged melodies from blazing electric guitars, shimmering twisting synthesizers, and some sharp drums to set the beat. Just about any one of them will get you bouncing in your chair. And Taylor plays some really beautiful, poignant piano melodies in the ballads, strung with softer, less dancey synth.
But rather than letting the catchiness carry the songs, they throw in some odd twists -- chants of "weather," horns, wind chimes, twists of jabbing synth, and a monologue (""Before we go any further I'd like to show you all a game I made up...."). You can never predict how these songs are going to go.
And Taylor sounds like he's having a GREAT time -- he can turn his quirky voice into the core of a dance song, or he can sing a low, soulful ballad. And he sings songs that are usually solid -- with a few odd moments ("I'm only going to heaven if it tastes like caramel") -- with the occasional lyrical brilliance ("I've never seen your love again/I'll never be your love for sure/Except for that day.... except for that day...").
And this version contains a bonus DVD, which basically has (ta da!) live performances of some of their music. Two are from the German Melt Festival (big, dark stage!), two full of the joyous primal energy of their performances at the Glastonbury Festival, and "Hold On" in the Electric Ballroom in London. Nice stuff.
Hot Chip astounds with the blindingly catchy, brilliantly complex "Made in the Dark" -- they keep polishing their music, and it just keeps getting better and better.
Absolutely wonderful
I've been a fan of Hot Chip for a couple of years now and this album has some of their best work on it. It's very well done and has a wonderful variety of tempos and styles. I'm very glad they're touring the US to promote this album (albeit briefly). I can't wait to see them in person.
Important but by no means flawless
The album opens with four dance floor shakers, then dips into intimate territory for about three songs before dropping the dance beats again and eventually pulling them back again for the last two songs. So you will hear reviewers cling to individual sections and state that the whole album is danceable or the whole album is tender, when in fact it contains both qualities in divided portions. The wonky humor of Hot Chip has been dialed down to a few subtle one-liners, with the exception of the song "Wrestlers" (think Ween meets Har Mar Superstar) which in some ways mocks their own tenderness. Overall this is a much more musically developed album than their previous two in both the rhythms and in the melodies & vocals. The live DVD (five songs from a couple of concerts) that comes with the deluxe edition sets the album in a live context (when coupled with the live intro of the album) but as an album it's a confusing rollercoaster ride. Compared to their other albums, none of the songs TOTALLY suck, but none of them are as perfect as "Playboy" either.




