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- Artist(s): Paddy Shine, Chris Haslam, Marlene Ribeiro, Alex Macarte
- Summary: The latest release for the Salford-based band features five tracks over 15-minutes long.
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- Record Label: Rocket Records
- Genre(s): Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock
- More Details and Credits »
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6 out of 6
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Mixed: 0 out of 6
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Negative: 0 out of 6
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Jun 3, 2015Infinity Machines is a painful modern masterpiece, and it's urging us to listen to the voices in our heads.
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Jun 3, 2015An album commanded by machines, few releases could tap into our terrifying mortality like this.
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Jun 3, 2015The Infinity Machines strain occurs in eight stages, each with varying intensities of drone.
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The WireJun 5, 2015Most of Infinity Machines' 110 minutes consists of lengthy, evolving jams build upon elephant's heartbeats bass beats overlaid by slowly building washes or jabbing trills of analogue synth, brain-sucking white noise and wailing saxophone. The later adds greatly to the miasmic atmospheres. [Apr 2015, p.56]
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Jun 3, 2015It’s easy to forgive Gnod such self-indulgence, however, even if it means Infinity Machines just about fails to maintain interest throughout, because this album sounds like very little out there, at least from a rock perspective.
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UncutJun 3, 2015Their fondness for 17-minute improvisations demand a certain stamina, but there's a strung-out beauty to Infinity Machines that eases you in gently. [May 2015, p.73]