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Aereogramme combines abrasive guitars, feedback, and distorted vocals into rock that, in its own way, is as crunchy and dynamic as Weezer, though as decidedly outsider as Mogwai.
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Although some have dismissed the group as glorified emo, the group has really gone far and beyond such a simple statement.
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Alternative PressIt's category-defying: raw and cooked, muscular and cerebral, shifting gears in seconds flat. [Apr 2003, p.70]
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The band's dynamics are beyond reproach, and the album sounds fabulous. Problem: The quiet songs don't provide a proper outlet for the band's palpable tension, and Aereogramme stays quiet far too often.
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A brave, commanding, astonishing LP that shatters all notions of what modern rock music can, or for that matter, should be.
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The building of momentum from beautiful or ominous minimalism into cathartic, sweeping heaviness is remarkable.
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Like Radiohead's Kid A, it's a rock album divided into movements closer in spirit to a dance record (complete with two ''chill-out'' tracks at the end), which is what, at times, makes it as difficult as it is compelling.
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Holy shite what a record.
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MojoOccasionally... there's a sense of things being too studied, the brain doing the work of the heart. [May 2003, p.106]
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Revelatory, if somehow pompous.
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It's an obvious comparison given the company they keep, but, this time around, Aereogramme really are Mogwai and The Delgados on the same record.
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Sure, they meld muscular riffs with smoky organ meditations, folky landscapes, pompous orchestration and the occasional IDM skitter, but not without losing the transcendent detail that makes each of these genres worth savoring and holding on to.
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Sleep and Release is both an exceptional release and an unfortunate release, and even when its at its best and at its worst, it remains both of these- its emotional and musical scope help the album succeed and cause it to fail.
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The album owes a big debt to the Europop trends of spaciousness and electro-scrape, but also reaches beyond the immediate environment, drawing on the consciousness-altering bash of Queens Of The Stone Age and System Of A Down.
User 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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AJJohnsonMay 5, 2004!!! it's been a long sinse I listened 2 the whole album so carefully.
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DirkNApr 10, 2003A great album. Not perfect, but the range & depth of it exceed anything else I've heard in a long time.