Who's Afraid of the Art of Noise (Deluxe Edition)

Reviews:

8.6  Pitchfork

Other resources:

Make Create playlist based on similar artists playlist

Who's Afraid of the Art of Noise (Deluxe Edition)

by Art of Noise

Added 2011-09-24 19:42:00Z

Avg rating: 8.6  |  286 plays  |  Dance & Electronic

Art of Noise's first full album, (Who's Afraid Of?) The Art of Noise!, consolidated the future shock of the earlier EPs and singles in one entertaining and often frightening and screwed-up package. Rarely has something aiming for modern pop status also sought to destroy and disturb so effectively. The most legendary song is still "Close (To the Edit)," benefiting not merely from the innovative video but from its strong funk groove and nutty sense of humor in the mostly lyric-less vocals, not to mention the "hey!" vocal hook the Prodigy would sample for "Firestarter." Its close cousin, the title track, brilliantly blends a nagging bass synth, echoed drum, and percussion fills and constantly shifting vocal cut-ups, random noises, and strange melodies. They're just two highlights on this prescient release, though. Part of the thrill of Who's Afraid is the sense of juxtaposition and playing around, something still not very common in music and even less so in the pop music genre. The blunt political protest of "A Time for Fear (Who's Afraid)" and the more abstract "How to Kill," achieved via appropriate sampling, slams right up against the rough beat sonics and serene orchestration. If such material had appeared on Rephlex or even DHR in the mid- to late '90s, few would have been surprised. Things aren't all dour and gloomy, though; "Beat Box" captures heavy grooves from said source with quirky vocal bits and soft vibes. Patented Trevor Horn orchestral stabs surface throughout, while Anne Dudley's knack for gentler shadings and dramatic arrangements also comes through clearly, something that would surface ever more strongly in her freelance production career. The full ten-minute version of "Moments in Love" is perhaps her triumph here, a seemingly pretty instrumental turned increasingly strange.
Description by Insound

Popular last month

  1. Sin and Lostness

    Sin and Lostness

    The Lost Rivers
    384 plays
  2. Animal Joy

    Animal Joy

    Shearwater
    367 plays
  3. Where the Sands Turn to Gold

    Where the Sands Turn to Gold

    Azusa Plane
    351 plays
  4. Ghostory

    Ghostory

    School Of Seven Bells
    327 plays
  5. Life Is Full of Possibilities
  6. Locked Down

    Locked Down

    Dr. John
    272 plays