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09-27-2003, 06:30 PM
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#1
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Napoleon Wilson
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Toronto, Canada
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What's everyone's take on "Chemical Brothers"?
Hi!
I'm not speaking from a commercial point of view, when I say that "Chemical Brothers" are junk. There's just NOTHING surprising about their music. I found most of their "hits" OK sounding at the best and everything else pathetic. Does anyone agree?
PS
I do not mean to insult true fans of that band. If their music sells - there's a good reason for it. But honestly do you think they are all that great? C'mon!
Napoleon Wilson
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09-27-2003, 06:58 PM
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#2
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Brothaman
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Birmingham, AL
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they had their time, and they do have some good things out there..."Exit Planet dust" and "Dig your own Hole" were probably the best albums they made, and made quite an impact at that time, but they are past their "hey-day". I did like a song called "Base5" I believe that was on their "Star Guitar" maxi single...
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09-28-2003, 07:27 PM
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#3
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Registered User
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here is a review i foung browsing...
When the Chemical Brothers are on top of their game, it's hard for anyone in their genre to touch them. In those moments, their sound threatens to go completely over the top, the massive beats and electronic squelches ripping through the speakers like they're about to physically jump out into your living room. Back in '97, I would drive around listening to "Block Rockin' Beats," unable to feel like anything but a bad mother****er. I might have only been behind the wheel of a Jetta, but that's not the issue.
Of course, a good way to judge a Chemical Brothers album is via the ego-inflation factor. If you're feeling like Al Capone with a fat bank roll and a baseball bat, the Brothers are achieving the desired effect; if you feel like you're shopping for designer footwear, things have veered horribly off-course. The fact is, the Chemical Brothers' greatest strength lies in their ability to lay down irresistibly fat basslines and breakbeats that would make Bootsy Collins' fingers bleed. A good Chemical Brothers track should bulldoze any form of criticism simply because it's a strictly visceral experience-- you press play and send the frontal cortex to its room to play with blocks for a while.
The big question going into Come with Us was whether they'd come out Kung-Fu fighting or serve up another batch of watered-down techno beats like those dished out on their previous album, Surrender. I wanted to see them rely less on guest cameos (almost invariably a bad sign)-- Bernard Sumner and Hope Sandoval should stay as far away from the studio as possible, preferably with a 300-pound bouncer with a pit bull screening the door-- and they generally do. Sure, Beth Orton and Richard Ashcroft managed to get their fingers in the pie, but some of these tracks also return to what the Chemical Brothers do best. In the end, it's a mixed bag.
Come with Us flies out of the gates unexpectedly with its first three tracks, immediately dragging the listener through a relentless torrent of beats and sonic energy. The title track, with its agitated, looped strings, undulating waves of syrupy keyboards, shouts, and strong backbeat, is reminiscent of the Beastie Boys at their most raucous; "It Began in Afrika" is a rapid, heart-pounding conga workout that distills the quick reflexes and primal urges of a cheetah hunt under a deadpan voice repeating, "It Began In Afrika-ka-ka"; and "Galazy Bounce" features a repeated call-and-response sample over tight, driving slap-bass funk. None of this is a thought-provoking music in the slightest, and I wouldn't want it any other way. These tracks are purely functional-- all speed, sweat and clenched muscle-- and, as convenient packets of immediate party energy, they succeed admirably well.
Of course, it's when the Chemical Brothers deviate from their role as Big Beat deities that problems arise. "Star Guitar" apparently substitutes for the missing Sumner track-- it's slight, but not nearly as vapid as "Hoops," the song that follows it. Honestly, none of the remaining material returns to the quality of the first three cuts, though "My Elastic Eye" and "Denmark" do manage to turn up the heat a bit. But there's not much to be said about the Orton ("The State We're In") and Ashcroft ("The Test") numbers, other than that they're both about as middle-of-the-road as you might expect they'd be. "The Test," for example, sounds like a weak companion piece to the Simple Minds' "(Don't You) Forget About Me," and Orton's admittedly seductive vocals aren't nearly enough to rescue an inherently bad song.
Yep, Come with Us is another let down, no two ways about it. And all because Tom Rowlands and Ed Simons seem confused about where they'd like to go. There are certain things they do very well, yet they don't seem to be content with being pigeonholed as one-dimensional. Unfortunately, one-dimensional is about the only thing they can pull off convincingly.
-Nathan Rooney, January 31st, 2002
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09-30-2003, 12:04 PM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: london
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i used to really like their old stuff but i don't think they're doin much anymore? i saw them last summer and they were wicked, i saw them this summer and they were crap. kinda the same as the prodigy whats that new rock crap all about?! 
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09-30-2003, 12:32 PM
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#5
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PublicDisplayofViolence
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Beyond The Valley of Dollmeat
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I never got into chemical brothers. I don't know why, their music just doesn't do anything for me. I never got into prodigy neither. i thought they were quite boring.
prodigy's record label probably made them change their style so they can sell more records. as you may notice, "electronica" is not all over MTV anymore.
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Originally posted by bec
kinda the same as the prodigy whats that new rock crap all about?!
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09-30-2003, 11:59 PM
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#6
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Registered User
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They've put out some decent music in the past, but lately they've gone down hill.
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10-01-2003, 02:44 PM
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#7
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Ssssssssssss
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: The Lost City
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I guess I like them. I have "Exit Planet Dust" and "Dig Your Own Hole" - but to be honest I never listen to them anymore. In fact, I've considered getting rid of them several times, but they're just good enough that I end up keeping them.
Yeah, I bought into that whole electronica craze that was going on in the mid-to-late-nineties, I'm semi-ashamed to say. (The worst album I bought during that phase was Crystal Method "Vegas". How embarassing...)
I definitely don't think the Chemical Brothers deserve the hype they've gotten. Their music doesn't hold up well over time, which in my mind is the mark of poorly made music. But they're competent, and they have some good songs.
I don't know what their new stuff sounds like, but I'm not too interested.
__________________
"Do not disturb me, Will Marshall. I'm searching for the vortex back to my time." : Enik
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10-01-2003, 04:02 PM
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#8
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Administrator
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Oslo
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I thought they were okey with their hits and the albums was overall very good also. I never got to buying anything from them until I saw their latest album, and bought it on impulse. The only thing I`m saying is that they won`t get a cent more from me in my lifetime (I couldn`t even bear it through the first listen).
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10-02-2003, 05:34 PM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: San Francisco
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i like the chemical brothers. they have some good tracks. however, i have to agree that they have a lot of crap too. Come With Us was crap. Surrender and Dig Your Own Hole were really good.
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10-02-2003, 05:50 PM
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#10
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Brothaman
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Birmingham, AL
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well, back in the day, Exit Planet Dust was the shit!
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