Are You Ready For An Organ Solo?

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (43 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:26

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music for a cocktail party

daytone

If Prince was an alien he would be quintron. The music is goofy dance music, but the sounds are highly original.

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Better Living through Recipes!

Bustopboxing

Here is how to make your own batch of this delicious ear candy: One part Cocorosie and one part Hot Chip + The B-52's - Fred Schneider + a guy that can really sing, large cup of Kraftwerk, mix and let stand for ten minutes. Add Bent + Flunk + Chaka Khan + Ursula 1000 + Clap Your Hands Say Yeah X Hooverphonic and lastly sprinkle Tipsy generously. Bake as long as you want. =) A+

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Turn it up!

arntzville

SUCH a great dance party album. "Miniature Breakdown" is probably the best song, but "Teenage Antoinette" and "Underwater Dance Club" are great as well, and "Cave Formation" is just such a cool, unique song. Quintron is every bit as powerful a party band as the B-52s or CCR; these songs have a raw intensity that's it's just about impossible not to dance to. Turn this up LOUD.

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A recording doesn't capture Quintron

Justine

Download it. Listen to it. Go to a Quintron show and dance your crazy ass off.

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They Say All Media Guide

Quintron returns with more subversive, more than slightly sleazy fun on Are You Ready for an Organ Solo?, one of three albums he released in 2003. By now, his modus operandi — howled baritone vocals, insistently dumb beats, cheerleader-style backing vocals courtesy of Miss Pussycat, and of course, organs and analog synths galore — is well-known, but that doesn’t make it any less entertaining. Tracks like “Place Unknown,” “The Beach,” and “Teenage Antoinette” are electro-garage rave-ups that should be the life of any happening party, while “Miniature Breakdown” is a dancefloor stormer that is about as straightforward as Quintron gets (which is to say, not very). However, any worries about Quintron making his sound more conventional should be put to rest by oddities like “Mud Bugs,” the theme to a horror film of the same name. This makes perfect sense, considering the track’s “Frankenstein”-like organ stabs and screamed vocals. Likewise, the rambling “I’m Not Busy” is funny, funky, freaky free association that is catchier than it has any right to be. “Cave Formation” is without a doubt the strangest song on the album: Miss Pussycat’s doubled, girlishly robotic vocals describe the wildlife — and nightlife — in a cavern; backed by a minimal beat and the occasional keyboard squiggle, it’s an utterly unique, and hypnotic, song. The album’s party vibe feels a little weary by the time the long-awaited “Organ Solo” finally arrives, but Are You Ready for an Organ Solo? is such a bizarre blast that it hardly wears out its welcome. – Heather Phares

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