High Society

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (191 ratings)
High Society album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 41:24

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a bit eclectic but I like it

Darthmatt4182

this in some ways a model for my own band - a mix of songs that you'd think would fit better in their own 2 bands, but instead come together for a sonic treat. I definitely recommend this!

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awesome

geezluweez

each track is so different from the next. i keep going back to "in this city" "disposable parts" "salty" "natural disasters". a tiny thread links all these tracks together as a whole album. it's like a really great mixtape. this could be disasterous, but they did it beautifully.

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2002's best album

outmoder

amazing, highly diverse album. Try Pleasure and Privilege for an out-and-out rocker, and Natural Disasters for quirky indie pop, or In This City for cool electro. it's full of great tunes.

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pretty much the best album of the past five years

muffinbuckingham

pretty much the best album of the past five years.

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Top albums of this decade

oOnkyo

So good.. Such variety of punk, robot Japanese vocals and catchy pop rock. Beautiful..

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gnarly!

johnnyhell

if you like interesting, inventive indie-rock, definitely check this out. great songcraft, loose and lively performance, musical risks. good stuff!

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Amazing

Technoccult

This is one of my favourite albums. Try "Disposable Parts" or "Carbonation"

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AaAaHh yes...

Mars13Feminine

This is SUCH a versatile album. It's just so COOL... it just makes me want to drive.

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They Say All Music Guide

Enon’s second album, High Society, is something of a homecoming for the band. Dave Sardy’s See-Thru label issued their debut, Believo!, but for their follow-up, the group moved to Touch & Go, the home of John Schmersal’s former band Brainiac, as well as that of Blonde Redhead, of whom Toko Yasuda used to be a member. Similarly, High Society sounds like a more focused combination of Brainiac’s spastic geek-rock and Blonde Redhead’s more delicate, poppy moments. Though they may be more focused, Enon will never be straightforward, but that’s one of the band’s, and album’s, strengths. In the first four songs alone, High Society spans the driving, garagey rock of “Old Dominion,” the weirdly brooding “Count Sheep,” “In This City”‘s sleek synth pop, and the jangly cuteness of “Window Display,” which sounds like a cross between Preston School of Industry and Magnetic Fields. Believo! was also admirably eclectic, but High Society is both more versatile, and more successful in its versatility, than Enon’s debut. A large part of this is due to the addition of Yasuda, whose voice and synths add a new dimension to the band’s sound, particularly on showcases like the pretty, and pretty weird, new wave buzz of “Disposable Parts” and “Shoulder.” Solid songwriting also anchors High Society’s sonic trickery effectively, making it interesting decoration instead of the album’s main attraction; relatively poppy tracks like “Sold!” and “Natural Disasters” sit pretty comfortably next to the wigged-out “Native Numb” and “Pleasure and Privilege,” which should satisfy any Enon fans looking for a fix of Brainiac-like freakiness. Equally impressive, though, is the album’s title track, which gives a playful nod in the direction of the Left Banke and the Kinks at their chamber-poppiest. Just as expansive and experimental as it is streamlined and melodic, on High Society Enon’s contradictory style makes perfect sense. – Heather Phares

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