Pocket Revolution

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (54 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 61:01

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Excellent!

philbender

A solid effort from start to end.

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One of the best 2005!

Kaweni

Unique, experimental, sometimes jazzy album from Belgiums finest!

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What indie music should sound like

violistic

which is to say, not like every other band you've ever heard. dEUS are the first really unique band I've heard in a while. Like radiohead, they really push the envelope and experiment with sound, and like another favorite of mine, the Frames, they have a lot of songs that start off slowly and quietly but build and gather momentum as they go. Saw these guys on the recommendation of some friends, and they absolutely blew me away--the albums are good, but they're SO MUCH BETTER live! Standout tracks for me on the album include "Sun-Ra," "Bad Timing" and the title track "Pocket Revolution." If you like indie with a little edge, check them out.

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They Say All Media Guide

Since nearly seven years had passed since dEus had issued an album (The Ideal Crash dropped in 1999, and it wasn’t exactly easy to locate in the U.S.), it was certainly understandable for fans to figure that the band had quietly packed it in. This proved not to be the case, though, as longtime members Tom Barman (vocals, guitar) and Klaas Janzoons (violin, keyboards) assembled a whole new dEus lineup, which included former members of Soulwax and Chris Whitley’s band. Pocket Revolution finally arrived in 2006 (the album was first made available in 2005 as an import, however), and once more, the group offers an album that refuses to be pinned down to a single style. It’s easy to pick out modern-day bands which sound comparable, such as the Coldplay-ish “7 Days, 7 Weeks” and the Eels-ish “If You Don’t Get What You Want,” but dEus has been around a heck of a lot longer. Other standouts include the title track, which alternates between calm verses and a grandiose choruses, as well as a tribute to jazz visionary Sun Ra titled, uh, “Sun Ra.” Despite the extended break between albums, dEus picks up right where they left off with Pocket Revolution. – Greg Prato

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