Niun Niggung

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (57 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 51:23

eMusic Review

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philip sherburne

eMusic Contributor

Electronic music columnist for eMusic.com; writer for fishwrap like The Wire, XLR8R, SF Weekly, RES, Nylon, and Wired; columnist for Pitchfork; blogger (www.phi...more »

04.22.11
This German electronic duo have every right to be cocky.
Label: Thrill Jockey

Mouse on Mars have certainly proved one of the most adaptable acts in the underground pop landscape — a category which describes a band equally rooted in Krautrock and dance music far better than merely "electronic" or "experimental." Though perhaps "adaptable" isn't the word, as Mouse on Mars have never evolved to fit any discernible external influences; they've certainly never done anything like heed the prevailing winds of the pop marketplace. They've simply remained a profoundly mutable project, but always with an immutable core. It's never been possible to pin down Mouse on Mars to a particular sound — not even within the space of a single album. Still, there is a discernible arc in the progression of the band's albums, allowing listeners to tease out distinct phases in which various of Mouse on Mars 'interests become particularly clear.

Since the turn of the decade, Mouse on Mars 'work has become both more focused and more chaotic. Niun Niggung announces its break with "Distroia," a frantic drum 'n 'bass pastiche that remains a staple of their live shows. (The version documented on Live04, sounding a bit like Squarepusher jamming to sped-up Sabbath records, is simply breathtaking.) It's hard to put… read more »

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Insanity

DamienRobotwarsFerland

I can't believe that this and Instrumentals are not eMusic picks. DOWNLOAD THIS IMMEDIATELY!

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Most Underated Album of All Time

babylonsean

This is probably in my top 5 favorite albums of all time. I can not believe that more people do not think this album is as great as I do. Honestly I was bummed out when it first came out, because I loved the Cutesy-DnB sounding stuff on Autoditacker, and that's what I was expecting from this album. But it eventually unraveled itself and I realized that it is sheer genius. No one else could possibly pull an album off like this. Kudos Mouse on Mars, you guys are the best at what you do!

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Organic infusion

Wondafucka

One of my favorite MOM albums, this is their first for infusing organic instruments into their work, it's also the first album where their tours began to ROCK! You never know when you see them live whether they're going to kick ass or keep their heads down in the knobs and sliders of bleep-land. There are so many amazing sound collages in this album. It's got ambient and rhythm down to a T.

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let down

RAKman

With Mouse on Mars, I usually love their tracks or find them less than average. Generally it is a 50-50 split on each album. Niun Niggung averages out the highs and lows and left me with nothing I particularly disliked, but nothing I want to listen to repeatedly. All in all, I found it a let down.

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Strong work for a postmodernist world

Pikg

I am not an expert on this group to recommend what is their best work, but I hope to learn more by checking out other eMusic offerings. For now I'll just say that everything I've heard so far has been of interest.

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Great!

gsamsa

If I were marooned on a desert island, this is one of the albums I'd want on my 512mb mp3 player. Strange and inventive and yet so catchy. This and Autoditacker are easily my two favorite MoM albums -- and I like all of them.

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They Say All Media Guide

From the first few seconds of Mouse on Mars’ sixth full-length, it appeared that Germany’s most inventive duo had deserted the bubble’n'squeak electronica they’d trademarked and instead gone the way of instrument-driven post-rockers like Tortoise or Kreidler. There’s a chamber quartet in attendance and a hushed air that sounds almost mature. After a minute of suspense though, things go all wibbly and electronic fans will find themselves back in the happy preserves of prime Mouse on Mars. The duo’s vision of techno on Niun Niggung is impeccably perfectionist but texturally messy and surprisingly organic: it’s electronic dance as produced by robotic hill people. The highlight is “Super Sonig Fadeout,” a propulsive track that begins with several moments of metallic distortion. Slowly, ingeniously, the noise organizes itself into a loping, incredibly funky beat that drives the rest of the track. The music on Niun Niggung is far too much fun to provoke the question of whether Andi Toma and Jan St. Werner have progressed or not (which is always a matter for serious analysis in electronic circles), but the album does occasionally sound more like an attempt to duplicate the Mouse on Mars formula than the real thing. [The American release of Niun Niggung included a radically different configuration from the British and German release, plus several bonus tracks.] – John Bush

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