D.U.M.E.

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (26 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 19:53

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Genius.

stevemcqueen

'Hold Your Breath' is the most subtly violent song I've heard. The lyrics and music emplace anxiety upon the listener. It's twisted and gives me shivers every time I hear it. I love it.

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s'allright

avid

Two Points: 1) you'll either like the aesthetic or you won't. it's detroit electroclash. 2) this isn't their best release, start with anxiety allways or gimme trouble.

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Skip it. Skip it good.

markkus

This is the first eMusic review I've written, but I just have to tell people how awful this is. Completely unimaginative music. Talentless, atonal vocals. Nary a creative beat to be had. I love Fischer Spooner, Ladytron, Felix da Housecat, Mount Sims, etc., but this is totally worthless. If I were in Adult, I would sooner get a job clubbing baby seals than to try to make a living playing this utter sheeyite. A waste of 6 downloads.

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They Say All Media Guide

First of all, that title: is it pronounced “doom” or “do me”? Either way of saying it applies to this six-song EP, which is Adult.’s first release on Thrill Jockey (fear not, Ersatz Audio fans, Adult. will continue to release music on their own imprint). Granted, Adult. has made a cottage industry of crafting dystopian sounds so chilly and vicious that they’re freakishly alluring — à la J.G. Ballard’s “Warm Leatherette”-inspiring novel Crash — but on D.U.M.E., Adam Lee Miller and Nicola Kuperus feel less like voyeurs and more like active participants (or perpetrators) in their songs’ scenarios. This more immediate feeling can be attributed to the fact that Miller and Kuperus developed most of D.U.M.E.’s songs by playing them in concert; the hissy rhythms, cavernous basslines, and occasional prickly guitars that dominate the EP are boiled down to on-the-road simplicity. The biggest difference from Adult.’s previous work, though, comes from Kuperus’ vocals; instead of the detached, sometimes disdainful delivery she normally uses, on D.U.M.E. she howls like a banshee, to theatrical, and occasionally hilarious, effect. When Kuperus sings “dirty double-crosser/don’t you know that’s not nice to do?” on “The End,” she sounds like a villain gloating before going in for the kill. D.U.M.E.’s witchy, heavily eyelinered approach may appeal more to fans of bands like Numbers or Ersatz Audio’s own Tamion 12 Inch than admirers of Adult.’s normally sleek, distant neo-electro, but the harsh, nervous allure of tracks like “Don’t Talk (Redux)” and “Hold Your Breath” is undeniable. – Heather Phares

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