Devour, Rise, and Take Flight

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (112 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 50:52

Write a Review5 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

not bad

purposdriven

Android lust is pretty good, especially considering most female industrial artists are horrible, heck most industrial artists sound horrible, but the ones that know what they are doing are GREAT. Can we stop talking about Trent Reznor? He had his day and now its done. Crawl back into the underground, that's where it's at.

user avatar

gfyh

sarapac

I am going to join Mr Majestic in the dark and listen to this album

user avatar

darkness

mrmajestic

This is dark stuff...and I like to play in the dark. You should join me there.

user avatar

quality - just in time

ceeler

this reviews I always read - blablabla - it's only about taste - so just shut up all of you - look at the genre of the music, stay open minded - this album is authentic, great eclectic stuff - lots of important and unique influences - if you know something about MUSIX ::: just listen to Kate Bush, Trent Reznor, Bjork, Portishead .... finally I found somebody who is really serious and talented enough to fulfill the needs the others have awakened - and believe me, I listen to looooooots of music - thank you shikhee!!!

user avatar

un-trent like

jergles

I'm not getting the comparisons to trent rezner. She's simply a slow-tempoed female vocalist that happens to accompany an industrial backbeat. Good sex background music at best.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

Android Lust’s second album is like the first vision of the talented Shikhee, still a fearsomely strong singer with a great eye for vivid lyrical portrayals of emotional extremes. Her ear for rough, rhythm-heavy industrial/electronic compositions hasn’t left either, as the crisp, distorted initial riff of “Lover Thine” makes clear from the start, and over Devour, Rise and Take Flight’s near hour-long length she aims for full body control, from dancing feet to audio overload. An example of how she works to maximize her abilities can be heard in how she uses her voice — on “Dragonfly” alone she moves from soaring, almost sweet calls to heavily treated declamations, even as the music also contains everything from gentle synth notes to flattened, ear-piercing feedback. “Sense of It All,” with a massed vocal set against a rising string melody on the chorus alternating with semi-whispered words on the verses, is another fine instance of working in a variety of modes at once, while “Leave It Behind,” the unlisted final track, is a beautiful, fragile guitar/keyboard downer-ballad, a perfect way to end instead of an explosive note. Co-mixer of the album Christopher Jon helps out on a few tracks instrumentally, most notably “The Body,” one of Shikhee’s most brutal portraits of a (possibly ex-)lover trying to control their relationship. Musically it shifts from full instrumentation rampage to gentle acoustic guitar strums and back on almost a dime, another example of how careful nuance serves Android Lust’s art well. One of the album’s stronger tracks, “Hole Solution,” isn’t quite the reverse of Nine Inch Nails’ “Head Like a Hole,” but in its similar awareness of how compelling digital beats and bass can be — as well as how to arrange a song to build up more and more in intensity — it shows how Shikhee is once again not simply someone inspired by Trent Reznor, but an equal to him in her core talents. – Ned Raggett

more »