Do You Trust Your Friends?

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Do You Trust Your Friends? album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 55:35

eMusic Review 0

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

04.22.11
Stars, Do You Trust Your Friends?
2007 | Label: Arts & Crafts / IODA

How do you follow up an indie-pop classic? You let your friends destroy all the hard work that you did in a remix extravaganza, of course. Or that's what happens on Stars'Do You Trust Your Friends?, at least. Luckily, those aforementioned talents are both delicate and brutal in varying measures, taking the group's originals into unexpected places. Metric takes “He Lied About Death” and reimagines it as a Philip Glass scored pop song, while The Most Serene Republic put an acoustic twang on the previously electrified “Ageless Beauty.” The Dears, meanwhile, take two cracks at “What I'm Trying to Say” and emerge with a classic on the second try: finding gold in Amy Millan's angelic vocals and looped synths.

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Disappointment, remixed

eclecticmetric

As a huge fan of both Stars and most of the A&C alums on this compilation, I was really disappointed. Most of the tracks are pretty sub-par on their own and certainly don't improve upon/add anything interesting to the originals. Only Final Fantasy, Metric and the Stills really pull their weight. (Update) Oh, and The Dears tracks are okay.

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in some ways, better than the album

ernie-c

the original had some great songs, but this makes it far more varied. one of the most incorrect pitchfork reviews in recent memory.

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nice

ThumbtackOnBroadway

i was really pleased with this actually. it gets a little weaker in the middle, but it starts and ends super strong. the dears cover one of my least favourite stars song, and it comes out even worse in the end. other than that, damn good summer cd i think.

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Disappointing

Overneath42

I was really looking forward to this, and having finally listened through it found it to be a mixed bag at best. Some tracks, such as The Most Serene Republic's cover of Ageless Beauty, are fantastic. Some, like Final Fantasy's version of Your Ex-Lover, are so-so. Some, like Junior Boys' version of Sleep Tonight (which is so bland that it can barely be called a remix) are disappointing. And some, like Metric's cover of He Lied About Death, are just outright annoying. It's too bad, really – there was so much potential here. It's not a terrible album – just disappointing.

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Nice!

Zeb

The opening track by Final Fantasy alone makes this collection worth owning, even if some of the others are of mixed quality.

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covers

Ruralist7

it was my understanding these are covers, not remixes...

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both remixes and covers

onfire

Some are covers and some are remixes.

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covers / remix

ItsOKtoExplode

are these covers or remixes? i believe full-on covers, correct?

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full track data

xtrev

1. your ex-lover is dead (final fantasy) 2. set yourself on fire (montag) 3. ageless beauty (the most serene republic) 4. reunion (jason collett) 5. the big fight (minotaur shock) 6. what i'm trying to say pt. 1 (the dears) 7. what i'm trying to say pt. 2 (the dears) 8. one more night (apostle of hustle) 9. sleep tonight (junior boys) 10. the first five times (the russian futurists) 11. he lied about death (metric) 12. celebration guns (camouflage nights with kevin drew) 13. soft revolution (the stills) 14. calendar girl (young galaxy)

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They Say All Music Guide

The concept behind the Stars album Do You Trust Your Friends? is a simple one: how trustworthy are your friends? If you gave them the chance to repaint your apartment, would they choose a standard shade of grey or a nauseating neon green? Stars turned over their album Set Yourself on Fire to their rock star buddies and studio-dwelling, knob-twiddler pals to see how they would remix their tracks. In this case, the risk pays off. Songs that were straightforward indie pop jingles are meticulously reworked into more atypical, wonderfully exciting compositions. Metric, Apostle of Hustle, and Junior Boys blow the original versions away with newfangled spins on the original takes. “One More Night” is re-created into a computerized flamenco number with splatters of Pinback and Wilco. “Sleep Tonight” is transformed into a keyboard heavy video game anthem reminiscent of the Knife’s fabulous “Heartbeats.” Of course, when you have 13 remixers working separately on a project that involved six musicians, the wide variety of personalities result in a drastic range of styles. This makes for a scattered listen that feels more like a mixtape than an actual album, but it’s a fun one nonetheless. The liner notes include comments from all of the artists involved in the project to give insight on what inspired their manipulations — whether it be hopes of making the Stars sound gangsta, like Queen, or like they were riding in a spaghetti western. – Jason Lymangrover

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