Debt Dept

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (26 ratings)

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 43:43

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Swing and a miss!

fuzzy_edges

Once the novelty wears off (after about 20 seconds), this becomes very annoying. Play this if you're tired and you want everyone to go home. There's a fine line between quirky & creative and pretentious & obnoxious. These guys tread that line like a drunk at a Cape Coral roadblock.

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Nice!

Gaylord

Possibly not for everyone but amusingly different and strangely enjoyable. Perhaps a bit of departure from previous albums - this one has kind of a chugging, stupid, almost stoned Stones Throw vibe. Lots of cheap sounding synths, moaning, and also space. It's early to say but this could be a favorite of 2008 at some point.

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They Say All Media Guide

Excepter’s own bemusing path through the murkier corners of whatever the noise scene of the early 21st century is has likely frustrated as many fans as it has entranced — it’s no surprise that they’ve ended up on Animal Collective’s label, and Debt Dept shows why it’s a good home for them. Beginning with the logically entitled “Entrance 08,” an intentionally trudging number that actually keeps up the pace, Excepter are again showing that the conventional way to mix a song isn’t the only one. Vocals here, as throughout the album, exist almost as addenda to the songs — not just background textures but not anything else either, giving a sense of a series of dramatic recitations being heard from a few doors over, evocative but not quite understandable. The song itself is a perfect, lengthy statement of purpose with its up-front guitars and increasingly stripped-down and focused drones — get in or get out, the band almost seems to be saying — and from there Debt Dept explores a variety of takes on the basic sound. While comparisons could be made to various no wave forebears, an interesting analog — suggested by songs like “Kill People,” with its hollow drum sounds and general murk — would be the experimental side of early Bauhaus, where such demi-instrumentals as “Untitled” and “Earwax” held sway. Meanwhile, “Greenhouse/Stretch” is an actual death disco number of sorts — or at least a dance track for actual zombies, thanks to its core keyboard loop squelch — while the concluding “Sunrise” (at least not counting the bonus track, “‘Burgers”) is an honest to God rock epic in the band’s own way, thanks to the build of the verses and the way it feels more like an “actual” song as such, or more accurately a more conventional one. – Ned Raggett

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