Apocalypso

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (300 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 50:53

eMusic Review

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Anna Fielding

eMusic Contributor

05.12.08
As streamlined as the pecs of a podium dancer and just as suited to nightlife.
Label: Modular

For their second album, Apocalypso, Presets duo Julian Hamilton and Kim Moyes have taken a dive into the darker side of dancefloor pop. And from the first track, "Kicking and Screaming," they compel you to follow them, into a world of solid electro beats and sinister dry ice.

The twosome bonded over a love of film scores, and that's apparent here, from the Mel-Gibson-poking title to the strong '80s sci-fi feel they've given to their synthesisers. In fact, '80s influences pepper the record; "If I Know You" is an illicit kiss shared by Marc Almond and the Pet Shop Boys; "Eucalyptus" sounds like "Being Boiled"-era Human League holidaying Down Under and there's a hard, industrial streak of Nitzer Ebb running throughout.

Occasionally, subtlety may have been sacrificed in favour of obvious dancefloor mood-jerkers, but there's not an ounce of spare fat or flabbiness here; Apocalypso is as streamlined as the pecs of a podium dancer and just as suited to nightlife.

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Essential for any boning playlist

Mortality

This is an album that really grows on you. At first I wasn't sure if I liked it. It's more experimental than Beams or Blow Up. However, several years after buying it I still have it on constant rotation. Kicking and Screaming is the highlight, but there's not one filler song on the whole album. Plus, like all Presets songs, great for your boning playlist.

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So very very good

zoshi

This girls in love with "This Boy's in Love"

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More Brilliance from The Presets

EMUSIC-0022378C

This is just brilliant electronica. The songs are catchy without being mass produced. "My People" is outstanding and takes on a whole new dimension when you realise it is about the plight of refugees in detention in Australia. Pay attention to the lyrics, they're cheeky and snappy. Love this album!

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loud, risky sounding electro

jerepjohnson

Australia based The Presets are one of the better electro acts right now. All of the Presets albums are good. Apacalypso is more emotional sounding in a way that previous albums are not.

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Never get tired of it.

Voldemeg

I listen to this one on a weekly basis at least, I find myself just thumbing to it whenever I can't figure out what I'm in the mood for. Endlessly catchy with hypnotic beats and tunes. I love it when I catch a hint of that australian accent.

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EVE Online music

Shieldfire

It's weird how some music have a special memory attached to them. I started playing EVE Online to this, it was on constantly and some of it is like reliving missioning in Aunenen again (for those who know what of I speak). It's all good, for samplers - try Kicking and Screaming, Yippiyo-Ay or Together ...

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Just Great

Muse8

Rock/Electro/Whatever hybrid. Smart lyrics, great vocalist, great grooves for the dancefloor or the metro.

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Can not. Stop. Listening.

fontor

I've been playing this constantly for weeks. If it were a disc I would superglue it to my CD player. It bears some similarity to the more subtle and layered 'Dystopia' by the Midnight Juggernauts (also available on eMusic), but this album is lovable for its brashness and groove. Hooray for Australian gothic-themed techno-dance all the way around!

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Whoa horsey!

Britster

This bunch make Justice sound like Mozart! If you like your electro as clever and varied as a french fry (um... painted black) then download without hesitation. Ortherwise approach with some caution. Tracks 3 and 5 are pretty good for a party tape. Oh look, the other tracks sound just like 'em too. Awesome!

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Synthtastic

ABC

Thirty seconds after hitting the play button will most likely prompt you to get up out of your seat or preform some fierce '87 style head-bobs or both. While Kim Moyes & Julian Hamilton studied classical composition they excel in its antithesis. After joining recently successful Modular Records in 2003, home to such acts as The Klaxons and fellow Aussies The Van She, The Presets have issued a slew of EP's and remixes and 2005's full-length Beams. But, with Apocalypso its clear that perfection has come with some (brief) work. The early album barrage includes singles "My People" and "This Boy's in Love" both of which clearly demonstrate The Presets' knack for layering updated samples on handy rhythms. Some time is spent in an experimentation, and in genre style as on "Aeons". This release most certainly satisfies from cover to cover. Its clear that The Presets are ahead of the eightball in the recent wave of electro from the land down under. -copyright 2008 Discosalt.com

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They Say All Media Guide

What with Vince Clarke living in semi-retirement in rural Maine and New Order suddenly realizing after 30 years that they don’t like each other all that much, it’s a hard time to be a fan of synthesizer dance pop from the ’80s. Until the Presets’ second album comes on, that is. The Sydney-based duo of singer Julian Hamilton and synthesist Kim Moyes is straight-ahead old-fashioned electro-pop circa 1984, when the fusion of the Human League and Giorgio Moroder was complete but the cold, hard demands of techno and house hadn’t yet asserted themselves outside of Detroit and Chicago. Tracks like first single “My People” and its surging follow-up, “This Boy’s in Love,” have the characteristic blend of steely synths, thumping electronic beats, and Motown-derived soul-tinged vocals that characterized the predominant strain of mid-’80s synth pop. It’s not entirely retro — “Eucalyptus,” the Daft Punk-like “Talk Like That,” and the soaring “A New Sky” would sound at home in any mainstream club DJ’s set circa 2008 — but the overall feel of the album from its arrangements to the sci-fi-themed cover art and even the album title (which several artists used for songs back in the day, from the Monochrome Set and Lords of the New Church to the Motels and Mental as Anything) harks back to the day when the Fairlight CMI was the height of musical sophistication and Jellybean Benitez and Arthur Baker were the hottest remixers on the block. – Stewart Mason

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