Chain Gang Of Love

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (107 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 34:25

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Pop a Mento, Take a Big Swig of Cola, Turn It Up

zachjj

A great mix of Spector girl-group, amphetamine inspired Mod beats and feedback fueled mayhem. Equal parts Jesus and Mary Chain, Ronettes and self-titled era Blondie.

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friggin fantastic record

ChairmanMao

This album would probably make my list of the Top Ten Records of the First Decade of the 21st Century. Bloody brilliant, perfectly consistent, accomplishes *exactly* what they set out to do. Full of beautiful distortion and lovely catchiness. Great fucking record.

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They Say All Media Guide

The Raveonettes barely gave listeners a glimpse of their cinematic brilliance with their Whip It On EP. One listen to their first studio full-length, The Chain Gang of Love, and you’ll know it immediately. The crash and charm of this 13-song set exceeds any kind of glorious expectations laid out at the beginning, and the Raveonettes probably want it that way. Sune Rose Wagner and Sharin Foo go for a much bigger sound this time around. The Chain Gang of Love is far more glossy and layered in melodies compared to Whip It On’s gray-colored coolness. Having legendary producer Richard Gottehrer (Blondie, Marshall Crenshaw, the Go-Go’s) at the helm doesn’t hurt either, for he captures the Raveonettes’ true pop essence with style. Forget those rules of keeping it to three chords recorded in B-flat minor. The Raveonettes indulge themselves in the finer elements of mid-’80s post-punk/noise pop (think Jesus & Mary Chain) and combine it with sheer pop melodies of the ’50 and ’60s for a sexy rock & roll picture show. From the fantastic pop jaunt of “The Great Love Sound” to the pulsating rockabilly blend of “Let’s Rave On” and “Heartbreak Stroll,” The Chain Gang of Love finds the Danish duo embracing influences of the past, but the Raveonettes tweak things ever so slightly to make them their own. The Chain Gang of Love isn’t suffocated in garage rock fashion alone, either. Foo and Wagner’s low vocals may hint at such a display, but overall their smooth pop presentation won’t be pigeonholed. The Raveonettes, more or less, honor great pop moments of yesteryear, in hopes of positioning themselves and the rock scene in general for something grand later on. – MacKenzie Wilson

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