Real Life Is No Cool

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (111 ratings)
Real Life Is No Cool album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 47:23

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Quite the earworm

joeyjojojnrshabadoo

Bought it for the catchy car commercial track (#2) but found the entire album absorbing. Track 10 might easily make my top 5 tracks of the year list.

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Baby Can't Stop

word-ape

Wanna Be Starting Something.

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quite absorbing

Lukeso

I didn´t like Lindstrom´s previous work for its machine-like boredom. but add an angel voice and you get quite a mixture of exquisite beats and some great vocals. whereas at first listen I loved tracks 1,2,6 the most, after having listened to it stoned I always go first for So Much Fun. great psychedelia, just dig deeper.

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Very good

JossWhedon-fan

My favorite track so far is "Baby Can't Stop." Sounds an awful like "Wanna Be Startin' Something" by Michael Jackson. Which is a very, VERY good thing.

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Lindstrom

By philip sherburne, eMusic Contributor

It's hard to believe that Oslo's Hans-Peter Lindstrom has only been releasing music since 2003. In that time, he's turned out a formidable array of singles, produced dozens of remixes for everyone from LCD Soundsystem to the Boredoms and released four studio albums, including two joint efforts with his frequent partner-in-crime Prins Thomas. Throughout it all, his name has become virtually synonymous with the outer-limits disco revival. Drawing not just from Italo and space disco… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Hans-Peter Lindstrøm and Christabelle have been familiar with one another since 2001, when the latter casually recorded vocals over some of the formerÂ’s tracks. This led to full-fledged collaborations, and a handful of modern electro-disco singles issued across the following several years. First, there was the dreamy, slightly narcotized “Music (In My Mind),” released in 2003. In 2007, there was the flirty and Moroder-propulsive “LetÂ’s Practise,” as well as a cover of Vangelis’ “Let It Happen,” which converted the originalÂ’s phantasmic space-folk into something far more inviting, sheathed in bright, Modernist-like cyclic prickles. Then, toward the end of 2009, the duo released “Baby CanÂ’t Stop,” a gorgeous, breezy fusion of candy-coated synth-funk rhythms, sophisti-pop horns, fidgety guitar wriggles cribbed from Off the Wall, and ChristabelleÂ’s most confident, extroverted vocal to that point. (She’s more likely to resemble the half-awake kid sister of Kim Carnes.) All of these songs (most of them in slightly edited form) are featured on Real Life Is No Cool, an album full of productions that are succinct — by LindstrømÂ’s normally widescreen standard, at least — yet stuffed with sumptuous sonic twists, many of which masterfully recombine familiar elements of dance-pop from the late ‘70s through the early ‘90s. Just about all of the new tracks would make fine A-sides, though they all fall into place as part of a flowing album, from a charmingly tentative, momentum-gathering opener (“Looking for What”), to a chiming kind of ambient holding pattern that acts as a bridge between “Let It Happen” and “Music in My Mind” (“Keep It Up”), to a sighing romantic closer seemingly made for the Nordic equivalent of a blue-light basement party (“High and Low”). “So Much Fun” is the absolute best of the new tracks, a rapid rush of ecstatic piano house. – Andy Kellman

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