The Light User Syndrome

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The Light User Syndrome album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 68:58

eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of Can’s Tago Mago

By Michelangelo Matos, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

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eMusic Yearbook: 2002

By Michelangelo Matos, eMusic Contributor

Maybe it's a coincidence that three fabulous and endlessly eclectic DJ mix-CDs - John Peel's FabricLive 07, 2 Many DJ's As Heard on Radio Soulwax Pt. 2, and DJ /rupture's Minesweeper Suite - all came out in 2002. But it sure didn't feel that way at the time. Of course, eclectic DJ mixes were nothing new; they'd been a standard from at least 1995, when Coldcut released 70 Minutes of Madness. But 2002 was a… more »

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Icon: The Fall

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

Roughly 75 people have been members of the Fall over the last three decades or so, but only one of them has been in every lineup: inimitable vocalist/lyricist/ranter Mark E. Smith, whose singular and monomaniacal vision drives the band. Smith's a bristling, hyperliterate, deeply eccentric presence, with a thick Manchester accent and a permanent scowl directed at a world that can't keep up with him; he's also got an ear for a riff like nobody's… more »

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An Introduction to the Monks

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

Imagine this scenario. You're in a club somewhere in Germany, watching the crudest, funniest garage-rock band you've ever seen. They're wearing monastic robes and nooses around their necks; they've shaved their heads into tonsures. One of them is playing a banjo, with which the PA system is ill-equipped to deal. The drummer's technique is pleasingly caveman-like. The guitar player is blitzing the crowd with feedback. The singer is gibbering like a lunatic, screaming "DO YOU… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Light User Syndrome is The Fall’s first post-Craig Scanlon album, and introduces Julia Nagle, who took over keyboards from the departing Dave Bush, and also contributes some guitar. Brix Smith and Karl Burns cover the rest of the guitar, and while Scanlon is missed, the end results work well enough. The crisp, live edge to the recording is attractive, but oddly enough, leaves a lot of space in the mix — Mark E. Smith and Nagle’s keyboards have pride of place along with Steve Hanley’s bass guitar (give an ear to “Das Vulture Ans Ein Nutter-Wain”). Smith himself seems to be searching for lyrics more than once, and while he comes up with his usual collection of acid-tongued zingers, other times he seems to be making vocal noise for the sake of it — nothing wrong with that, but still, one expects more. Though the album takes a little while to get started, when it does, the winners start coming in droves, such as the attractive Brix Smith/Mark E. Smith duet “Spinetrap,” and the nervy, brisk bite of “Oleano,” which sounds like an endless alarm bringing out the paranoia. There’s some fiery aggression flaring up more than once as well, as “He Pep!” and especially the lengthy, roaring clatter and blast of “Interlude/Chilinism” show. The addition of another pretty/sharp exchange between Brix Smith and Mark E. Smith makes the latter all the more entertaining. In terms of unexpected covers, the Fall do have another winner — Johnny Paycheck’s “Stay Away (Old White Train),” sung by Smith with an appropriate, if terribly amusing, drawl. Speaking of singing — more than once, co-producer Mike Bennett shares the vocals with Smith — a surprising change to say the least! The odd geographical confusion track “Cheethan Hill” shows how well that can actually work, with Bennett taking a clearer lead while Smith, unsurprisingly, does the “sing from one room over” approach. [Two extra tracks are available on this edition.] – Ned Raggett

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Activity

  • 02.12.11 Look pal, Elvis was the king, right? To me, Elvis were king
  • 02.12.11 The working class has been shafted So what the fuck you sneering at?
  • 02.12.11 Jingles! Cabaret! Merseybeat!
  • 02.12.11 Then they have Carl Lewis on He's got a ponytail and he's a vegan He talks a lot of wind
  • 02.12.11 Recruited some gremlins To get me clear of the airline routes
  • 02.12.11 I can't stick musicians. I can't stand them, and being stuck in a studio with them I think that's my strength I can hear what they can't.
  • 10.21.10 And so backwards I look back with a scalpel eye on afternoons wandering the city with a flapping bag of cans for company.
  • 10.21.10 None of the rubbish had been cleaned up. And there were all these ghouls around the rubble. Not one of them is helping.
  • 10.21.10 I am one of the 3 per cent who was made to take speed.
  • 10.17.10 We're living in a re-issue world, filching from the past like magpies with a Tardis.
  • 10.17.10 I always thought Peron was a good sort, a good chap, definitively not a tosser.
  • 10.13.10 For some odd reason they think they know best.