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Virgin Suicides

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (19 ratings)
Virgin Suicides album cover
01
Playground Love (With Gordon Tracks)
3:32
$1.29
02
Clouds Up
1:28
$1.29
03
Bathroom Girl
2:24
$1.29
04
Cemetary Party
2:35
$1.29
05
Dark Messages
2:28
$1.29
06
The Word Hurricane
2:31
$1.29
07
Dirty Trip
6:11
$1.29
08
Highschool Lover
2:41
$1.29
09
Afternoon Sister
2:23
$1.29
10
Ghost Song
2:14
$1.29
11
Empty House
2:36
$1.29
12
Dead Bodies
2:56
$1.29
13
Suicide Underground
5:31
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 39:30

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eMusic Features

0

Who Are…Peaking Lights

By Marc Hogan, eMusic Contributor

Indra Dunis and Aaron Coyes, the married duo behind Peaking Lights, say they plan to get "2011 tattoos." 2011 was the year they moved from Wisconsin, where she grew up, back to California, where he did, and where, up the coast in the San Francisco Bay Area, the two originally met. It's also the year Dunis and Coyes released Peaking Lights' breakout album, 936, welcomed their son, Mikko, into the world, and started recording their… more »

0

New This Week: Sharon Van Etten, Twilight Sad & More

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

OK! Are you guys ready to get bummed out? Because it's the week before Valentine's Day and, man, do we have some sad records for you. I mean, sad even for indie rock, which has sad basically branded into its DNA. So if you're ready to be heartbroken, let's get going. Sharon Van Etten, Tramp: Basically, the only record you need today. A great leap forward from her previous, folky outings, Tramp finds Van Etten falling… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Two years after the arrival of their debut album, the French twosome Air returned, not with a proper sophomore LP, but with The Virgin Suicides, a full soundtrack to the directing debut of Sophia Coppola. Only one track, “Playground Love,” has vocals, and that comes from an outsider (Gordon Tracks) who sounds more like the Auteurs’ Luke Haines than Beth Hirsch, the only real vocalist employed previously. The trademarked Air sound is for the most part unchanged; as on Moon Safari, producers Godin and Dunckel rely on contemplative electronic mood-music in a minor key, heavy on the analog synth and organ yet with plenty of traditional textures (guitar, brass, strings, live-sounding drums) in keeping with lounge music and space-pop from the 1960s and ’70s. And though all the music here is as meticulously detailed as the tracks on Moon Safari, the soundtrack cultivates an atmosphere more in league with traditional scoring — instead of focusing on pop songs in an electronic context, Air constructed these tracks as mere soundbytes, simple themes with little embellishment on the basic ideas. Of course, that’s perfectly in keeping with the secondary role soundtracks should play to truly serve the movies for which they’re composed. Listeners eager for a second dose of the exquisite electronic pop found on Moon Safari will be pleased with much of The Virgin Suicides, but will probably have to wait until Air’s proper follow-up to find more evidence of their greatness. – John Bush

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