Future Perfect

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (229 ratings)
Future Perfect album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 51:53

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Brilliant

jtap66

Melodic, agressive, moody, textured...I could go on and on with the adjectives. This album is a showcase of musical ability. A few tracks evoke Sonic Youth in their prime. The drumming? Sublime. At turns funky and in-your-face agressive. You must download this. I insist.

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insanity

truetaco

the last few minutes of "great days for the passenger element" are the best. they make the hairs on my neck stand up, the goosebumps on my arms poke out, and i question reality for just a split second...truly awesome album!

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Fantastic

Chicago1

I once skipped a class because I didn't want to stop listening to this album.

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Thanks To The Monkeys

tresadorable

Not "The Monkees," mind you. Favorite tracks: Capital Kind Of Strain, Subzero Fun, Asleep At The Trigger

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Great album!

SeriousPoo

A great Shoegazer / Noise Rock album, with some amazing sounds and sonic washes to get lost in.

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Success!

TheGuy

Finally! E-music loves me! (If you've never heard of Autolux, simply download the first track. Genius. And the drumming....)

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Nothing Misses

Beel

I've been living with this record for 4 years. It is worth it.

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A little hit-and-miss, but...

MatthewB

...a couple of great tracks: Try the dynamic "Here Comes Everybody" and mesmerizing "Asleep at the Trigger."

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They Say All Music Guide

After tenures in overlooked ’90s outfits like Ednaswap and Failure, the members of Los Angeles’ Autolux joined forces. The fruits of their labor have yielded Future Perfect, an album that triumphs as it defies expectations. Meshing the guitar blur of the shoegazer movement (Lush, My Bloody Valentine, Pale Saints) with traces of indie rock royalty (Sonic Youth, Ivy), it’s hardly what you might expect producer T-Bone Burnett to stand behind. But the trio excels as it thumbs its nose at the new wave revival movement of the early 21st century via the hypnotic “Sugarless,” the lilting and riff-sturdy “Trigger,” and the menacing whirl of “Blanket.” If the aforementioned numbers highlight Greg Edwards’ guitar antics and bassist/vocalist Eugene Goreshter’s twee vocal approach, the band’s secret weapon is drummer Carla Azar, who is not just skilled behind the kit. Azar’s pipes sound eerily similar to Kim Deal’s Pixies efforts on “Angry Candy” and “Here Comes Everybody,” which are arguably the band’s finest moments. – John D. Luerssen

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