Zonoscope

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Zonoscope album cover
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EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 61:21

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J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

J. Edward Keyes has been writing about music for nearly 15 years, a fact he occasionally finds terrifying. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, the Village V...more »

01.26.11
Not altering their approach so much as tempering it
2011 | Label: Modular Fontana

The Melbourne band Cut Copy have built a career on updating the electropop of the 1980s. Suave, dour and evincing the appropriate amount of heartsickness, their first two albums were full of steadily percolating songs that bathed downcast melodies in pulsing LEDs. They were also saturated with an artful melancholia: Cut Copy write the kind of songs that take place at two in the morning, and usually at a high school drama club after-party. Imagine if the first few Depeche Mode records were gracefully understated instead of flamboyant and chic and you're getting close.

On Zonoscope, Cut Copy don't alter their approach so much as temper it: The rhythms are a little less insistent, the focus more on sharpening the details rather than deepening the groove. What emerges is an album of moments rather than anthems: The krautrocky drone of "Alisa" gets sporadically attacked by hornet's nest guitars; "Take Me All Over" sports a guitar line that's little more than a nervous twitch and a bass line that's eerily similar to Men At Work's "Down Under," but its backdrop is a cornucopia of weird rattles, miniature congos and synths that sparkle in the distance like the aurora borealis. "Pharoahs & Pyramids"… read more »

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Great Album! One of the best of the year!

djpal1

This is the type of album people may initially buy for one or two tracks and then slowly discover the richness of each and every other track after repeated listenings.

user avatar

Showing some growth

eJDL

Where 'Bright Like Neon Love' was full of good idea's, the execution often failed to live up to the premise. 'In Ghost Colours' remedied that short coming and the payofff was a album that held up to repeated listens. 'Zonoscope' wisely chooses not to put itself across as 'In Ghost Colours II' and while this may disappoint some listeners, the result is a focused, cohesive album that shows Cut Copy has now has a clear idea of what they're trying to put across and how to do it - effectively. The first half of the album takes little effort to appreciate - the second half a few more listens, but fans are sure to enjoy it. And the fifteen minute 'Sun God'? Well, I suppose it boils down to whether you're in the mood for it or not. With a distinctive eighties vibe, lots of percussion harking back to Hunters & Collectors - or event Men at Work(!), and synths that recalling the heady days of Section 25, they somehow manage not to slip into pastiche. I'm looking forward to their next release.

user avatar

A decent follow-up to In Ghost Colours

HELENSKALA

I agree that the best track is Sun God, but I'm a sucker for super long tracks. Try Where I'm Going or Hanging Onto Every Heartbeat if you're undecided about downloading the entire album.

user avatar

Pleasant, if a little flat

Needlz

It's got good production, "tasteful" being the most succinct description I can offer. Not a bad background or beach album, but I find it lacking power. It doesn't really ask much of the listener.

user avatar

Transcendence

tkdcoach

Having lived through the 1980s can safely say this record both incorporates and then transcends the sounds and zeitgeist. It is entirely up to date and the best record of 2011 so far and one of the best records of recent years, period.

user avatar

Great album-who cares if it's derivative..

adams4069

Sun God is the best track, despite it's 15 minute length. I happened to love the 80's bands they are "copying", as some are so boldly stating. Whatever genre one finds, there will be comparisons to some era or bands. I couldn't care less who dislikes this album, no matter the reason. Any album that gets me excited is a rarity these days, and Zonoscope does just that.

user avatar

Very nice!

Cman

With big nods to some of the 80s better "new wave" bands, Cut Copy has managed to make a throwback album, that stays rooted in the current time. Upbeat and fun, but shows some darkness at times, its a well-balanced collection. "Need you Now," is a perfect second coming of "Enola Gay."

user avatar

Nice music,

Joseph93

but can't hold my attention for very long; it's just so conservative and frankly boring.

user avatar

in the zone

thegrandwazoo

as if the 80s were a negative vein to mine, woodsport? -- bad day, maybe? -- more sophisticated than their last (more variation), but equally, if not more pleasing -- moving in a + direction, me thinks

user avatar

not loving it

woodsport

I listened to too much music in this vein in the 80's. It seems fairly well constructed but I'm just not feeling it this time around.

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Cut Copy’s 2008 album In Ghost Colours was a triumph of late-2000s dance-rock, combining strands of new wave, synth pop, disco, and French house into a glittering, streamlined display of how to make music that was equally adept at getting crowds moving in a club and breaking hearts over headphones late at night. It’s an understatement to say that the follow-up had a lot to live up to, and for the most part, Zonoscope is up to the challenge. There isn’t a single weak track to be found, and though could have easily done so with no side effects, the group didn’t just remake Ghost, they made some subtle alterations here and there to their approach. The opening track “Need You Now” is emblematic of the changes in the group’s sound. Dan Whitford’s vocals are more out front, the synths are warmer sounding, and the overall sound is peppier and happier. Where Ghost was a late-night, rain-slicked city streets kind of album at heart, Zonoscope is more of a Technicolor, summer day kind of experience. The tropical drum fills on “Take Me Over,” the impossibly hooky chanted vocals and glam rock beat of “Where I’m Going,” the occasional acoustic guitar that pops up, and the rich vocal harmonies all provide a lightness that the group hadn’t really shown much before. When Cut Copy aren’t beaming sunshine straight out of the speakers, they can still conjure up thick clouds of electric melancholy, as on the brief but swooningly pretty “Strange Nostalgia for the Future” or the midtempo soft rock ballad “Hanging on Every Heartbeat.” They also show that the hazy, hard-edged shoegaze sound of “So Haunted” (from Ghost) was no fluke, as “This Is All We Got” and “Alisha” both sound like they could be early Ride singles (only with fewer guitars and more Xanadu-sounding synths). And their foray into vaguely political sloganeering on “Blink and You’ll Miss a Revolution” would make Heaven 17 proud. The only thing that keeps Zonoscope from being the juggernaut that In Ghost Colours was, is that it lacks a song as drop-dead brilliant as “Hearts on Fire” (though “Where I’m Going” comes close) and it includes the clunky, somewhat corny-sounding “Corner of the Sky,” which comes off as a bit too Frankie Goes to Hollywood to stand up to the greatness that surrounds it. One tiny misstep doesn’t derail the album, though, and Zonoscope ends up being a very worthy successor to In Ghost Colours. Thanks to its beauty, warmth, and top-rate songwriting, Cut Copy remain atop the pile of dance-rock groups in 2011, right next to LCD Soundsystem. – Tim Sendra

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