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Holy Ghost!

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (100 ratings)
Holy Ghost! album cover
01
Do It Again
4:13 $0.99
02
Wait And See
3:40 $0.99
03
Hold My Breath
3:57 $0.99
04
Say My Name
6:35 $0.99
05
Jam For Jerry
4:45 $0.99
06
Hold On
5:57 $0.99
07
It's Not Over
4:11 $0.99
08
Slow Motion
3:48 $0.99
09
Static On The Wire
6:26 $0.99
10
Some Children
5:51 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 49:23

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eMusic Review 0

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Dorian Lynskey

eMusic Contributor

04.11.11
Electro-pop with enough production smarts to keep things interesting
2011 | Label: DFA / Revolver

You shall know Holy Ghost! by the company they keep. New Yorkers Alex Frankel and Nick Millhiser have been part of the DFA camp for the past decade, first as members of youthful hip-hop crew Automato and then as in-house musicians. Since the duo's debut single, 2007's "Hold On," they have remixed LCD Soundsystem, Cut Copy, MGMT and Phoenix, all of whom leave their mark on this electro-pop debut.

Their most blatantly pop moves sound a little too slick and unconvincing (there's not a "Kids" or a "Lisztomania" here), but they've got the production smarts to keep things interesting. Even the over-perky "Jam for Jerry" turns itself around with a glittering disco coda, while the deadpan slow motion grooves of "Do It Again" and "Some Children" (featuring yacht-rock smoothie Michael McDonald) are good news to anyone mourning LCD Soundsystem's retirement. Running through it all is a theme of hedonism in straitened circumstances. "I'll take some money from the joint account/ I know I know I know we're running out," sings Frankel on "Hold My Breath", sounding uncannily like Phoenix's Thomas Mars fronting late-'80s Depeche Mode. "I love the city but I hate my job," he declares on the seductive after-hours techno… read more »

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Good-to-great time

Smalltownghosts

Holy Ghost! is a good-to-great time, even in it's linear thinking and unevenness. a full review is available at www.yarnly.com

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0

What We're Listening To: April 2011

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Remember, during the halcyon days of the video store, the "Staff Picks" shelf? The place where employees got to lobby for their favorite films, and the place where you could go for a reliable selection when you just weren't sure what you wanted to watch? We're taking that principle and running with it: eMusic is proud to present this regular, monthly roundup of our editors 'and members 'current faves. Whether it came out 30 years… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Like the most adept synthesists of ‘80s club music — Morgan Geist (Metro Area), Stuart Price (Zoot Woman), Trevor Jackson (Playgroup) — Alex Frankel and Nick Millhiser know their history inside-out and how to manipulate the studio gear that made it. The two have the total package, including but not limited to the zipping synthetic basslines, the wriggling rhythm-guitar lines, the torrents of fleet drums, and the melancholy vocals over a sound that is altogether colorful and uplifting. It’s all done with studious attention to detail and total sincerity, even when they evoke uncool-as-of-2011 mid-’80s reference points like Sly Fox (Frankel’s sung/rapped delivery on “Do It Again”) and stadium-era Simple Minds (the frosty piano on “Wait and See”). The same goes for the keyboard-triggered vocal chirps, the plastic horns, and — oh yeah — Michael McDonald, who’s on the glistening midtempo closer “Slow Children,” not as a stunt but out of necessity. (Frankel had written a part out of his range and used some connections to enlist the soft rock icon.) Three tracks from the duo’s 2007-2010 run of singles and EPs are woven into the sequence, and they’re naturally among the album’s highlights. The new songs are, for the most part, up to that high standard. What doesn’t make a direct hit on the hips and heart is, at the least, well constructed. – Andy Kellman

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