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Audio, Video, Disco.

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (50 ratings)
Audio, Video, Disco. album cover
01
Horsepower
3:42
$1.29
02
Civilization
4:10
$0.99
03
Ohio
4:01
$1.29
04
Canon (Primo)
0:27
$1.29
05
Canon
3:39
$1.29
06
On'n'On
4:30
$1.29
07
Brianvision
3:11
$1.29
08
Parade
4:01
$1.29
09
New Lands
4:14
$1.29
10
Helix
4:31
$1.29
11
Audio, Video, Disco.
4:52
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 41:18

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eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

10.24.11
Embracing dance pop as the new arena rock
2011 | Label: Ed Banger Records/Because/Elektra

While the indie-rock nation was warming up to electronic genres like dubstep and chillwave, Top 40 radio, almost overnight, was turning mainstream dance pop into the new arena rock. Behind every Lady Gaga, Black Eyed Peas and David Guetta is the impulse to make as many people as possible feel ridiculously good using broad strokes of synthetic keyboards that routinely replicate the power chords of yesterday’s axe-wielding guitar gods.

Despite their indie-trained self-deprecating image, Frenchmen Gaspard Augé and Xavier de Rosnay wholeheartedly embrace shameless crowd-pleasing in the arena-disco fusion they engineer as Justice. Discarding the brutish, super-distorted beats of their 2007 debut , Audio, Video, Disco offers sweeter, more fully realized songs sung by Ali Love, Diamond Nights’ Morgan Phalen and Midnight Juggernauts’ Vincenzi Vendetta that recall Daft Punk’s transition from the groove-based Homework to the distinctly more melodic Discovery.

Although Augé and de Rosnay talked a good game about Audio being the daytime pastoral alternative to the nocturnal urbanity of , the results are more Laserium-friendly than ever: Check those spiraling guitars exploding in harmony on “Canon” as they pay tribute to “Strawberry Letter 23,” the Shuggie Otis psychedelic soul jam popularized by the Brothers Johnson. Like… read more »

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Progressive Electro

burke.leo

It's like if the French duo went back in time to 1975, and saw a Rush concert, and decided to do a Prog-Rock-Electro album. Roger Dean should have done the cover art.

user avatar

wtf. No.

sixtwentysix

I don't know what happened but these guys seemed to lose everything that made the first record good and replace it with keyboard noodling. No thanks.

user avatar

Rawr getting better and better!

kukumber

This cd rocks! Imagine the first one without that female vocals and now a male one. It is a bit more rockish. Kinda reminds me of Journey

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They Say All Music Guide

In their first half-decade of existence, the great paradox of the French duo known as Justice is that they have always been familiar, and yet you can’t quite pin them down. No one could advocate for their debut full-length without mentioning Daft Punk, but the unique Justice voice was there in the mix too, becoming more obvious with each return visit. Four years later, its follow-up comes with the same appeal as prog rock, pop-metal, and that big drum thunk of the ‘80s, which are all touchstones for the overall sound. Still, the heart of the album comes from the duo’s increasingly good songs and performance touches that are identifiably Augé and de Rosnay, as dreamy vocals echo underneath crisp percussion and very Euro-styled synths. Guitars plays a bigger role than ever as “Brianvision” comes with some Phil Manzanera-style riffage, while “New Lands” brings reminders of the Cars in all their new wave glory. Just so the dancefloors don’t go hungry, the rhythmic thump is present on big singles like “Civilization”, the title track, and the great “Helix,” which sounds like Italo-disco going post-punk. With so many genres having heavy influences on this mash, Audio, Video, Disco might just be the quintessential example of pop music in the Internet world where everything is available, and available to shuffle, but the main point is good times, great record. – David Jeffries

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