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Faking The Books

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (159 ratings)
Faking The Books album cover
01
Faking The Books
3:59 $0.99
02
Call 1-800-Fear
3:24 $0.99
03
Micronomic
3:23 $0.99
04
Small Things
3:40 $0.99
05
B-Movie
3:13 $0.99
06
People I Know
3:03 $0.99
07
Grin & Bear
4:41 $0.99
08
Geography-5
2:27 $0.99
09
Left Handed
3:43 $0.99
10
Alienation
4:01 $0.99
11
Crawling By Numbers
2:52 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:26

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Write a Review 6 Member Reviews

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Aural Sedation

Grubenstier

I read all the rave reviews here on eMusic and then randomly listened to a few tracks and thought, ok, it will grow on me eventually. So, I downloaded all 3 works...unfortunately. This is such completely and utterly boring, unimagnitve and uninspiring music. There are much better choices in this genre here on eMusic than this!!

user avatar

Brilliant, as expected

thegitdown

Harder and more rock-influenced than their earlier releases - they've really pushed the drums and guitar forward to excellent effect (B-Movie). Combine that with sensitive glitchy laptop atmospherics (title track and Small Things) and Valerie's excellent lyrics (Call 1-800-FEAR, and the rest of the album too), and IMO it was one of the best albums of the year and I still listen to it regularly.

user avatar

At last!

Yuiwork

Thank you Emusic!

user avatar

Not a bunch of loops

BobHair

The Stereolab comparison isn't apt, IMHO. These guys are more like a pop band with electronica elements. Track 10 is the best thing here, absolutely gorgeous. But just about everything else on this record is swell, too. If I had to pick two others for a mix tape, I'd go with tracks 1 and 7.

user avatar

I'd rather listen to Stereolab

auraladdy'd

I heard a couple of tracks somewhere else... perhaps an earlier album? Unfortunately, this stuff just doesn't do it for me.

user avatar

A Very Good Listen

toosday

Both lush and bubbly all at the same time. This is pure gorgeous electronica. I love it!

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They Say All Music Guide

Lali Puna don’t allow their soft electronic-pop to be washed out by the sharp guitars that occasionally poke out of this, the group’s third album for Morr Music. Those who picked up 2003′s “Left Handed” single — provided again on this disc — were possibly taken aback by the instant buzzing surge in the chorus of the A-side, and, excepting the electronic noise that flutters deep in the background throughout the song, it’s as ordinarily constructed as a hook-heavy indie rock tune. Though it’s as effective and as charming as any other, crossing the pensive drive of New Order with the jagged bounce of the missed Life Without Buildings, it’s free of the cozy synth-generated colors that helped make the group stand out from their peers on 2001′s Scary World Theory. The rest of Faking the Books tends not to follow this mold. Electronic elements balance out the harsh guitars with regularity, resulting in a handful of full-blown zingers. These songs — “Call 1-800-FEAR,” “Micronomic,” “B-Movie” — bring the wallop, involving queasy synth bleats and blasting guitars in equal doses, along with melodies that are as sweet as ever. Several other tracks are either truer to the older material or slightly more experimental than what you’re used to hearing from them. “Geography-5″ is a skeletal lullaby with spare percussion and purring synths; “Alienation” and “Crawling by Numbers” fit in strings while also acting as safe havens for listeners who have been antagonized by too much lazy glitch stuff. As stunted as Valerie Trebeljahr’s politically minded lyrics might be from time to time, her voice remains a comforting thing to hear. All of these highlights add up to the best Teen Beat record not released by Teen Beat. – Andy Kellman

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