eMusic Review 0
In 2001, Anthony Gonzalez and Nicolas Fromageau achieved cold fusion of synth pop and Casio symphonies in a bedroom studio in the idyllic French Riviera port town of Antibes. Their self-titled debut as M83 showed a studied appreciation for Brian Eno and Can and stirred up the shoegaze underground, but it was a mere preview for bigger productions to come. With their follow-up Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts, the duo explored a range of tonal colors previously known only to Claude Debussy and Kevin Shields, interlocking up to 20 keyboard parts on a single track.
If audiences embraced the group's cinematic qualities, consider 2005's Before the Dawn Heals Us a young indie filmmaker's first Hollywood blockbuster. With Fromageau absent and Gonzalez alone in the director's chair, Dawn goes supernova all over M83's formerly subdued melodies. The theremin choir on album opener "Moonchild" provides a four-and-a-half-minute godray, "Can't Stop" is a pop sugar packet swiped from the café table of fellow Frenchmen Phoenix, and "A Guitar and a Heart" sounds like a video game version of a hypnotic Queens of the Stone Age riff. A stickler for continuity and plot, Gonzalez sprinkles bits of dialogue (in… read more »