Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts

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Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 56:51

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Dead Cities, Red Seas and Lost Ghosts

TUNETASTER

Love M83 but I'm sorry to say the best that I like about this album is the album cover. The album is an interesting project but no more. Maybe I haven't given it a serious enough listen but there is insufficient stimulus material here to call me back for multiple re-listenings.

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Amazing cacaphonic feast

Anaxamaxan

I can't get over Igjarjuk's review. Spot on. Noise, but gorgeous, sometimes crystalline. Highly recommended.

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M83 at their best

igjarjuk

The sound of skyscrapers thrusting through the upper atmosphere only to be torn apart by cosmic rays and solar flares, with stone, steel and wire shimmering as they tumble back toward the earth. Majestic noise.

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By far their / his best, in my opinion

logic1000

This is my 2nd favorite album of all time. I like to think of it as: The story of the end of the world, as told by a machine. Track 10 has always stood out to me as a poor fit for this album, but I think that the rest of the tracks are absolutely necessary. I really hope that M83 will return to this level of greatness in the future.

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On the list as one of the most radiant keyboard albums, M83′s absurdly lush Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts combines a small arsenal of antiquated synths and drum machines with a shoegaze aesthetic to create a giant starburst of sound and analog miasma. A French duo comprised of Nicolas Fromageau and Anthony Gonzalez, the pair’s songs seem to evolve from one major chord to the next with tremendous velocity, always accumulating dense new layers of sound along the way. The keyboards throb, quiver, arpeggiate, and drone with such unbridled intensity that there’s rarely any space (or need) for anything else. But while the shrill analog thrash of “America,” the frenzied overload of “0078H,” and the sustained crescendo of “Noise” certainly prove beyond doubt that guitars needn’t be a prerequisite for post-rock dramatics, M83 are so much more than just a quiet-loud-quiet-loud outfit with a twist. As evidenced by the singsongy hymnal of “In Church,” the sweetly sung vocals on “Run Into Flowers,” and the provincial chimes of final track “Beauties Can Die,” M83 is a keyboard band of the best kind: one with nuance, tone, thrash, and color. – Mark Pytlik

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