|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Radical Connector

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (105 ratings)
Radical Connector album cover
01
Mine Is In Yours
4:53 $0.99
02
Wipe That Sound
4:11 $0.99
03
Spaceship
4:58 $0.99
04
Send Me Shivers
6:05 $0.99
05
Blood Comes
5:11 $0.99
06
The End
5:11 $0.99
07
Detected Beats
5:17 $0.99
08
All The Old Powers
4:28 $0.99
09
Evoke an Object
8:11 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 48:25

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Philip Sherburne

eMusic Contributor

Philip Sherburne has been writing about music in print and online since the late '90s, with a focus on electronic music (for dancing and otherwise). A native of...more »

04.22.11
Mouse On Mars, Radical Connector
2004 | Label: Thrill Jockey

The title of Mouse On Mars 'newest record works in several ways at once, suggesting not only the way they tie together wildly disparate forms — like musique concrete and R&B — but also how the Cologne duo has managed to thread a wire from its early experiments with ambient sound to a new interest in pop forms. Radical Connector takes all the hallmarks of electronic music at its most "difficult" — abrasive textures, morphed and melted vocal samples, rhythms sourced from digital skips — and fuses them to a sing-along sensibility. (Of course, they're not alone in this: The Clipse's "Grindin'" recently did the same for commercial hip-hop.) Even fans accustomed to the instrumental touches on Idiology may be surprised by the sweeping strings of "Send Me Shivers" (which, in early September, was second only to Steve Earle's "Warrior" on eMusic's Top 20 Songs chart) or the twanging echoes of a countrified Velvet Underground on "Mine Is In Yours." It's impossible not to be caught up in the sweep of vocalist Niobe's delivery, which burns like a blowtorch through layers of effects and processing. In fact, the voice, chopped and looped in stuttering percussive sequences reminiscent of hip-hop beatboxing,… read more »

Write a Review 10 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Underrated

Joseph93

jkfjfnhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhf

user avatar

totally addictive and diverse

Edwin

Mouse on Mars's most accessible. The hooks and well-mixed effects were enough to make me grab the rest of their work, all of which was well worth it, if a little nuttier than this one.

user avatar

interesting

lilxbullxterrier

Downloaded a few of the songs because they caught my attention....the rest can stay where they are.

user avatar

very creative vocals

emilio

As a recent fan of MoM, I like this new album as much as their old stuff. I'd say my favorites in this album are "Wipe that sound", and "Send me shivers" but I appreciate the other tracks, too. Actually, I saw them live performing songs from this album. As was said earlier, I loved their high-energy performance. It was an amazing show in the sense of seeing them control those intricate and weird sounds. I couldn't believe that highly distorted/modulated vocal was live until I saw it :) However, it also takes a little getting used to seeing them live, because you're basically watching two guys sitting and typing and touching knobs on various machines. Except when they's vocalizing of course. ;)

user avatar

stompstompdance

bunny7

quite different from their other stuff, nowhere near as abstract but you still have the glitchy twitchy loops!!! the vocals are used well although risk ruining 1 or 2 tracks. an excellent album!! especially the first few tracks. download it all and stomp your feet and nod your head instead of doing what you intended to do on your pc

user avatar

Mine is in Yours

SugarMixer

Best song on the album. You can get it free on download.com though. Great album!

user avatar

fantastic

gocam

I've never been a tremendous fan of Mouse on Mars recordings, but when I saw them live I was absolutely blown away. If you ever get the chance, run to go see them - this is first album of theirs that approaches the sheer exuberance and energy I felt when watching them live.

user avatar

s'okay

duggie

I recommend "Mine is in yours", "Wipe that sound", and "Blood comes". The rest isn't poppy/funky enough for me.

user avatar

their best album since Autoditacker

goofy

nuff said.

user avatar

What if KLF ate Kid606?

scrawdbloke

What if KLF ate Kid606? There are all kinds of tweaked sounds and textures on this disc, effects-dripping vocals, and THICK heavy beats. A very welcome techno-y addition to my eclecticism...I will be waiting for their future works with open ears...

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Throughout their decade-plus career, Mouse on Mars’ Andi Toma and Jan St. Werner have engaged in a very focused kind of wandering. They’ve moved from the frothy textures of Vulvaland and Iaora Tahiti to the busier, drum’n'bass-inflected Autoditacker to the playful pastoralism of Niun Niggung to Idiology’s rubbery, eclectic pop while, paradoxically, crafting a sound that is distinctively Mouse on Mars. On Radical Connector, Toma, St. Werner, and percussionist/vocalist Dodo Nkishi once again build on what they’ve done before and take it in a very different direction. The album is more overtly pop than anything they’ve done before — each of the tracks features vocals, a first on a Mouse on Mars album — but also harder-edged and more overtly electronic than work such as Idiology. As clichéd as it may be to say it, the album’s title conveys its aesthetic perfectly: tracks like “Mine Is in Yours” and “Spaceship” build on Idiology’s most radically jittery tracks like “Actionist Respoke” and “Introduce,” but take this sound in an immediate, danceable direction. And while the frostbitten, pristine beauty of “Send Me Shivers” — featuring guest vocalist Niobe — borders on the alien, it’s never alienating. But even the album’s most delicate, intellectual moments don’t feel as detached as Mouse on Mars’ past work; Radical Connector has more guts and soul than what has come before it. Nkishi feels more integrated into this album than he did on Idiology, and his blunt, raspy vocals provide some of Radical Connector’s best tracks. Nkishi’s voice is the perfect canvas for Toma and St. Werner to tweak, particularly on the bouncy, oddly tribal “Blood Comes,” where he croaks “it’s interrrrrrrupted” over increasingly busy layers of himself and a relentless beat. Things get even crazier on “All the Old Powers,” a witchy track built around Nkishi’s trippy ramblings and a beat that sounds like it was made from kicking doors open and throwing things against the wall. Best of all, though, is “Wipe That Sound,” a funky, evocative track that’s both sweaty and smart. By the time the glacially gorgeous closer, “Evoke an Object,” finishes, it’s hard to believe that Radical Connector is only nine tracks long; the album is so concentrated that it feels much bigger. This may not be Mouse on Mars’ most ambitious album, but it’s among the group’s most successful — it’s not at all difficult to feel a connection to this truly intelligent dance music. – Heather Phares

more »