When I Explode

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When I Explode album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 30:56

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When he explodes, I enjoy the result...

FAllen1975

Sadly, I moved out of St. Louis before ever getting a chance to see these guys in action. Living in St. Louis, I was always frustrated about never having a unified "sound" like so many other cities (see Kansas City in the Mid-90's, Seattle, San Diego). But if the young cats in St. Louis are looking for influence, take these guys as a good jumping off point. Sure, there is the DC (Dismemberment Plan and Q & Not U) influence. But I hear more of a pop edge. I have had this album for a couple of years and when one of the songs pops back up on my iPod, I invariably hear myself singing along and singing along to the resonating song in my memory hours later. The D'Plan seemed to go for the heart and Q¬ U the throat. These guys go to get your feet movin'.

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They Say All Music Guide

It’s been said that imitation is the highest form of flattery, but if the Dismemberment Plan were an adjective, the term would stick to Missouri/Illinois dance-punk outfit So Many Dynamos — read it backward — like a sea lamprey on a Midwest game fish. The good news is that for the most part they pull it off, blending angular guitar licks with deep, rhythmic synths, overdriven drums, and the pained vocals of frontman Ryan Ballew into a disco ball of angst that would make the perpetually depressed Travis Morrison do the backspin. When I Explode is relentless in its execution, a compliment to the preternatural rhythm section. Handclaps fuel the brutal “Heat/Humidity” into a full dervish spin with murderous intentions — “God, you make a lot of noise in the trunk of my car” — and hard-panned guitars riff off of the opening lick to “Marquee Moon” with dizzying results on “When We Were Machines.” Despite the occasional dud — the whiny, obligatory heroin overdose song (“These Things Happen”) — When I Explode manages to simultaneously celebrate the object of its affection and decree it dead without losing sleep over either. – James Christopher Monger

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