The Free Design: The Now Sound Redesigned

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The Free Design: The Now Sound Redesigned album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 60:45

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Good. Bad value

ellyllon

This is a really good collection of songs, but I begrudge paying for all the 'interlude' tracks. It costs 5 credits to purchase 2 mins 47 playing time. I'd be tempted to skip purchasing the interludes, but then you are losing something from the album. Come on eMusic, sort it out please.

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Excellent Intro To Free Design

ferris09bueller

A paintbox of sounds...my favorite of which is I FOUND LOVE from Styrofoam and Sharon Shannon. Brings back the sunny, giddy joy of a single that you can't hear enough. Pure joy.

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springtime with madlib

sillyilly

The free design is an intersting anomoly from the sixties which appears, for good reason, to have been taken up by the stones throw/ioda crew. The free design is this sort of poppy, I guess bubblegummy quartet but they have this sort of contemporary air to them akin to the meloncholy musisings of air, stereolab etc. Well in comes madlib, kid koala, danger mouse to name a few under I assume the production of PB wolf. Long Story short pick it up. Reminiscent of Edans Beauty and the Beat perhaps or the secret records Dudley Perkins only plays for the ladies.

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They Say All Music Guide

The Seattle label Light in the Attic began reissuing Free Design records in 2003, an overdue and most welcome development. Around the same time with the help of Peanut Butter Wolf they began roping in artists to remix and reimagine Free Design tracks. Originally issued as a series of 12″ singles, the results are collected on The Now Sound Redesigned. A nice mix of hip-hop heads like Madlib, Danger Mouse, Murs, Kid Koala, and PB Wolf, electronic boffins like Caribou, Nobody, and Sharpshooters, and indie poppers like Stereolab, the High Llamas, Chris Geddes from Belle & Sebastian, and Super Furry Animals contributed to the effort, and you can gauge the reputation of the Free Design by the high quality of names who dug the group enough to be involved. Most of them kept large chunks of the source material, whether the pristine vocal harmonies or the ornate orchestral backings. Only a few deliver mixes that really hijack the originals, namely Danger Mouse and Murs (who turn “To a Black Boy” into a fiery condemnation of the prison sentence of a young athlete), Peanut Butter Wolf (who splices bits of Steve Miller’s “Fly Like an Eagle” on his alternately head-scratching and head-nodding demolition of “Umbrellas), and Caribou (who stretches “Dorian Benediction” into an epic-length electronic symphony with lots of clanking bells). Otherwise the feeling is playful but reverential with numerous standout tracks. The Stereolab/High Llamas collaboration mixes five or six Free Design tunes into a sparkling chamber piece. Madlib adds filthy funk bass and stuttering drums to “Where Do I Go,” sending it straight to a place you never thought you’d hear the Free Design, the dancefloor. Chris Geddes and Hush Puppy add a heady sense of humor and energy to their hilarious and energetic take on “2002 – A Hit Song.” Kid Koala and Dynomite D. essay a suitably restrained, scratch-filled, and doomy trip-hop version of the Free Design’s most emotional song, “An Elegy.” Surprisingly with a project like this, there are only a few dud tracks, Stryofoam and Sarah Shannon (ex-Velocity Girl) turn in a hammy guitar rock version of the wonderful “I Found Love” and do what had seemed impossible: they manage to strip the joy right out of it. Mellow likewise remove all the fun from “Kites Are Fun” on a cover version that should be titled “Kites Are Bland.” And for some reason, Dudley Perkins thought it would be a good idea for him to ramble on and on uninterestingly over Kousik’s bouncy and sweet mix of “Don’t Cry Baby.” These moments are easy to overlook when the rest of the album is so nice, sweet, and interesting. A fitting tribute to the group, and if it gets a hip-hop fan or indie kid to discover the original beauty and wonder of the Free Design, the collection will have done its job. – Tim Sendra

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