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Danse Macabre

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (91 ratings)
Danse Macabre album cover
01
Agenda Suicide
3:57 $0.99
02
Glass Danse
2:58 $0.99
03
Total Job
2:16 $0.99
04
Let the Poison Spill from Your Throat
4:01 $0.99
05
Your Retro Career Melted
3:49 $0.99
06
Posed to Death
3:08 $0.99
07
The Conductor
4:42 $0.99
08
Violent
5:35 $0.99
09
Ballad of a Paralysed Citizen
4:27 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 34:53

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Rock and Roll to dance too

ToddD

These guys are cool. I've listened to most of the stuff they have released and this album I think is the best, although they are all pretty decent. see them live, they have a cool show.

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Don't stop dancing

akaidrummer

The sounds are reminiscent of early industrial electro, but the songs are developed, hooky, and catchy. They just toured with Ladytron, and the sounds are similar, but the feel isn't. The Faint's energy is infectious!

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The '80s Live Forever

Compulsive

One of my favorite finds of 2001, I love this whole album. I remember frequently blasting it in my car on the way to a club at midnight (where the DJ would happily spin songs like "Your Retro Career Melted" while the kids who were kids the last time this music was fashionable would hop around). And The Faint's live show is a blast.

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Do you remember 2001?

Presto

It's hard to believe that this electro dance rock stuff has been going on all decade. But here it is, proof.

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They Say All Music Guide

In popular music one thing is for certain: old genres never die or completely fade away; they just recycle. On Danse Macabre the Faint lovingly and accurately resurrect all that was memorable/forgettable about the disposable hits of 1980s: repetitive dance beats propelled by sterile drum machines, monotone vocals, spastic outbursts of cacophony, and hypnotic keyboard synthesizer motifs. But don’t hold that against them. Like Soft Cell, Human League, Gary Numan, and Kraftwerk, the Faint have the ability to pen strong hooks, most notably in the tracks “Posed to Death,” “Let the Poison Spill,” and “The Conductor,” which would have been monster hits in the dawn of the age of MTV. The lyrics are decadent but not offensive, often spinning surrealistic tales that vaguely detail the seamy side of disco-club life. Proudly wearing their new romantic/new wave heart on their collective sleeve, the Faint offer a campy yet playfully dark collection that is purely an exercise in Reagan-era pop-culture nostalgia. – Tom Semioli

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