Plutonium Blonde

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Plutonium Blonde album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 55:22

eMusic Features

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The Noise of Neu!

By philip sherburne, eMusic Contributor

No history of electronic music would be complete without a chapter dedicated to Kraftwerk, the German quartet who introduced synthesizers and chugging, "motorik" rhythms to pop music - and in so doing laid the groundwork for techno (and left no small mark upon hip-hop as well, given that their "Trans-Europe Express" was heavily sampled for Afrika Baambaata's "Planet Rock"). Fewer genealogists of electronica remember to include the contributions of a group called NEU!, but the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

The folks at ROIR say that this is Legendary Pink Dots’ “most commercially appealing album to date,” and the scary (and kind of cool) thing is that they may well be right. Think about that while you’re listening to “Torchsong,” with its stomping industrial beat, its mechanical-animals-in-agony sound effects, and its faintly menacing vocals. Or the mopey synth pop of “Rainbows Too?,” the weirdly whimsical spoken word interlude “An Arm and a Leg,” the fingerpicked banjo on “Mailman,” or the decidedly creepy album closer “Cubic Caesar.” There’s a little bit of something for everyone on Plutonium Blonde, and while bands that work intentionally to provide that kind of pandering variety usually end up sounding desperate, the Legendary Pink Dots just sound like the kind of band that can make all kinds of weirdness sound pleasing in many different ways. Notice, for example, the wimp-folk opening to “A World Without Mirrors,” on which an acoustic guitar and flute tempt you to turn off the stereo immediately; stick with it, though, and the song suddenly turns into an ambient electric meditation that is startlingly captivating. Notice also how the extended instrumental coda of “Rainbows Too?” actually manages to make layered backwards guitar sound interesting — bet you never thought you’d hear interesting backward guitars again. They’re just that kind of band. – Rick Anderson

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