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A New Chance

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (65 ratings)
A New Chance album cover
01
Something Special
4:16 $0.99
02
Miami
4:15 $0.99
03
First Class Riot
3:27 $0.99
04
A New Chance
4:36 $0.99
05
The Last Dance
4:17 $0.99
06
Looking For Gold
3:38 $0.99
07
Neo Violence
4:13 $0.99
08
1981
4:03 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 32:45

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eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

09.23.08
A dance band for go-getters with no time for filler
2007 | Label: Modular

As its name might suggest, The Tough Alliance specializes in confrontation. Childhood friends Henning Fürst and Eric Berglund create sunny synth pop designed not only to get them through merciless winters in Göthenburg, Sweden, but also intended to serve as the foundation for a façade-subverting spectacle. Their untrained vocals are both whiny and enthusiastic, howling across smooth bright keyboards like a horny cat rubbing its hindquarters against every convenient surface. Rather than writing about love and dancing, they search for meaning and authenticity — "something special, something real," as they cry in A New Chance's opening manifesto. They're sincere, well-dressed, and boy-band handsome. Yet in performance they ignore their instruments and sing as much as Britney Spears, preferring to incite pandemonium. It's not just a metaphor when they sing "First Class Riot."

None of this would matter if TTA didn't write fantastically catchy songs wrapped around inventive arrangements that crisscross indie-rock, unabashed pop, and countless club micro-genres. On "First Class Riot," the breakthrough radio hit back home, Fürst and Berglund take on the haters while pounding pianos over a jaunty tom-tom rumble that would make Adam Ant smile knowingly. The instrumental "Miami" flips between a keyboard hook tweaked from Shannon's… read more »

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80s.

Yadadadabingbang

No, it really is pretty 80s. Pet Shop Boys might care to consult thier copyright attorney after listening to this...

user avatar

80s brit synthpop without the songwriting chops

bmilner

I can see why other reviews think this sounds like an 80s disc. It just has that sterile 80s digital reverb production that makes it sound like a cut-out album from back in the late 80s. I can see why some like it, it's got a lazy slightly Caribbean feel to it mixed in with the synthpop but the vocals are mediocre, the delivery takes itself too seriously and the songwriting is 3rd rate. 2 stars.

user avatar

Tropical electro-pop: 5/5

logic1000

Great electronic/synth-y music with a Caribbean feel. Fun sounds, beats, and vocals. Like another reviewer stated, you'll be bobbing along with the beats. Unlike another reviewer, I don't get a huge retro or 80's vibe--unless you consider anything with synthesizers to fall into those categories. Regardless, their music always makes me feel good and smile to myself. And that, my friends, is priceless.

user avatar

Wow absolutely craptastic.

irq506

Amazing I love how it sounds so freshly 80's like we all need the 80s back, like halitosis. Its so uniquely just like everything else trying to cash in on the most screwed up self indulgent decade of bad hair, bad clothes bad ideas and bad politics. God how I cant wait for the 80s to to shrivel up like a chopped forskin and slither away down the drainhole of lobotomized memories.....bleeeuuurrgghh!

user avatar

Fun!?

Stick-Up-Artist

This is a pretty good record. In an alternate 1980's inspired world "First Class Riot" is a number 1 hit! I imagine it being punk rock for billionaires. Y'know... dicks but classy dicks.

user avatar

Refreshingly retro

Premature_Gray

This album has a delightful electro-synth-pop vibe reminiscent of the early to mid 1980s. Worth checking out are "First Class Riot," the reggae-tinged "Looking for Gold," and my favorite, "First Class Riot."

user avatar

Organic. Hot.

paultaylor_2009

The album has an overwhelmingly organic feel, and although it might not bring you to your feet dancing, it will at least make you happily bounce your had to the beat. Listen to "Something Special" and "Looking for Gold" and you will see what I mean.

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They Say All Music Guide

Awash in balmy, neon grooves and exultant, kaleidoscopic scraps of melody, the Tough Alliance’s U.S. album debut and second proper pop full-length is neither a dramatic change of direction nor an astounding leap forward from the already quite excellent The New School — but it is a revelation nevertheless. As effortless, and effortlessly enjoyable, as it is perplexing to define, its remarkably fresh-feeling fusion of dance music and classic pop has all the omnivorous eclecticism, bright-eyed playfulness, and epic emotional earnestness of Saint Etienne’s Foxbase Alpha and Primal Scream’s Screamadelica (it could be coincidental, but TTA covered a C-86-era Primal Scream tune on an early EP.) It’s also more than a little reminiscent of those landmark albums in sound and style, grounding its blend of (among other things) dub, ’60s pop, reggae, new age, and synth pop in a foundation of early-’90s club beats and hip-house. Those dusty grooves, along with the preponderance of ’80s-style synthesizers (though by this point they ought to be as strongly associated with the ’00s as the ’80s) and an outmoded production, give A New Chance a curiously faded, antiquated quality, one that doesn’t feel tired so much as refreshingly anachronistic, though it might be more accurate to say it feels removed from time entirely. Either way it’s gloriously out of step with the majority of dance music and pop, mainstream or underground, in the late ’00s, unless you think of it as the unlikely amalgamation of hitherto divergent recent trends in Swedish music, incorporating the twee romanticism of Jens Lekman and the Honeydrips, the so-called balearic dubtronica of Studio and Air France, and the melodic synth pop of the Embassy and Cat5 (to name exclusively TTA labelmates and fellow Gothenburg residents.) But the Tough Alliance are more than the sum of their influences — “take no heroes, only inspiration,” they once memorably sang — and A New Chance is far more than the triangulation of its reference points. The bouncy, summery shuffle “First Class Riot” was a well-chosen single, but truly every one of the eight songs is a highlight — the driving, Miracles-sampling house of “Neo Violence”; the lush, abstractly funky, vocal fragmented “Miami,” and even the mellower “1981,” whose backing track could almost pass for Enya, and which recalls the duo’s one-off ambient LP Escaping Your Ambitions. It adds up to a constantly shifting, consistently exhilarating thrill ride that’s over far too soon (it’s a shame they didn’t see fit to include any of the tracks from 2006′s equally wonderful New Waves EP); an album that, ultimately, stands alongside Screamadelica as a bold, unique, and immensely satisfying experiment, envisioning pop’s potential future by reshuffling its past. – K. Ross Hoffman

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