- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
| Stereolab | Primary Artist |
| Tim Gane | Organ, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Drums, Vocals, Clavinet, Wurlitzer, Electric Harpsichord, Group Member |
| Mary Hansen | Organ, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Drums, Vocals, Clavinet, Wurlitzer, Electric Harpsichord |
| Rob Mazurek | Cornet |
| Sean O'Hagan | Organ, Acoustic Guitar, Bass, Piano, Harpsichord, Clavinet |
| Jim O'Rourke | Bass, Guitar, Percussion, Keyboards |
| Kev Hopper | Saw |
| John McEntire | Drums, Keyboards |
| Steve Waterman | Overdubs |
| Andy Robinson | Overdubs |
| William Hawkes | Strings |
| Mark Bassey | Overdubs |
| Sophie Harris | Strings |
| Jacqueline Norrie | Strings |
| Dominic Murcott | Marimba (Electronics) |
| Colin Crawley | Overdubs |
| Simon Johns | Bass |
| Ramsay Morgan | Organ, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Drums, Vocals, Clavinet, Wurlitzer, Electric Harpsichord |
| Brian G. Wright | Strings |
| Sean O'Hagan | Brass Arrangment |
| Jim O'Rourke | Producer, String Arrangements |
| John McEntire | Producer |
| Steve Rooke | Mastering |
| Fulton Dingley | Producer, Engineer |
Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
I think this album is Stereolab's best, even better than DOTS AND LOOPS. Its mix of long easy listening tunes, with long smears of electronics and the occasional brass section, groovy space age-funk, and the slowed down ABBA-melody in The Free Design, is just better than anything I've ever heard. It reminds me of the albums that people like Joni Mitchell or Kraftwerk made in the mid-70s, but when you realise that this was made 20 years later, with outstanding musicians, this is indeed something unique and special.
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Editorial Reviews
Barnes & Noble - Jon Dolan
Stereolab's gift to the alt world may be their fluid, funky sound-collage pop, but their genius is their funky good taste. Culling the best music from their own private dictionary of coolster influences - a little Krautrock here, a dollop of lounge exotica there - they've made their weird little world seem like a paradise unto itself. On the band's new COBRA AND PHASES, the Lab shows impeccable taste in producers, bringing in post-rock dons John McEntire and Jim O'Rourke to leaven what is at once their artiest and sexiest work in years. Opening with a bit of improv space-jazz that sounds like Archie Shepp beamed forward to the year 3000, lead cut "Fuses" eventually morphs ...