Bankrupt! [Deluxe Edition] [Bonus Disc]

Bankrupt! [Deluxe Edition] [Bonus Disc]

by Phoenix
Bankrupt! [Deluxe Edition] [Bonus Disc]

Bankrupt! [Deluxe Edition] [Bonus Disc]

by Phoenix

CD(Special Edition)

$17.99 
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Overview

Somewhat sneakily, as they honed their blend of new wave, synth pop, soft rock, and all things '80s for the better part of a decade, Phoenix became one of the most influential acts of the 2000s and 2010s. When they married that distinctive style to some of their strongest songs on 2009's Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, that album's mainstream success felt like a well-earned reward for their years of defining a sound that had permeated a lot of pop culture. Its follow-up, Bankrupt!, isn't nearly as devoid of new ideas as its title suggests, but it doesn't feel like quite the leap forward Wolfgang was compared to what came before it. Not that it necessarily needs to be; Phoenix sound more comfortable and confident than ever on songs like the lead single, "Entertainment," which defines almost everything that they do on the rest of the album with its galloping beats, earnest vocals, and Asian-tinged keyboard melodies. "Trying to Be Cool," "Don't," and "Oblique City" also carry over the bouncy irresistibility of the band's breakthrough, and even if they don't have the star-making power that "1901" and "Lisztomania" did, they reveal Phoenix's deep love and even deeper knowledge of '80s pop magic in their deft major-to-minor key changes and strategically placed buildups and breakdowns. These little touches help the band stand out among its like-minded contemporaries, and it helps that Phoenix have been drawing inspiration from the '80s longer than that decade actually existed (the fact that they mixed Bankrupt! on the console used in the making of Michael Jackson's Thriller might have contributed some good '80s karma as well). Elsewhere, they pay lip service to another of that decade's icons with "Drakkar Noir," and the way Thomas Mars pronounces it almost makes the overbearing cologne cool again. Here and on "The Real Thing," the band ponders and crosses the line between real and fake, taking it to new levels on "S.O.S. in Bel Air," which could reignite the debate between Strokes and Phoenix fans over who copied who first (and who does it better). Later on, things get interesting -- particularly for longtime fans -- when the band indulges its experimental side on songs like the seven-minute title track, which prefaces Mars' vocals with a lengthy stretch of baroque keyboards, and the expansive melancholy of "Chloroform" and "Bourgeois." Even if moments like these aren't exactly in keeping with the sound that broke Phoenix, they're a reminder that the bandmembers ultimately became popular by being themselves. Bankrupt! lets them celebrate with a victory lap that's enjoyable for all concerned. [A double-disc version of Bankrupt! that included 71 "sketches" from the album's recording sessions was also released.] ~ Heather Phares

Product Details

Release Date: 04/23/2013
Label: Glassnote Entertainment Group
UPC: 0892038002855
Rank: 90544

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. Entertainment
  2. The Real Thing
  3. S.O.S. in Bel Air
  4. Trying to Be Cool
  5. Bankrupt!
  6. Drakkar Noir
  7. Chloroform
  8. Don't
  9. Bourgeois
  10. Oblique City

Disc 2

  1. Cabourg
  2. Just Trying to Be Cool
  3. L' Heure Bleue
  4. L' Aventure
  5. Versus Monteverdi
  6. Francois
  7. Labyrinthe
  8. Vesuve II
  9. Campo Marzio 4
  10. Cite d'Or Fondations
  11. Cite d'Or
  12. Baccalaureat
  13. Police
  14. Helmut
  15. Vladimir
  16. Cite d'Or II
  17. Le Rouge aux Levres
  18. Dolomites
  19. J'ai Tout Donne
  20. Bruce
  21. Nanonana Nuage
  22. Drakkar
  23. RMI Florian
  24. Belinda au Soleil
  25. Belinda
  26. Nanopico
  27. Triangle 3
  28. Belinda Wurlitzer
  29. Giorgio 2
  30. Lin Bleu
  31. Rimini-Antibes
  32. Batobus
  33. Scouts d'Europe
  34. Nanomanioc
  35. Je T'aime
  36. Epsilon 12
  37. ¿¿te Pourri
  38. Biblos
  39. Jeunesse
  40. Blue Lagoon
  41. Taxi G7
  42. Ex-Aequo
  43. Ragazzi
  44. Drill
  45. Rimini Sous la Douche
  46. Chimie
  47. Hedlunda 2
  48. 33cl
  49. Virgule XII
  50. Majordome
  51. Oblique
  52. Amphores
  53. Lin Bleu dans le Metro
  54. Entertainer
  55. Mindgames
  56. Prince des Collines
  57. Aristotle
  58. La Main de Dieu
  59. Aristotelian
  60. Vendredi
  61. Anthracite
  62. Amalfi
  63. Le Synthe Pleure
  64. 4 Bits Adagio
  65. 24 Carats
  66. Invisible
  67. UGC Cine Cite
  68. Negroni I
  69. Chloroform Berceau
  70. Hedlunda
  71. Cite d'Or de Facto

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Phoenix   Primary Artist
James Mudford   Mallets,Percussion
Laurent D'Herbecourt   Drums
Steph Mudford   Mallets,Percussion
Michael Askill   Mallets,Percussion
Zdar   Drums
Thomas Hedlund   Drums
Cedric Plancy   Flute
Rebecca Lloyd   Mallets,Percussion
Bastien Vandevelde   Drums
Cameron Kennedy   Mallets,Percussion

Technical Credits

Laurent D'Herbecourt   Engineer
Mike Marsh   Mastering
Phoenix   Composer,Lyricist,Producer
Deck d'Arcy   Group Member
Thomas Mars   Group Member
Christian Mazzalai   Group Member
Laurent Brancowitz   Group Member,Art Conception
Zdar   Mixing,Engineer,Producer
Thomas Hedlund   Drum Samples
Pascal Teixeira   Art Conception
Julien Torb   Engineer
Andre Kelman   Engineer
Bastien Vandevelde   Engineer
Ben Garvie   Cover Illustration
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