After months in the studio and 25 days into the tour, we are excited to announce that our first, full-length DRINK THE SEA album, including CD, vinyl, and deluxe packages, is now available through The Glitch Mob store.
We would like to thank all of you for the support and we hope you enjoy the music.
:: Fake Plastic Tunes Review ::
Drink the Sea is not the first electronic album to evoke an urban, nocturnal tone. However, the Glitch Mob is consistently successful here at creating a bird’s eye...
After months in the studio and 25 days into the tour, we are excited to announce that our first, full-length DRINK THE SEA album, including CD, vinyl, and deluxe packages, is now available through The Glitch Mob store.
We would like to thank all of you for the support and we hope you enjoy the music.
:: Fake Plastic Tunes Review ::
Drink the Sea is not the first electronic album to evoke an urban, nocturnal tone. However, the Glitch Mob is consistently successful here at creating a bird’s eye perspective of this hypothetical nighttime cityscape. Beginning with “Animus Vox”, the album’s rousing opener, and continuing through “A Dream Within a Dream”, this detached motif conjures elements of an aerial, scenic atmosphere. After a brief midsection lull- “Fistful of Silence” and “Between Two Points” are the album’s weakest links- Sea drops back down to earth with faster-paced highway tunes- including the single, “Drive It Like You Stole It”. While the sound is undeniably clubby (these tunes are without a doubt designed for the post-midnight dancefloor), the song structure is conceptual in nature. The synth lines and electronic loops rise and explode in the traditional mold- but the Glitch Mob takes those sounds in unpredictable directions once they inevitably reform. For all its excess and experimental gusto, the album remains a more or less reasonably efficient, calculating experience. The Glitch Mob DJs pace their electronic barrage well enough with the only real misstep being the aforementioned midsection. There is an ambitious internal logic as to what is being attempted with Drink the Sea. Despite its flaws, it is assured in its own identity. And that’s more than can be said of other similar genre offerings. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.