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Take Ecstacy with Me/Get Up
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Take Ecstacy with Me/Get Up
Current price: $5.99
Barnes and Noble
Take Ecstacy with Me/Get Up
Current price: $5.99
Size: OS
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!!!
follows up the tough and political
Louden Up Now
with an EP of covers that on first glance looks like a misprint. Covering
Magnetic Fields
' escapist anthem
"Take Ecstasy With Me"
and
Nate Dogg
's
party rap
jam
"Get Up"
could either be genius or folly for a band as serious and cerebral as
seems to be. Well, put in a vote for genius because
has pulled off something special here. The band takes over both songs completely and easily casts aside any possible claims of novelty.
gives the often stifling
approach a widescreen scope that makes the song sound like an anthem for an early-'90s
Madchester
summer, a perfect blend of electronics and guitars, melody and dancefloor motion that none of the
bands (apart from
the Happy Mondays
at times) quite could manage. The
cover isn't as promising initially as the band seems to be just covering the song straight up with drawled vocals and a lazy tempo. About halfway through the ten-minute track things start to get interesting as the beat becomes more insistent and the guitars start to swirl, culminating in a staggering section with brutally phased and manipulated vocals, shards of synths, and waves of guitars. From there the song becomes something more sinister and real, as tough as anything from
. The EP shows that
aren't afraid of anything and have what it takes to be mentioned in the same breath as the bands that inspired them. That's quite a feat for what seems to be just a goofy covers single. ~ Tim Sendra
follows up the tough and political
Louden Up Now
with an EP of covers that on first glance looks like a misprint. Covering
Magnetic Fields
' escapist anthem
"Take Ecstasy With Me"
and
Nate Dogg
's
party rap
jam
"Get Up"
could either be genius or folly for a band as serious and cerebral as
seems to be. Well, put in a vote for genius because
has pulled off something special here. The band takes over both songs completely and easily casts aside any possible claims of novelty.
gives the often stifling
approach a widescreen scope that makes the song sound like an anthem for an early-'90s
Madchester
summer, a perfect blend of electronics and guitars, melody and dancefloor motion that none of the
bands (apart from
the Happy Mondays
at times) quite could manage. The
cover isn't as promising initially as the band seems to be just covering the song straight up with drawled vocals and a lazy tempo. About halfway through the ten-minute track things start to get interesting as the beat becomes more insistent and the guitars start to swirl, culminating in a staggering section with brutally phased and manipulated vocals, shards of synths, and waves of guitars. From there the song becomes something more sinister and real, as tough as anything from
. The EP shows that
aren't afraid of anything and have what it takes to be mentioned in the same breath as the bands that inspired them. That's quite a feat for what seems to be just a goofy covers single. ~ Tim Sendra