Discount
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Music » General » StarfuckerJanuary 9, 2009  
Categories
Electronics
Music
Computers
Apparel
Office
Outdoor Living
Related Categories
• General
Alternative Rock
Styles
Music
• Neo-Psychedelia
Rock
Alternative Styles
Alternative Rock
Styles
• Indie Rock
Indie & Lo-Fi
Alternative Rock
Styles
Music
• Electronic Pop
Indie & Lo-Fi
Alternative Rock
Styles
Music
• General
Indie & Lo-Fi
Alternative Rock
Styles
Music
• General
Pop
Styles
Music
• General
Rock
Styles
Music
• Electronica
Dance & DJ
Indie Music
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• CD Album
CD
Format (binding)
Refinements
Music
• Main Albums
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music
Starfucker
Starfucker

 enlarge 
Artist: Starfucker
Label: Badman Records
Category: Music

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $9.45
You Save: $5.53 (37%)



New (28) Used (9)  from $8.97

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 44710

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 933
UPC: 655037093329
EAN: 0655037093329
ASIN: B001DPC446

Release Date: September 23, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: 2008 EDITION!! BRAND NEW SEALED!! IN STOCK AND READY TO SHIP!! CD CLUB EDITION

Tracks:

  • Florida
  • German Love
  • Myke Ptyson
  • Laadeedaa
  • Rawnald Gregory Erickson the Second
  • U Ba Khin
  • Holly
  • Hard Smart Beta
  • Pop Song
  • Miss You
  • Isabella of Castile

Similar Items:

  • Dear Science,
  • Fleet Foxes
  • Microcastle/Weird Era Continued
  • For Emma, Forever Ago
  • The Rhumb Line

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The Dude would abide, man...   October 15, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A far cry from the Carly Simon plagiarizing, ham-fisted Nine Inch Nails track of the same name, wannabe ironic/risque bedroom recordists Starf*cker punt near a dozen clunky, lo-fi but syrupy-warm pop gems our way for their laid-back, if not family-titled, debut. Homemade Casiotones, fuzzy drum machines and occasional flimsy acoustic guitar meet Rob Crow vox halfway for this fun, head-bobbing collection of tunes strong on hooks and short on words, just the way the doctor ordered.

The anesthetized bounce of "Florida" sets the tone for the record and steers everyone in just the right laid-back, gateway-drugged direction. As an added bonus, it finishes with the most hilarious wordplay on the entire album, a Monty Python-ish voice-over* filtered as if through a dying record player:

"How much wiggle is *a* wiggle? Well, you have to draw the line somewhere. So people come to some sorts of agreements about, uhh, how much of a wiggle... is a wiggle. That is to say, a thing. One wiggle. One can always reduce any one wiggle into sub-wiggles. Or see it as a subordinate wiggle in a bigger wiggle. But there's no real fixed rule about it..."

Something like this emerges from a bedroom studio every once in a blue moon to greet hipsters with fistfuls of indie street cred, usually sporting some kind of almost-clever name (Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, anyone?), only to be forgotten in a few months. Questions of longevity aside, though, it's the present that matters, and right now, the simple pleasure of sloppy falsetto harmony and delicious keyboard portamento (as in the aptly-named "Pop Song") is too delectable to pass up. Starf*cker get all their portions right, too: "Hard Smart Beta" cooks in just under two minutes. Accessibility-wise, the absurdly-named "Myke Ptyson" pogos around on a snappy, "save the princess" type riff that sounds like it might've flown out of a pre-Gameboy handheld's speaker. That should tell you what you need to know.

All it takes is a taste, and you're hooked. You might not remember the specifics later, but that's not always a bad thing. Starf*cker just begs for repeat performances. Especially so on the icy cool and irresistable, slippy-slide bitpop of closer "Isabella of Castile." They know they should go, but they want to stay. Picture Pinback with Nintendo controllers in hand in lieu of guitars, and you've got these dudes. Awesome for when nothing deathly serious will get the job done, and chilling out is priority numero uno. And when isn't that the case, really?

*I've since been informed that this is part of a speech by a Buddhist named Alan Watts.



5 out of 5 stars Cool electronic pop - Don't miss this one!   September 23, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Hearing this CD was a genuine discovery of something new and exciting. It's ultra-catchy synth-pop, featuring addictive beats and lighter-than-Air vocals. Listening to these eleven tunes, I was reminded at times of previous electro-pop artists such as BeBop Deluxe, Devo and Thomas Dolby, and there's also a brief instrumental homage to ELO ("Pop Song"). At the same time, lead Starf***er Josh Hodges has also clearly got his own thing going. Basically, he and co-producer (and label head) Dylan Magierek just have unerring instincts for putting together a captivating piece of music. I defy you to listen to "German Love" and not be drawn in! I only hope that Josh's choice of a band name (which must be tough for marketing and other purposes) doesn't keep people away from this outstanding album! By the way, this is my first five-star review in quite awhile. I don't give out five stars casually, but this disc is truly amazing!

Discuss MP3 News & Downloads Blog

Mobile Phones - Reptile Supply - Masters Degrees Online - Credit Cards - Song Lyrics