I have been listening to Midnight
Movies for quite sometime now but only last Saturday on my way back
home in the Komuter while listening to Midnight Movies'
Coral Den I
realized that they sound very similar to Stereolab - in the way how
they put the melodic vocal part of Gena Olivier over the droning
background. Even her voice sounds somewhat similar to that of Laetitia
Sadier's.
So I thought it would be interesting if I do a
little 'compare & contrast' (again) in between Midnight Movies and
Stereolab. I'm not sure if I am good to be considered a Stereolab fan
but I sure do like their music. Having not listened to all of their
previous releases, the only Stereolab moment that I can relate with
Midnight Movies is from their third album
Transient Random-Noise Bursts With Announcements, released in 1993.
I listened to the album for a few times last
night and after much hesitation I decided that I should just post any
song from this album that I like and say: Voila! I thought I remember
one song from this album that sounds very similar to Midnight Movie's
Coral Den but after re-listening back to the album, I couldn't work it out at all (although now I think track no.2
Our Trinitone Blasts is the track that I've been looking for).
Track no.6 from Midnight Movies' second album
Lion the Girl released
in 2007. Of all the bands/artists that makes up a list of my favorite
bands, Stereolab I reckon has got to be the most eclectic of all.
Allmusicguide reckons Stereolab as "the most influential alternative
bands of the 90's". Formed in London in 1991 by (band leader) Tim Gane
and Laetitia Sadier, Stereolab is one of the most wide-ranging
experimental band the world has ever witnessed. Combining the aesthetic
of Krautrock from bands like Faust and Neu! and the sensibilities of
pop music like bossa nova, lounge pop, and movie soundtrack, they have
created a trademark distinctive music style by overlaying a melodic
vocal part over a droning rhythm part.
I have posted here track 4 from the album
Transient Random-Noise... At
least I thought it would give you a rough idea on how Midnight Movies
and Stereolab sounds alike. Another aspect of Stereolab's
experimental-ness is their recording method - they "relied heavily on
forgotten methods of recording, whether it was analog synthesizers and
electronics or a fondness for hi-fi test records..." (quoted from
allmusicguide). For example, the song that I have posted above,
although the bitrate says it's 128 the sound quality is a bit lower
than that. I ripped the song direct from my CD and what you hear from
the mp3 above is exactly what I hear from my CD.
I miss my old listening-to-Stereolab days. I think I'll give Stereolab
a spin tonight and drown in the droning noise and peruse over Sadier's
political lyrics. Though they may be Marxist of some sort, I don't
care, Stereolab is definitely one of my favorite (and most unlikely
choice) band.