Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Future Crayon

 
Album Review: Future Crayon

  • Artist: Broadcast
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: August 21, 2006
  • Type: Compilation (best of)
  • Genre: Electronica

Review

Collecting most of Broadcast's EP tracks, B-sides, and rarities from The Noise Made by People and Haha Sound eras, Future Crayon is a welcome reminder of how consistently interesting the band's output is. Indeed, the band's other EP collection, Work and Non-Work, flowed just as well, if not better, than many other groups' full-length albums. Future Crayon isn't quite that cohesive, but it does chart how Broadcast's sound developed during that time, and also includes some tracks that even die-hard fans might have missed the first time around. The collection begins with a string of relatively poppy songs that rival the quality of anything that appeared on either The Noise Made by People or Haha Sound. Extended Play Two's "Illumination" is particularly gorgeous, opening with an insistent bassline and Trish Keenan's coolly lovely voice before achieving lift-off with clouds of backing vocals and art-damaged synths. Meanwhile, "Still Feels Like Tears" from the Pendulum EP takes the title track's stripped-down psych-rock in a lighter, sweeter direction, while Extended Play's "Where Youth and Laughter Go" begins as a clockwork lullaby and then swells into quintessentially Broadcast-like sci-fi lounge-pop. Future Crayon then delves into the more experimental side of the band's music, which usually only appears as brief interludes on their albums. 1998's "Hammer Without a Master," which originally appeared on the Warp comp We Are Reasonable People and is one of this collection's rarest tracks, is an especially striking collage of horror-show organs and death-surf guitars grounded by jazzy drumming; along with "Daves Dream," it sounds like a more elegant version of the sound Add N to (X) was pursuing at the time. The aptly-named "Chord Simple" is a lovely, oddly affecting instrumental that appears twice here, both on its own and as a part of a harder-edged version of "Unchanging Window." While the decision to put most of the more accessible tracks on the first half of the disc is understandable, it doesn't always make for the easiest listening -- sometimes, it feels easy to get lost in the more abstract moments later on in the collection. Nevertheless, Future Crayon is a must for Broadcast obsessives and a good way for casual fans to explore some of the rougher edges of their music. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Illumination Broadcast (3:15)
Still Feels Like Tears Broadcast (3:41)
Small Song IV Broadcast (3:39)
Where Youth and Laughter Go (Lyrics) Broadcast (2:43)
One Hour Empire Broadcast (1:42)
Distant Call Broadcast (3:33)
Poem of Dead Song Broadcast (2:30)
Hammer Without a Master Broadcast (4:59)
Locusts Broadcast (5:00)
Chord Simple Broadcast (4:38)
Daves Dream Broadcast (4:01)
DDL Broadcast (2:28)
Test Area Broadcast (5:53)
Unchanging Window/Chord Simple Broadcast (6:59)
A Man for Atlantis Broadcast (3:15)
Minus Two Broadcast (4:16)
Violent Playground Broadcast (2:11)
Belly Dance Broadcast (4:48)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more