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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 9, 2013 20:28:59 GMT -5
BOWIE: Thought you would bring me to the resurrector!
WIN: Turns out it was just a Reflektor.
RÉGINE: It's just a Reflektor.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 9, 2013 20:40:05 GMT -5
I absolutely love the fact that you can hear Neighborhood #1(Tunnels) at the beginning of this song.
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Post by benoitbe1 on Sept 10, 2013 9:01:53 GMT -5
Great track, really love it. We feel the touch of James Murphy from LCD (not a fan of this band... but I think it's good for AF to work with), and the featuring with Bowie is just perfect.
Can't wait for the album...
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 11, 2013 10:17:59 GMT -5
Butler said: "I think in Connecticut we were playing maybe 50 or 60 songs, like we literally played 60 songs while we were there and then kind of slowly refined it. It's longer than [2010 album] 'The Suburbs' – it's a double record – mostly down to the fact that the songs are a lot longer. I mean, 'Reflector' is seven-and-a-half, there's another couple of seven-minute songs on the record and so it made more sense to stretch it out to two records with two distinct sides. It's more of a classic double LP vibe where you have to flip the side and it takes you to a different place."
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 18, 2013 9:32:06 GMT -5
David Bowie 'threatened to steal' 'Reflektor' from Arcade FireRichard Reed Parry lifts the lid on being in the studio with Bowie and new album detailsDavid Bowie light-heartedly threatened to steal Arcade Fire's 'Reflektor' for himself, according to band member Richard Reed Parry. Bowie appears alongside the Canadian band on their new single, the first track to be taken from the forthcoming double album of the same name. Speaking to NME in a new interview in this week's issue, available digitally and on newsstands now, Parry lifted the lid on what it was like to be in the studio with Bowie. "It was just after 'The Next Day' had come out. He basically just came by the studio in New York while we were mixing, just to have a listen to the stuff we were doing," explains Parry. "He offered to lend us his services because he really liked the song. In fact, he basically threatened us – he was like, 'If you don't hurry up and mix this song, I might just steal it from you!' So we thought, well why don't we go one better, why don't you sing on our version? Thankfully he obliged, and we were really happy about that." Elsewhere in the interview, Parry states that the more dance orientated sound of the 'Reflektor' single "represents an angle of the record", but does not tell the full story. "It's pretty all over the map," he says. "And that was the goal. We wanted to go to extremes. Sometimes it's like a bluesy bar band, and others it's more like a disco band in a weird old nightclub from a country nobody's ever heard of." 'Reflektor', the band's fourth album, is set for release on October 28. Frontman Win Butler recently described the album, which is a double, as a "mash-up of Studio 54 and Haitian voodoo". www.nme.com/news/arcade-fire/72730#ekcztdGWSF0odzZp.99
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 22, 2013 10:20:15 GMT -5
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 22, 2013 14:38:18 GMT -5
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 23, 2013 16:43:24 GMT -5
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 26, 2013 22:12:29 GMT -5
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 27, 2013 16:03:45 GMT -5
i can't help but think that i'll be freaky deakying to this record a lot...
God bless.
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 27, 2013 16:32:53 GMT -5
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 28, 2013 6:35:59 GMT -5
Arcade Fire will perform on SNL on 9/28; Tina Fey will host. God bless. this is tonight at 11:30 p.m. est on NBC, followed by a 30 minute set on NBC after SNL. dunno if it's available outside the U.S. but it'll probably be on YouTube soon... God bless.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 28, 2013 9:59:35 GMT -5
Rolling Stone Magazine review: 4.5 Stars out of 5 "If this is heaven/I need something more," Win Butler and Régine Chassagne, Arcade Fire's founding singers, declare in close, almost whispered harmony as the opening title song of their band's extraordinary new album goes into high gear. "Reflektor" is seven and a half busy minutes of art and party. Over a strident-disco hybrid of the Rolling Stones' "Miss You" and Yoko Ono's "Walking on Thin Ice," Arcade Fire and their new co-producer, James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, throw brittle-fuzz guitar licks, grunting bass, mock-grand piano and ballooning synth chords across deep reverb like frantic instrumental argument. They also find room for David Bowie, one of Arcade Fire's first and biggest fans, who sings with Butler near the end and repurposes the descending vocal flourish from his 1975 hit "Fame." The way Butler and Chassagne, who are married, sing those lines in "Reflektor" is a sublime moment in the commotion. It is also a perfect summary of their group's still-fervent indie-born hunger after a decade of mainstream success, and specifically, the decisive, indulgent ambition on Reflektor: a two-record, 75-minute set of 13 songs and the best album Arcade Fire have ever made. Founded in 2003, the Montreal-based band – which includes multi-instrumentalists Richard Reed Parry and Butler's brother Will, bassist Tim Kingsbury and drummer Jeremy Gara – has always thought and acted big, using serious echo and drum-circle-like percussion to amplify the emotional mysteries in Win's U2-meets-elliptical-Springsteen writing. Arcade Fire's third album, 2010's The Suburbs, was urgent and clear, a record about dreams and escape, gassed with classic-rock punch. It was a Number One hit and rightly won a Grammy for Album of the Year. Reflektor is even better, for this reason: the jarring, charging union of Murphy's modern-dance acumen and post-punk sabotage with Arcade Fire's natural gallop and ease with Caribbean rhythm. (Chassagne is of Haitian descent; she and Butler have been active in relief efforts there.) Murphy worked on all but two songs, with most of those tracks near or over six minutes long. The result is an epic made for dancing and sequenced like whiplash. "We Exist" rolls like the pop-leaning late-Eighties Cure, then butts into the paranoid mule-kick reggae of "Flashbulb Eyes." "Here Comes the Night Time" abruptly zigzags between rapid Haitian drumming and a Talking Heads-at-the-beach stroll – as if Murphy and the band can't decide which night they like best – while "You Already Know" is buoyant New Wave Motown, with Chassagne's half of the call-response chorus sparkling in the reverb. That song has to be a single. It ought to be a hit. Arcade Fire don't play a lot of straight-up heads-down rock & roll. But they are damn good at it. "Normal Person" starts with a joke (the sound-effect chaos of a club band plugging in for a night's work), then sounds like Butler singing in front of the Velvet Underground with a wobbly Little Richard on piano. The opening shock of "Joan of Arc," the last track on the first disc, is hardcore punk. But the blitz quickly drops into meatier surprise: a Gary Glitter-style stomp. The song – a memorial to female strength and sacrifice – surges to an inevitable conclusion: long keyboard sighs and Chassagne singing in French through warping electronics, as if from inside a ring of fire. It is a dynamic, poignant finish, and I doubt anyone would feel cheated or unhappy if Reflektor ended right there. But the two discs have their own mood swings, the second less manic and more plaintive, even luxuriant at times. The sequence is loosely based on Greek myth – the rapture, violent separation and eventual reunion of the lovers Eurydice, a nymph, and the musician Orpheus (depicted on the album's cover). "Feels like it never ends/ Here comes the night again," Butler sings with an eerie-Neil Young effect in a reprise of "Here Comes the Night Time," before the trouble starts. There is dance music in this half of Reflektor too: the industrial-funk strut and Bowie- esque vocal glaze of "It's Never Over (Oh Orpheus)"; the "Blue Monday"-prime New Order all over "Afterlife." But this is the push and pull of loss and hope, utter despair and the refusal to quit. "I gotta know/Can we work it out/Scream and shout/Till we work it out," Butler and Chassagne ask each other, in heated unison, in "Afterlife," before Reflektor dissolves into the warm vocal-and-electronic exhale of "Supersymmetry." There is no specific resolution by then. But there is calm, at least for now. It is tempting to call Reflektor Arcade Fire's answer to the Rolling Stones' 1972 double LP, Exile on Main Street. The similarities (length, churn, all that reverb) make it easy. But Reflektor is closer to turning-point classics such as U2's Achtung Baby and Radiohead's Kid A – a thrilling act of risk and renewal by a band with established commercial appeal and a greater fear of the average, of merely being liked. "If that's what's normal now, I don't want to know," Butler sings in "Normal Person," sounding like a guy for whom even this heaven, next time, won't be enough. Read more: www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/reflektor-20130927#ixzz2gCSEhsT1
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 29, 2013 0:35:54 GMT -5
Wow...that was a funny little concert film by Arcade Fire on NBC. All the new songs sound intense and complex. Fucking loving what I'm hearing thus far. This band is constantly pushing themselves and their audience. Hats off! Also, great cameos during the show (James Franco, Ben Stiller, Bono, Michael Cera, Jason Schwartzman, Zach Galifianakis, Bill Hader, Rain Wilson, etc). Songs played on SNL: Reflektor, AfterlifeSongs played during Here Comes The Night special: Here Comes The Night, We Exist, Normal PersonFYI...I dug Win wearing a Nirvana t-shirt under that light blue blazer during Normal Person.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 29, 2013 1:38:37 GMT -5
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Post by RUBIKON on Sept 29, 2013 6:24:16 GMT -5
SNL performance on Dime now. HD 1080i aswell.
Any videos or better audio rips of the Here Comes The Night Special yet?
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 29, 2013 8:26:58 GMT -5
Here comes the night time.........
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Post by Lennon2217 on Sept 29, 2013 8:29:04 GMT -5
SNL performance on Dime now. HD 1080i aswell. Any videos or better audio rips of the Here Comes The Night Special yet? Audio rips all over Twitter. Just search "Arcade Fire" and "MP3". I love technology.
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Post by RUBIKON on Sept 29, 2013 10:20:13 GMT -5
Both SNL and Here Comes The Night Time Special on Dime in 1080i now.
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Post by Sternumman on Sept 29, 2013 11:06:38 GMT -5
SNL performance on Dime now. HD 1080i aswell. Any videos or better audio rips of the Here Comes The Night Special yet? Audio rips all over Twitter. Just search "Arcade Fire" and "MP3". I love technology. The Audio rips are nice and clean but SNL should know how to produce live music by know. The audio especially during Reflektor was not right
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 29, 2013 17:37:23 GMT -5
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Post by Let It🩸 on Sept 29, 2013 17:56:49 GMT -5
i only listened to the new songs once early this morning while still have asleep but i do remember hearing some Cure-like sounds and great percussion...gonna give it a proper listen later...
God bless.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Oct 1, 2013 7:55:29 GMT -5
"Can we work it out? Let's scream and shout 'till we work it out Can we just work it out? Scream and shout 'till we work it out?"
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Post by Lennon2217 on Oct 1, 2013 7:57:19 GMT -5
i only listened to the new songs once early this morning while still have asleep but i do remember hearing some Cure-like sounds and great percussion...gonna give it a proper listen later... God bless. They have embraced a lot of influences from The Cure, Talking Heads and New Order on this record. The song "Afterlife" sounds right out of the New Order playbook. I really love all the songs played on Saturday. Can't wait to hear the rest. Arcade Fire + James Murphy proving to me a lethal combination. We are witnessing greatness here people.
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Post by Lennon2217 on Oct 2, 2013 9:19:42 GMT -5
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