Crystal Castles – Crystal Castles (Last Gang/Shock)

0

Toronto-based electro/chipcore duo Alice Glass (formerly of noise band Fetus Fatale) and Ethan Fawn (formerly of garage-metal act Jakarta) apparently first met whilst doing community work reading to the blind, but since their emergence as Crystal Castles in 2004 they’ve managed to amass something of a cult-like fanbase, thanks in no small part to packed local live shows, ultra-limited 7” runs and the enthusiastic reactions of tastemaking bloggers. This self-titled debut album follows on the heels of recent profile-raising remixes for Bloc Party and Klaxons and collects together the lion’ share of this previously released material alongside a smattering of new tracks. If you’ve heard Crystal Castles’ debut single “Alice Practice’ (apparently recorded originally as a secret microphone test and featured towards the start of the tracklisting here), then you’re already familiar with the duo’ overall aesthetic – one built around a collision of punk / New Wave-centred female vocals, punching stripped-down electronic beats and retro, blippy 8-bit synths, a stylistic trajectory that certainly crosses over to the disco-centred collaboration with LA band HEALTH “Crimewave’ and “Xxzxcuzx Me’, which calls to mind some meeting point between ATR’ Hanin Elias and a malfunctioning arcade game (“Just because we don’ eat flesh / doesn’ mean we fear death”). While the overall effect is certainly infectiously frenetic (you can just imagine these tracks going down a storm at a packed warehouse party – do they still exist these days?), there’ a sense that some of the 16 tracks here are filler more than anything else, with instrumental track “Reckless’ venturing dangerously close to anodyne, by the numbers electro-house. While there’ certainly more than a few intriguing moments packed into Crystal Castles’ debut album, there’ the overriding sense that some judicious editing might’ve resulted in a stronger listening experience.

Share.

About Author

A dastardly man with too much music and too little time on his hands