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Kings Of Convenience ‎- Versus (2001)

Kings Of Convenience ‎- Versus (2001)
Tracklist:

01. I Don't Know What I Can Save You From (Röyksopp Remix) (4:12)
02. The Weight Of My Words (Four Tet Remix) (4:56)
03. The Girl From Back Then (Riton's Über Jazz Mix) (3:04)
04. Erot vs Kings Of Convenience – Gold For The Price Of Silver (4:53)
05. Winning A Battle, Losing The War (Andy Votel Mix) (4:23)
06. Evil Tordivel – Leaning Against The Wall (Evil Tordivel Upbeat Remake) (3:44)
07. Toxic Girl (Monte Carlo 1963 Version) (3:06)
08. Alfie – Failure (Alfie Version) (3:35)
09. Little Kids (Ladytron Fruits Of The Forest Mix) (4:47)
10. Failure (Radio Edit) (3:34)
11. Leaning Against The Wall (Bamboo Soul Mix) (3:29)
12. The Weight Of My Words (Four Tet Instrumental) (5:29)

It is quite rare for a remix album to better the source material. Versus by Kings of Convenience is one of those select few. Their album Quiet Is the New Loud is a very pleasant disc, but the songs all begin to sound the same halfway through. That's not a problem here, as the various remixers take varying approaches to the Kings' hushed and nocturnal sound. They also keep enough of the band's essence so it sounds like a real record by Kings of Convenience and not some cobbled-together mess. (Only once are Erik Glambek Bøe's lovely vocals omitted, and that is on the very last track.) Some of the remixers take the electronic route: Röyksopp keeps the acoustic guitars and whispered vocal of "I Don't Know What I Can Save You From" and adds a perky bassline and loping looped beat; Four Tet alters the acoustic guitars into a blurred symphony of noise and adds a head-bobbing hip-hop beat to "The Weight of My Words," but keeps the melancholy gloom of the song intact. Some of the remixers take an organic route: Riton turns "The Girl From Back Then" into a smoky jazz tune complete with a Milesian muted trumpet solo; Alfie adds sawing cellos and huge, reverbed drums to "Failure"; David Whitaker doesn't alter anything, but adds a full orchestral string arrangement. The most successful remixes are those that throw the listener for a loop and do something unexpected: Erot actually makes "Gold for the Price of Silver" downright funky, adding a little '70s funk guitar strumming, heavy breathing female vocals in the background, and a groove that will have you up shaking it in no time. Evil Toredivel's mix of "Leaning Against the Wall" turns the song into a horn-driven, almost new wave stomper that wouldn't sound out of place on a Madness record. Ladytron adds a sense of urgent doom to their mix of "Little Kids," with the stuttering beat and sinister synths. They even throw in some tubular bells, and that is never a bad idea. If you liked the Kings of Convenience album, you'll find much to like here. If you a fan of remix albums, you'll be hard pressed to find a better one than this.




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  • ingeborg
  •  wrote in 20:03
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many thanks
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  • josemartins62
  •  wrote in 14:29
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