Phoenix
Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
Play Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
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MOG Editorial Review
With three releases under their belts before the 2009 release of Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, Phoenix proved they were capable of writing tight pop songs, yet their discography didn’t have one strong album that was all killer and no filler until this moment. Opening with the bouncing “Lisztomania,” continuing into danceable synth number “1901,” Phoenix have never sounded so confident. The album is rounded out with the bubbling electro-funk of “Fences,” the spacey guitar work of “Love Like a Sunset” (both Part 1 and Part 2), and the sleek hooks of “Lasso,” in which the band sounds most cohesive. Though it clocks in at a slim 10 tracks, this album finally shows what the French indie act is capable of when they're focused, even if they leave us begging for more as finish the record far too soon.
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AMG Review of Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
Andy Kellman
All Music GuideRealigned with Philippe Zdar, the half of Cassius who mixed United, Phoenix make adjustments on the polarizing characteristics of their second and third albums -- the pokey and occasionally listless Alphabetical, the jagged and tune-deficient It's Never Been Like That -- with some of the most direct and enjoyable songs they've made to date. The two opening songs, the bopping "Lisztomania" and the buzzing "1901," are so immediate and prone to habitual play that the remainder of the album is bound to be neglected. There is plenty to like beyond that point, including "Lasso," which niftily alternates between a tangled rhythm and tight-spiral riffing, and the labyrinthine "Pt. 1" of "Love Like a Sunset," which serves the same purpose as the extended instrumental passages on Roxy Music's Avalon, at least until its rousing conclusion and shift into "Pt. 2." Beyond containing the band's best, most efficient songwriting, the album also stands apart from the first three studio albums by projecting a cool punch that is unforced. Vocalist Thomas Mars, more bright-eyed and youthful than ever, also sounds more a part of these songs, rather than coming across as a protruding element that clashes against the instruments. Maybe they've just hit their stride.













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