Grubby dance symphonies that nag nag nag, all fevered synth, splintered drums and those quick-to-make-your-acquaintance refrains, Attack Decay Sustain Release finds Jameses Shaw and Ford, aka Simian Mobile Disco, relentlessly pursuing their brain-conquering agenda. This is a fiercely full-on record: aptly named opener ‘Sleep Deprivation’ makes its point with relish, pummeling electro beats and stabbing synths roughing us up.
It is only the beginning of an unrelentingly intense journey. Foot glued to the accelerator, SMD pile-drive up a highway of lacerating sound, playing dodgems with the primal electro of Suicide and Gallic disco cool of Daft Punk, speeding all the way to extinction. First single ‘It’s The Beat’ gives notice of SMD’s intention to lay it on thick at every opportunity, the synth sounds punching through a canvas of electronic skiffle; meanwhile, the vocal impetuously announces, “it’s the beat”. No one can accuse SMD of trying to be profound – instead they’ve created something pretty, something vacant, and something which is instilled with a joyous physicality. These tracks speak to every sinew and muscle in your body.
Ducking and diving number ‘The Hustler’ is powered by devastating junkyard rhythms and elastic beats, snapping this way and that, elongating and contracting. Then there’s ‘Tits & Acid’, screeching like an electronic Banshee. This artillery of willfully daft dance has only one objective: to hijack the listener’s cerebral cortex. Mission accomplished. A moment of relative, and unwelcome, calm, ‘I Believe’ is the kind of lame-assed fare that passed for dance music in the early ‘90s, the keyboards swooning heavenly, SMD aiming for ethereal and achieving insipid. The chasing its own tail, cyclical rhythms and lyric of ‘Love’, are similarly unconvincing.
Much better is ‘Wooden’, which sounds like nothing so much as The Orb fired up on amphetamines rather than their usual tipple, LSD. ‘Scott’, meanwhile, is like being trapped in dear old Syd Barrett’s mind – disconcerting, rapidly disintegrating, an amalgam of disturbed bleeps and ramshackle beats. Given their proximity to the old rave new wave – Ford produced Klaxons’ Myths of the Near Future – it’s almost inevitable that SMD will be corralled into that dubiously defined genre. However, Attack Decay Sustain Release defies such trite categorization and, ultimately, what it is or isn’t doesn’t really matter. All you need to know is this is quality.

This pisses all over
the Justice LP and don't you forget it.
Seriass?
I think the Justice album completely slays. I do like this album though.
Agreed,
this album is the mother, read
<a href="http://fallenotbroken.blogspot.com/2007/05/simian-mobile-disco-attack-decay.html">here</a>.
it's
better than justice and MSTRKRFT efforts put together
And NYPC's
that comes out on the same day
very, very fine record this
Spot on! Quality!!
They're in their own leauge. This could be the electronica/dance album of 2007! It brings the old raver back to life.
Justice!
>>> SMD
Although they are narrowing the gap.
Waters of Nazareth
is better than anythign else they've done though, and each subsequent release gets more and more dull. A band I heard the other week that give them a good run for their money are "Teenage bad girl", on vitalic's record label
They tread some familiar ground, but do it very, very well indeed
SMD>Justice
its true
Rubbish!
Tracks 2-5 + 7 are good, but the rest is pure filler.
'I Believe' is particularly bad, and 'Love' is an absolute waste of Barry Dobbins.
Justice's album is in a completely different league to this, and so is MSTRKRFT's.
I
quite like 'I Believe'... am I the only one?!
Anyway, forget about Justice. Who thinks this is better than the new Chems album?
Cheeze
"I believe" is cheeze.
All i care about
Is the video for The Hustler
Justice and MSTRKRFT
both better than this.
sorry the filler ruins an alright album.
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