iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store. If iTunes doesn’t open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop. Progress Indicator
iTunes 9

iTunes is the world’s easiest way to organize and add to your digital music and video collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Street Horrrsing by Fuck Buttons, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Street Horrrsing

Fuck Buttons

View More by this Artist

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Fuck Buttons

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Sweet Love for Planet Earth Fuck Buttons 9:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Ribs Out Fuck Buttons 3:57 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Okay, Let's Talk About Magic Fuck Buttons 10:08 Album Only View In iTunes
4 Race You to My Bedroom / Spirit Rise Fuck Buttons 9:18 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Bright Tomorrow Fuck Buttons 7:41 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Colours Move Fuck Buttons 8:54 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Some bands with a name like F**k Buttons would go for a raunchy approach, but on their debut Street Horrrsing, the Bristol-based group focuses on messing with layers of sounds instead of anything sleazy. F**k Buttons' collage of brittle electronics, post-rock epics, and blistering noise recalls more than a few other bands — they're capable of raging like Wolf Eyes, conjuring Aa's dead calm, echoing Mogwai's majesty and mining similar territory to tourmates like Stars of the Lid and Deerhunter — but they put these elements together in their own beautiful, and often unsettling, way. Street Horrrsing opens with "Sweet Love for Planet Earth," a nine-minute epic that starts off twinkling like a snow globe (or the theme to The Exorcist), then swells with thick clouds of distorted synths and bass. Despite the layers of noise, the song radiates an intense, cathartic, and remarkably subtle beauty, even when fuzzed-out screaming cuts through the haze like a dream pop take on Wolf Eyes. Its pulsing bass morphs into rattling percussion as "Ribs Out"'s tribal terror takes F**k Buttons' music in a very different direction, trading oddly comforting sheets of distortion for stark, unyielding rhythms, and feral yips and wails. The rest of the album lies somewhere between these extremes, flowing as one long piece while the band finds a surprising amount of variety in the blunt rhythms, penetrating electronic haze, and distorted vocals that make up Street Horrrsing's main motifs. F**k Buttons use noise richly and expressively, but they're far from a noise band; even on the densest, most frantic moments like "OK, Let's Talk About Magic," a striking melodic sensibility guides these songs. Conversely, the prettiest moments still have a scary streak: "Race You to My Bedroom"'s dense atmosphere has a glowing, sunset loveliness, but its wordless chattering makes it equally rapturous and ominous. F**k Buttons' sound gets more unique when they add some unexpectedly twists to it, as on "Bright Tomorrow," where a four-on-the-floor beat transforms the song into noise-house. Before it ends on the same sparkling melody that opened Street Horrrsing, "Colours Move" closes the album by reprising everything that came before it with a strangely jubilant air — or maybe not so strangely, because this debut is as satisfying as it is promising.

Recent Customer Reviews

A Good Start
     
by avannicola

Yes. its true. The "hipster" community loves it, all slobbering over any kind of obscure noise they can find. But at the same time, it is a good record. Listening to this on Hi-Fi Headphones takes you to an entirely different place. Giant distorted synths, small melodic organs, and pulsing 4/4 beats fade in and out. The fuzzed out screams and rants add another level to it. It feels like the world is ending but we're all sitting around, accepting it, and listening to the sometimes brilliant sounds of the, as itunes likes to put it, F*** Buttons. Buy it, love it, and, and be excited for whats next.

nice but overrated
     
by b1b1b1

They basically have a good sound but the songs are pretty formulaic and the main problem is the lack of sophistication of their songwriting skills and overly relying on the same elements song after song that become redundant (especially the irritating Masonna-ish vocals that pop up way too frequently). This is esentially drone music, but they don't have the chops to make it truly engaging, as their songwriting is extremely simplistic (at least half the songs have a three-note melody that are all pretty similar to each other). Nice enough, but I tend to get bored halfway through the songs because they don't do enough to keep interest going. Probably sounds better if you're high.

Not so new, and not so great
     
by Sir Julesalot

Nifty meldings seem de rigueur these days. So you get your basic, say early 70s, folk with a nice schmear of low fat electronica, you know, little bubblings and cracklings in the background. Or your four square house with a thick dollop of country smarm squeezed on. Figures: much of IDM’s innovations have occured, the kids have supped on them and, unwilling to relinquish, specially in the States, the alterna-whatever they were suckled with, love to combine genres, something like the musical equivalent of pan-asian or cal-ital dishes. The Pitchdorks have already elevated that nouvelle cuisine to haute.

Ergo our little Buttons. It was only a matter of time before a bunch'o geeks combined minimal tech a la Richie Hawtin or, even more obviously here, Pan Sonic, with elements of grindcore. Mind you, our Buttons are nice lads: you have none of the willful agression and brutal breaks of, say, John Zorn circa Torture Garden (still the source of my favorite song title: "Perfume of a critic's burning flesh"). No, here the template is good old post-rock as perfected by the likes of Mogwai: start with some pretty melodic cells that get repeated for what seems like eons, build up some Fenneszian distortions roughly midway, just to prepare the weak of ear for the coming wall of noise, bounce some growly screaming against said wall, ease up, return to the melody, as if to say ‘twas just a nightmare, end of track. Fairly hypnotic if you let yourself go, but also astoundingly simplistic. And repeated over six tracks (unless I fell asleep and missed sumthin') newly boring.

Biography

Formed: 2004 in Bristol, England

Genre: Electronic

Years Active: '00s

The Bristol, England-based experimental duo F**k Buttons — Andrew Hung and Benjamin John Power — formed in late 2004 and signed to the ATP label, releasing the "Bright Tomorrow" b/w "Little Bloody Shoulder" 7" single during the fall of 2007, with live dates throughout England (with Liars,...
Full Bio
Street Horrrsing, Fuck Buttons
View In iTunes

Customer Ratings

     
56 Ratings

Influencers

Contemporaries