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Walking On a Dream

Empire of the Sun

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Album Review

Empire of the Sun's debut offering of experimental electro-pop and dance-rock is very well-timed, hitting the market just as the buzz surrounding MGMT's Oracular Spectacular has started to recede. Like those similarly colorful Americans, Empire of the Sun's two members embrace the glam lifestyle in spirit and song, wearing festive costumes in concert and festooning their music with oddball flourishes, androgynous lyrics, and a general sense of theatricality that borders on schizophrenia. Walking on a Dream runs an interesting gamut, sampling equally from hip-hop ("Swordfish Hotkiss Night"), arty synth pop ("Standing on the Shore"), and all the stops in between. With its programmed percussion and futuristic keyboards, the music sounds slightly more indebted to Pnau than the Sleepy Jackson; nevertheless, Luke Steele (the brains behind the latter band) takes center stage on the bulk of these songs, speak-singing in a childish tenor one minute and cooing like a lovestruck female the next. The aforementioned MGMT followed a similar path with their own debut — a fact that simply cannot be emphasized enough, given the vast similarities between both records — but while MGMT took cues from the likes of David Bowie and Prince, Empire of the Sun's fusion is more reminiscent of worldbeat and fantasy movie soundtracks. The outlandish cover art follows suit, as Steele and Nick Littlemore (dressed up in bizarre Star Wars-styled regalia) are flanked by a decorative elephant, a tiger, and what appears to be the skyline of Atlantis. Like the music it promotes, the cover art is purposely ludicrous, but listeners who have a palette for such whimsy should walk away happy.

Customer Reviews

EMPIRE IS: Earth Wind & Fire meets MGMT (steals from others along the way)

I feel sorry for Empire... having their most popular song being 'Walking On a Dream', poppy oversampled garble, means their other music is disregarded. 'Swordfish Hotkiss Night' is the grittiest of their reasonably tame array but otherwise, I might aswell be listening to a lullaby collaboration. HOWEVER: This being said, what 'Swordfish' does for the album is nothing less than majestic. It's intense frequency of bass reminds one of songs such as 'Never Wanted to Dance' (Mindless Self Indulgence) or EW&F's earlier hits. I am pleased that an Australian 'band' (term used VERY loosely) has made it to international stardom (?or mockery...) Enough of you listening to me ranting about why I think they suck, I've downloaded all of their stuff avidly... MAKING ME A HYPOCRITICAL WASTE OF SPACE. Or am I? Now I'm just being stupid. MGMT should be proud that some aussies are copying their every move...

just like walking on a dream =]

i love walking on a dream, the song is really great, it's definitely a lot like MGMT's stuff but what's not to love :)

Walking on a dream

Nice work for a Aussie newcomers, first half of album would be my fav ending with the incredibly atmospherice 'country' The first half is an MGMT / upbeat / electro set / part of the album. The remaining half takes a few listens to, but would prefer more of the first 4 tracks. Incredible mix of 'Half Mast' into 'We are the people'. Over all I feel it's a Midnight Juggernauts v Royksopp v MGMT collab - well worth your money. Look out for these guys in the future!

Biography

Formed: Australia

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Taking their name from the J.G. Ballard novel that became a 1987 Steven Spielberg film, Australia's larger-than-life electro-glam-pop duo Empire of the Sun feature the Sleepy Jackson's Luke Steele and Pnau's Nick Littlemore. Steele had previously worked with Pnau on "With You Forever," a track from the band's 2007 self-titled third album, and the pair enjoyed collaborating so much that they started their own project, drawing inspiration from the likes of Phoenix and Daft Punk. In fall 2008, Empire...
Full Bio
Walking On a Dream, Empire of the Sun
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  • $9.99
  • Genres: Pop, Music, Electronic
  • Released: 03 October 2008

Customer Ratings

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