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iTunes Review

28 After presents an evil European inversion of Manhattan’s underground disco of the late 1970s and early 1980s. The message of unity and transcendence-through-dance expressed in the triumphant productions of Patrick Adams becomes the murky, sleazy suspicion of 28 After. If New York City disco was the sound of a city high on itself, 28 After is the music as re-imagined by KGB agents and S&M madams. Although its origins remain shrouded in mystery, the consensus says this is the work of one Bernard Fevre, a French library musician whose collaboration with partner Jackie Giordano entitled Disco Club in 1978 received “lost classic” status upon reissue by Aphex Twin’s Rephlex label in 2004. (The pair’s original moniker was Black Devil.) While the exact whereabouts of Giordano remain unknown (prison and/or death are the persistent rumors), he is believed to have crafted this follow-up in the wake of the of the Rephlex reissue's success: the title 28 After refers to the intervening time between the original album and this sequel. The sounds here are unforgettable as a cavalcade of grotesque and fantastic keyboards give the album its personality. At turns icy and torrid, there are noises here that seem to foretell the entire careers of Aphex Twin and Squarepusher. Singularly disturbing and irresistibly fun, 28 After is both a blueprint and an anomaly of sinister Euro-disco.

Customer Reviews

30 years after

Nearly 30 years after the first album, the extremely rare disco masterpiece gets a follow up, an epic journey into the deepest electronic disco, full of haunting vocals, warped lyrics, twisted yet melodic electronics and crisp disco beats. Similar in sound to the original LP which sounded like one long epic track this new album is more diverse and surprising. Highly recommended!

WoW

The days of going to the clubs in 83' were crazy fun. These were the songs you danced to when it was waaayyy past your bedtime. Dark and creepy smelly clubs they were, but being there you the felt you were alive! If your wanting a feeling of what those last days of the disco era into the electro new wave were. This album is a must. Enjoy.....:)

Love/Hate

"The Devil In Us" is probably one of the wierdest song I've ever heard... but for some reason, I find it pretty damn enjoyable! I'm never sure whether to hate it for the vocals or love it for the beat and the music in the background. However, since I love it AND hate it and since it's the best song in the album that I've heard so far, it earns itself a solid 3 stars in my book.

Biography

Formed: France

Genre: Electronic

Years Active: '70s, '00s, '10s

Initially a one-off "collaboration" between French producer Bernard Fevre and alleged financier Jackie Giordano — credited, respectively, as Joachim Sherylee and Junior Claristidge — Black Devil released a six-track album of spooky electro-disco entitled Disco Club. Originally released on Italy's Out label in 1978, it became somewhat mythical in the disco underground due to its scarcity. A copy eventually fell into the hands of the Rephlex label's PP Roy and won the hearts of Richard...
Full Bio
28 After, Black Devil Disco Club
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