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D-Sides

Gorillaz

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Album Review

The Gorillaz B-sides and remixes collection D-Sides just emphasizes that Demon Days could have just as easily been called Damon Days. Even though Damon Albarn worked with collaborators like Danger Mouse on the second Gorillaz album, Albarn was its main sonic architect, and this is made even clearer by the songs that didn't make it onto Demon Days. Where the album honed a paranoid, melancholy — but always accessible — vibe, D-Sides is charmingly loose and eclectic; the stoned, rag-tag shuffle of "Don't Get Lost in Heaven (Demo)" is far more engaging, or at least immediate, than the choir and strings-bedecked version that appeared on Demon Days. The layered, doo wop-inspired harmonies and pianos on "Highway (Under Construction)" bear the marks of fiddling around in the studio, but appealingly so — and that goes double for the new wave/electro ramble "Rockit," on which Albarn makes "blah blah blah" sound almost profound. D-Sides finds him working in styles he couldn't fit on the album (although "Spitting Out the Demons"' dubby gloom comes the closest to Demon Days' final cut): "68 State"'s moody synth noodling could soundtrack an anime dystopia; "Hongkongaton" fuses dub and music hall; and "People" could be the mutant offspring of Britpop and synth pop. While many of D-Sides' tracks are sketches, the full-fledged songs are just as good as what ultimately appeared on Demon Days. "The Swagga," er, swaggers from retro-futuristic pop to messy, freewheeling rock, fulfilling the promise of rowdy snippets like "Murdoc Is God." Albarn also finds room for some surprisingly vulnerable moments; "Hong Kong," with its strings and shamisen, feels like a distant cousin of The Great Escape's "Yuko and Hiro," and "Stop the Dams" closes D-Sides' first disc on a quiet, heartfelt note. For longtime Albarn fans, this part of the collection is a lot of fun — a trip through his scraps and oddities is still more rewarding than many other artists' magnum opuses.

D-Sides' remix disc is, somewhat surprisingly, more focused than the actual Gorillaz B-sides are. It's no surprise that Albarn has gathered an on-point cast of remixers, including Metronomy, Hot Chip, and the DFA, who begin the disc with its best track, a belligerent, percussive version of "Dare" that strips the song down to little more than Shaun Ryder's voice, percussion, and the odd buzzing synth. "Dare" inspired two of the disc's other standouts, a remix by Junior Sanchez and one by Soulwax. While not all of the remixes hit these heights, overall it's a fun set, and a good complement to the eclecticism of D-Sides' first disc.

Customer Reviews

Love B-Sides and Strangley, the Remixes

it's really sad a lot of these songs never made the cut for the album. some of them i like more than the tracks on "Demon Days" form the synth anthem of "68 State" to the grimey "Murdoc is God", to the loud "We Are Happy Landfill" and the dark electronic "Rockit". But the best of the B-Sides is just the sheer beauty of "Stop the Dams" and the elegant 7-minute "Hong Kong" which feels not like a Gorillaz song but some ancient Chinese song written long ago somewhere high in the foggy mountains.

The remixes I'm not so great about, but then again I never have been. But wow, there are two I do love. The first being the Schtung Chinese New Year Remix of "Dirty Harry", really showing that Gorillaz and some fo their remixers have a real liking of Far East culture and sounds.

But the best remix on here by far is Metronomy's Remix of "El Manana". I am a big fan of Metronomy so hearing them remix a song was either gonna be a complete failure or a complete masterpiece. It was the latter; it turns this beautiful song that drifts around into this synth/melodica and simple 4/4 beat dance without at all losing the beauty, kinda making a new kind of beauty, but a more rougher kind.

Buy the B-side part and Metronomy's Remix, it's all good. :)

D Sides

It's straight up a great album definatly worth buying, especially you're a Gorillaz fan. My personal favorite is 68 State, which is largely due to the similar sound to Feel Good, Inc. The whole album is one mellow trip through musical nonsense and bliss with instruments ranging from all notes of the musical spectrum . . . if that makes any sense.

Tsk tsk tsk...

Wow. Very lazy.

Biography

Formed: 2000

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Conceived as the first "virtual hip-hop group," Gorillaz blended the musical talents of Dan "The Automator" Nakamura, Blur's Damon Albarn, Cibo Matto's Miho Hatori, and Tom Tom Club's Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz with the arresting visuals of Jamie Hewlett, best known as the creator of the cult comic Tank Girl. Nakamura's Deltron 3030 cohorts Kid Koala and Del tha Funkee Homosapien rounded out the creative team behind the Gorillaz quartet, whose virtual members included 2-D, the cute but spacy...
Full Bio
D-Sides, Gorillaz
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