- More Hot Chip
The fact that 'Made In The Dark', a dazzling gem of a record, is only Hot Chip's third album, is surprising in itself, such has been their recent ubiquity with numerous remixes for the likes of Amy Winehouse and Jamie Lidell, MTV-blanketed singles (yes 'Over And Over', we mean you) and a Mercury Award nomination. Going purely on the strength of their studio long-players however, their progression from the Prince-obsessed awkward-white-boy (and unashamedly so) electronic funk of 'Coming On Strong' to 2006's markedly more successful 'The Warning' has been less of a gradual development and more a radical blossoming.
Whereas 'Coming On Strong', as its' title possibly acknowledged, raised its' pop eyebrow a bit too archly, the acclaimed follow-up captured the combination of detachment, euphoria, frailty and tunes so well that now everyone from the style press to The Wire are clamoring to herald Hot Chip’s return. They're the "LCD Soundsystem for 2008!", apparently. Such comparisons aren't wildly far off the mark, although on the first half of 'Made In The Dark' Hot Chip play with more abandon, less streamlined rigor, then James Murphy and co displayed on last year's multiple-poll topping 'Sound Of Silver'.
First mention must go to ‘Ready For The Floor’, arguably Hot Chip’s most perfect moment yet and a track that plays on the divide between self-awareness and sincerity, vulnerability and hedonism (the contrast between being “ready for a fall” and “ready for the floor” encapsulates Hot Chip so much better than all these words here there’s almost no point trying) in just three pop-friendly minutes. Its’ presence within the record’s opening quarter is crucial, linking as it does the album’s feet with it’s overreaching heart.
Opener 'Out At The Pictures' begins with a detuned organ, whose escalating tones give way to a drum machine and rave-referencing middle section that wouldn't sound out of place on one of the more radical Girls Aloud singles: superficially it's extremely chaotic, but it's only the frantic repetition of Alexis Taylor's vocals (which have never sounded better) that give this impression. It's this sense of chaos that dominates the
album's first-half, from 'Shake A Fist's schizophrenic mash-up of Kraftwerk, Todd Rundgren and queasy synths to 'Bendable Poseable', it's layered mix of guitar and metallic beats recalling the likes of The Knife and Battles (just without those groups’ austerity): for close to twenty minutes 'Made In The Dark' is one amazing party.
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