Stereolab
Electrically Possessed [Switched On Vol. 4]
Rare & Collectible Vinyl Records

Stereolab

Electrically Possessed [Switched On Vol. 4]
New, 2021 3LP Gatefold Compilation; UK Import. Comes Housed In A Uni-Pak Style Gatrefold. These Come Un-Sealed, In An Outer Sleeve With Hype Sticker Affixed To Front. "Appearing Just Over A Decade After Stereolab Disbanded, Electrically Possessed: Switched On, Vol. 4 Is A Welcome Refresher On The EP's, Singles, And Rarities They Issued From 1999 To 2008. The Collection's Nine-Year Span Covers Nearly Half Of The Band's Career -- By Contrast, The Original Switched On Gathered Just Six Months' Worth Of Music -- But Like The Other Volumes In The Series, It Captures The Flavor Of Its Era Just As Completely As Stereolab's Full-Lengths. Electrically Possessed Begins With The First Of The Microbe Hunters, A Mini-Album That Arrived Soon After The Group's Heady 1999 Effort Cobra And Phases Group Play Voltage In The Milky Night And Provided A Playful Contrast To That Release. While The Nine-minute "Outer Bongolia" Rivals Cobra's Ambition With Its Extravaganza Of Wah-wah Guitar, Brass, And Xylophone, The Serenely Spacey Pop Of "I Feel The Air (Of Another Planet)" And The Strutting Jazz-Funk Of "Barock-Plastic" Could've Appeared On Emperor Tomato Ketchup. Much Of The Rest Of Switched On, Vol. 4 Consists Of Limited-Edition Tour Singles That The Band Recorded At Tim Gane And Laetitia Sadier's Computer-based Home Studio, Which They Built After They Fell In Love With Digital Recording While Making 1997's Dots And Loops. Though Many Of These Tracks Ride A Similar Groove, There Are Several Standouts. "L'exotisme Interieur" From 2008 Is Chiming, Blissed-out Pop; The 2001 A-Side "Free Witch And No Bra Queen" Pairs A Sexy Spy Movie Theme Worthy Of Lalo Schifrin With Spooky Vocal Harmonies; And "Calimero," A 1999 Collaboration With Brigitte Fontaine, Is One Of Their Clearest Homages To French Pop À La Serge Gainsbourg. Some Of Electrically Possessed's Other Highlights Were Composed For Various Projects That Fit Stereolab's Aesthetic Perfectly. The Bustling Collage Of Vocals, Beats, And Burbling Synths That Is "B.U.A." Reunited Them With Visual Artist Charles Long, For Whom They Composed Music For The Amorphous Body Study Center, While "Variation One"'s Funky Synth Workout First Appeared On The Soundtrack To The Documentary Moog, Appropriately Enough. The Collection's Previously Unreleased Material Ranges From Snippets Like The Spacious Dots And Loops Outtake "Pandora's Box Of Worms" That Will Likely Appeal Most To Hardcore Fans To Buried Treasures Such As "Solar Throw-Away (Original Version)," A Tart, Brassy Ballad That Makes For One Of The Set's Finest Moments. While There Might Not Be Quite As Many Essential Tracks Here As On The Other Switched On Volumes, Electrically Possessed Is A Reminder That Stereolab Were Releasing So Much Good Music That It Was Easy To Take It For Granted At The Time, And It's Well Worth A Listen For Fans Who May Have Missed Or Glossed Over These Songs When They Were First Released." AMG Review By Heather Phares.

$36.00
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Track List

A1 Outer Bongolia
A2 Intervals
B1 Barock-Plastik
B2 Nomus Et Phusis
B3 I Feel The Air (Of Another Planet)
C1 Household Names
C2 Retrograde Mirror Form
C3 Solar Throw-Away [Original Version]
C4 Pandora's Box Of Worms
C5 L'exotisme Intérieur
D1 The Super-It
D2 Jump Drive Shout-Out
D3 Explosante Fixe
D4 Fried Monkey Eggs [Instrumental]
D5 Monkey Jelly
D6 B.U.A.
E1 Free Witch And No Bra Queen
E2 Heavy Denim Loop Pt 2
E3 Variation One
E4 Monkey Jelly [Beats]
E5 Dimension M2
F1 Solar Throw Away
F2 Calimero
F3 Fried Monkey Eggs [Vocal]
F4 Speck Voice