Release Date: Nov 11, 2008
Format: MP3, 320 kbps Contextual Help marker
Length: 52:32
Genre: Electronic
Copyright: 2008 Our Secret Record Company

Reverse Migration

Latest Price: $8.98 Contextual Help marker
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1 Play Button
The Lucky One (Slow Club remix) Top Track Icon
Remixed by Slow Club
2:47 $0.88 Buy Song 9
2 Play Button
Sad Song (Pacific! remix)
Remixed by Pacific!
3:26 $0.71 Buy Song 7
3 Play Button
Fallen Snow (The Teenagers remix)
Remixed by The Teenagers
4:25 $0.69 Buy Song 6
4 Play Button
I Couldn't Sleep (Darkel remix)
Remixed by Darkel
3:08 $0.70 Buy Song 3
5 Play Button
A Violent Yet Flammable World (Montag remix) Top Track Icon
Remixed by Montag
4:49 $0.71 Buy Song 7
6 Play Button
Don't See The Sorrow (Keith Murray remix)
Remixed by Keith Murray
3:49 $0.68 Buy Song 4
7 Play Button
Dark Halls (Best Fwends remix)
Remixed by Best Fwends
2:55 $0.66 Buy Song 4
8 Play Button
Night Majestic (Matt Harding remix)
Remixed by Matt Harding
3:52 $0.66 Buy Song 5
9 Play Button
Stars (Disco Pusher remix)
Remixed by Disco Pusher
3:55 $0.69 Buy Song 5
10 Play Button
Lark (Ruff and Jam remix)
Remixed by Ruff & Jam
3:47 $0.69 Buy Song 4
11 Play Button
The Way To There (Mark-Anthony Tieku remix)
Remixed by Mark-Anthony Tieku
4:27 $0.68 Buy Song 4
12 Play Button
Sad Song (Alexis Taylor remix)
Remixed by Alexis Taylor
7:56 $0.66 Buy Song 3
13 Play Button
The Lucky One (James Yuill remix)
Remixed by James Yuill
3:16 $0.72 Buy Song 6

About Reverse Migration

Covers and remixes of songs from Brooklyn female synth-pop trio's second album. Features contributions from Hot Chip's Alexis Taylor, The Teenagers, Best Fwends, Air France, Air side project Darkel. They've received praise from Pitchfork, The London Times, MTV News, NME, and director David Lynch, who named them his favorite new group in 2007.

Reverse Migration - Review

As the remix album format has become increasingly popular, it has also come to encompass a wider array of approaches towards the communal editing of one artist's pre-existing material. There's no better example than the digital-only Reverse Migration, on which Au Revoir Simone's The Bird of Music gets scrambled up by a collision of different methodologies that largely flounder and fail to recapture the cohesion of the originals. As a basis for the remixes, the all girl synth pop group's shimmering 2007 album at first certainly seems ripe for further development; immersed in washes of layered keyboards, their charmingly gorgeous songs provide a wealth of great hooks and melodic invention while maintaining a simple consistency that suggests the potential for sonic expansion. Unfortunately, these remixes only end up revealing how essential the simplicity of the initial instrumental approach is to the success of the material. Reverse Migration opens with what is apparently the band's own remake of "The Lucky One," reduced to a simple acoustic ditty which senselessly revs up into a hyperactive workout towards the finish. "Don't See the Sorrow" is an out-and-out acoustic cover by Keith Murray, and it's not the only place where a song is completely re-recorded by the remixer: Mark-Anthony Tieku's take on "The Way to There," for one, is a complete overhaul which only samples the original at the end. On the other hand, "Sad Song (Pacific! Remix)" doesn't stray too far from its source, essentially adding a bouncy bassline that accentuates the song's poppy chord structure. Montag's remix of "A Violent Yet Flammable World" lends the song an air of dreamy trepidation, cautiously building on a bed of chimes and plucked strings, but halfway through it abruptly flies hell-bent into bland rave-up territory which undermines the whole thing. Ideally, a remix should bring something fresh to the table that makes it compelling in its own right, and not just add needless embellishments and pointless rhythmic turnarounds. Only several of these tracks succeed in that regard: the innovative "Night Majestic (Matt Harding Remix)" strips away the bubbly synths in favor of a fractured, guitar driven sound, while Alexis Taylor brings his distinctive Hot Chip flavor to another version of "Sad Song." The song is more or less his own extended composition until the last several minutes, when he takes the original music and turns it into a remarkably affective acoustic lament. In general, few amidst the recent flurry of remix albums actually succeed, with Nine Inch Nails' Y34RZ3r0 R3mix3d being a particular exception. Most others, like Stars' Do You Trust Your Friends?, fall way short of the mark. Reverse Migration falls primarily in the latter camp, turning a remarkably substantive synth-pop album into a far more typical affair. ~ Ben Peterson, All Music Guide

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