2004, Anticon
Passage's music is the kind of electro-new-wave-industrial-folk-hospital-waiting-room-hope-hop that you can dance or die to. The self-produced "Forcefield Kids" is full of distorted lo-bit jiggy drums; chopped-up, backward harps and French horns; distinctive synths with envelopes and filters; acoustic guitars; playful, heavy words; and catchy-ass melodies. Passage capably references and blends a seemingly infinite library of influences. The record is filled with images of invalids, radiation, cold hospitals, lost love, and dreaded, never-ending Sunday afternoons filled with self-loathing regrets. A highlight is the dark pop infection called "Old Aunt Mary," sounding like something off Beck's "One Foot in the Grave." Who would have thought that someone could create a hardcore, new wave, melodious fast-raps record, with sweeter-than-candy indie-pop hooks? "The Forcefield Kids" is proudly and without apology a genre-defying record that just about embodies "the anticon sound."
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Forcefield Intro |
| 2 | In the Bioburbs |
| 3 | Creature in the Classroom |
| 4 | Pins in the Bowels |
| 5 | Of the Charmed Design |
| 6 | Old Aunt Mary |
| 7 | Free Luv from Left Field |
| 8 | Whine Money |
| 9 | Unstrung Harp |
| 10 | Hareoki (SP?) Kiss Ass |
| 11 | Put Together, Play, Red Ferrari Calendar |
| 12 | Vail 4 Lil Geniuses |
| 13 | Duck 'N' Cover |
| 14 | 14411 |
| 15 | Unspectacular White Boy Slave Song |
| 16 | Spring '97 |
| 17 | Suffragette (SP?) |
| 18 | Reagan's Chest |
| 19 | All the News That's Fit to Print |
| 20 | Scarefilm |
| 21 | Poem to the Hospital |
| 22 | Pail of Air |
Customer Reviews





