All Artists: Benjamin Diamond Title: Strange Attitude Members Wishing: 0 Total Copies: 0 Label: King Japan Release Date: 7/9/2008 Album Type: Import Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop Style: Dance Pop Number of Discs: 2 SwapaCD Credits: 2 |
Benjamin Diamond Strange Attitude Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
From the voice of Stardust's smash summer anthem a few yearsback, 'Music Sounds Better With You' comes his debut solo album which is set to burn up the clubs & charts in Europe. This exclusive Japanese pressing adds tw... more » | |
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Album Description From the voice of Stardust's smash summer anthem a few yearsback, 'Music Sounds Better With You' comes his debut solo album which is set to burn up the clubs & charts in Europe. This exclusive Japanese pressing adds two bonus tracks, 'Joyride' (Dub) & 'U Were Born' (Sunday Night Mix)' as well as the hidden bonus track that graces the French version, 'Just A Little Time (No Drums Version)'. Includes the first single'In Your Arms (We Gonna Make It)'. Though 14 tracks are listed on the spine the 15th song tails track 14. 2000 release. Standard jewel case. Similar CDs
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CD ReviewsMusic for supermodels. Watujel | San Antonio, Texas | 06/15/2001 (2 out of 5 stars) "If glossy European disco music and bored facial expressions aren't necessary accoutrements of supermodel life, I don't know what are. So what better CD for these runway mavens than Benjamin Diamond's "Strange Attitude." Even if they show up to the photo shoot engrossed in Proust (hey anything's possible), by the time they hear Diamond singing "back a new day" (and somehow pronouncing it "love your music") for the tenth time, they'll have that perfect glassy-eyed, slackjawed look that photographers love.Though Diamond uses some fat bass synthesizers and thanks George Clinton in the liner notes, this stuff is too polished to qualify as funk. Many of the songs (especially "Little Scare," "18 and Over," "Strange Attitude," and "In Your Arms") boast promising, catchy intros, but quickly lapse into seemingly endless repetition. It's good to have a strong hook and interesting title, but that doesn't mean you can just repeat them mindlessly for six minutes and claim that constitutes a song. Especially foul is his cover of Oran "Juice" Jones' "The Rain," which doesn't even have a decent intro; it sounds like a six-year-old is playing the piano. And his singing betrays a lack of interest in the material.This CD will set the right atmosphere at a party, but if you're looking for dance music that will hold up under closer, and more um, sober inspection, better stick with the Pet Shop Boys."
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