Search - Clor :: Clor

Clor
Clor
Clor
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1


     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Clor
Title: Clor
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: EMI Import
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 8/1/2005
Album Type: Import
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, New Wave & Post-Punk, Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 094633068124, 094633000315, 094633000353
 

CD Reviews

Electro-pop destination...
usagi2988 | Portland, Or USA | 08/03/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Imagine if Notwist and Out Hud got together and made an album. It sounds a bit like Prince and Missing Persons as well, but without the pretentiousness of being a cover album. And finally, the whole record, while being able to point at all these references, still manages to be its own creation and entity. It sounds improbable, even impossible, but the good news is that UK band Clor has done this already, so you can stop pushing the limits of your imagination with that last catalyst.



With their eponymous album, Clor manage to successfully meld electronic with live instrumentation, usually at the expense of the listener's sense of direction. The only consolation is that they do it so well, that by the end of the album the myriad key and melody changes become natural. And the moniker "pop" is meant as a nod to that ability, the one that makes you feel as if you know the song so well because you wrote it, even if it's only the second time you've actually heard it.



This is the kind of album that sounds as equally good coming out of either your home stereo or windows of your car (while you're doing some ridiculous speed down the road) as it does pumped through your headphones as you're walking downtown or under the covers. Of course, it would be naive as well as a bit arrogant to claim this is an everyone-album, but it sure is good. If even two of the words "Electronic," "Indie," or "Pop," strike your fancy, you certainly could do a lot worse than pick up this album."
Clor Their Way To Greatness
The Wasp | Australia | 04/19/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"While it seems simultaneously absorbed and absurd to describe your debut album as "a flawless masterpiece of disassociated male sexuality and scientific investigation, set to irresistibly insistent tunes", Clor have certainly delivered a record that splices masculine frailty with songs aligned with glorious musical benchmarks from the 1980s.

On their eponymous debut these sons of Brixton have developed a pop sound that captures Duran Duran's synthesised savoir-faire and David Byrne's edgey allure. While the keyboards, electronic drumkits and special whiz-bang effects often descend into rather ropey realms on tracks such as Making You All Mine and Garden Of Love, it's little wonder considering Clor's guitarist Luke Smith previously wrote bleepy music for video games.

There's more to Clor than a whacked-out love of dressing up, hosting dinky DJ nights and capturing the spirit of Talking Heads on bedroom recordings though, with Love And Pain stretching the influences to include the exuberant pop of The New Pornographers, Gifted adding quality lyrics ("you were the brightest star in my firmament" wins the inaugural Lyric Of The Week competition) that will have Belle & Sebastian fearing redundancy and Dangerzone sounding like electro junkie Tiga covering The Flaming Lips. The mellow and wounded finale of Goodbye might sound like a sweet piece of Travis-style pop, but the lyrics such as "we crave red hot strangers" indicate it's actually a randy little number designed to pull the groupies. It seems like James Blunt isn't the only clever devil switched on to using fey melodies to pull the lassies. Clor blimey."
Music for schizophrenics
M. Lohrke | Provo, UT | 08/25/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"despite sounding like something straight out of 1983, clor's debut album couldn't have happened any other time than now. it'd be easy to pigeonhole clor into the whole nu-wave revival with the bravery and the killers, but doing so would not only be a disservice to the band, but also to you the listener.



invoking everyone from devo, to dm, to gary numan, to kraftwerk, clor employs an powerpop/electropop punch, that despite the somewhat dated casio-keyboard sound, sounds fresh and vital. songs like 'outlines,' 'love & pain' and 'dangerzone' (no, not nicked from kenny loggins) are relentlessly experimental, yet never sacrifice craft and melody for said experimentation. barry dobbin's vocals bop and weave like muhammad ali--he's impossible to pin down, and that's a good thing. musically, clor is all over the map--there's not a stagnant moment on the album. bass lines, synth lines, and vocals are in constant motion, never holding a note, it seems, for more than a split second. at the end you'll probably be reaching for a bottle of advil from the musical blitzkrieg you've just experienced.



it's certainly not for everyone, but underneath all the madness (and it certainly is mad)are solid, interesting songs. in the end, clor are mad scientists, adding an arm here, an leg there, a new head, all the while creating something new, melodic, exciting and let's face it, plain old fun."