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Label:541
Cat-No:5411114
Release-Date:29.03.2024
Configuration:LP
Barcode:
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Last in:-
Label:541
Cat-No:5411114
Release-Date:29.03.2024
Configuration:LP
Barcode:
1
Compact Disk Dummies - Solàr
2
Compact Disk Dummies - There's No Sex Without You
3
Compact Disk Dummies - fomo
4
Compact Disk Dummies - Cut Me Open
5
Compact Disk Dummies - Where We Go (Calypso)
6
Compact Disk Dummies - Like A Turtle On Its Back
7
Compact Disk Dummies - Ballet Dancer
8
Compact Disk Dummies - The Signal
9
Compact Disk Dummies - Do It Again
10
Compact Disk Dummies - Underwater
180 GRAM COLOURED VINYL. Including the singles There's No Sex Without You & fomo.

Tracklist

A1. Compact Disk Dummies - Solàr
A2. Compact Disk Dummies - There's No Sex Without You
A3. Compact Disk Dummies - fomo
A4. Compact Disk Dummies - Cut Me Open
A5. Compact Disk Dummies - Where We Go (Calypso)

B1. Compact Disk Dummies - Like A Turtle On Its Back
B2. Compact Disk Dummies - Ballet Dancer
B3. Compact Disk Dummies - The Signal
B4. Compact Disk Dummies - Do It Again
B5. Compact Disk Dummies - Underwater


On their third full-length album, 'The Signal', the Compact Disk Dummies keep a few interesting balls in the air. They play with the opinions and expectations of the outside world, while also confronting their own desires and doubts. This is aptly depicted on the cover with a table, a bell, two brothers and an impatient crowd: who is waiting for whom? The album is as diverse as its cover is surprising. In a mix of styles and influences ranging from retro house to funk, Lennert and Janus Coorevits demonstrate their versatility. Following their scintillating performances at Rock Werchter and Pukkelpop, and the success of the radio hits 'There's No Sex Without You' and 'fomo', 'The Signal' marks the start of a new era for the Dummies.

Lennert notes, "Pfff, I would think about everything indefinitely. And I'm not the only one, I notice. Stuck in a kind of limbo, a state of uncertainty, surrounded by signals, but still feeling a certain fear of following the signal."

On 'The Signal', 'fomo' dissects human desire, reaching for the unattainable. 'Where We Go (Calypso)' is like the shipwreck no one wants. And in the title track, the female lead character finds herself in a toxic relationship, the signs of which are obvious, at least to the outside world. While the content of 'The Signal' revolves around doubt, contemplation and acting or not acting, the musical interpretation is in direct opposition to that. The Compact Disk Dummies do not doubt; they hold their heads up and their chests out. With certainty, they mix everything that excites them musically into the blender, without grinding the identity of the Dummies themselves; actually enriching it instead. The retro house of 'Solàr' (a song about Louis the Fourteenth? Why not) flows into the rampant funk of 'Ballet Dancer' before expanding into 'Underwater'. In every track, you sense the long road the Coorevits brothers have travelled since their breakthrough - and their then angular electro-punk. This third album is Lennert and Janus' most sophisticated work in the expanding universe of the Compact Disk Dummies.

In addition to being a mix of styles, 'The Signal' is also a mix of collaborations. There is the French touch of mixer Michael Declerck and mastering engineer Alex Gopher. There is the Dutch input of Wieger Hoogendorp (Goldband) and Jens Van Der Meij (Froukje). Beautiful string sections are provided by Wietse Meys and Reinhard Vanbergen, bass licks by Boris Van Overschee and backing vocals by Isolde Lasoen and Judith Okon, among others. Producer Jasper Maekelberg always kept an eye on things. And again, for the third album in a row, after 'Mess With Us' (2013) and 'Neon Fever Dream' (2020), artist Athos Burez also provided the artwork for 'The Signal'.

But however international the music sounds, however great the contributions from other top artists, 'The Signal' remains largely the work of the Dummies, with Lennert as vocalist, lyricist and multi-instrumentalist, and Janus as engineer, producer and all-around tech wizard. The album was not made in New York, Tokyo or Berlin, but in Desselgem. Studio 87, the Coorevits family's garage converted into a studio, remains Ali Baba's cave for the Compact Disk Dummies. In their studio crammed with synths, percussion and guitars, Lennert and Janus could not ignore the signal: time to smash it!
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