Shopping > Music > April March > Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

April March - Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks] (CD)

Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]
Pricing Not Available
Not Yet Rated 0 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

Release Date:02/02/1999
Label:Tricatel
UPC:723724681620

Track List: Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

  1. Garden Of April
  2. Sugar
  3. Knee Socks
  4. Charlatan
  5. Mignonette
  6. Chrominance Decoder
  7. Garcon Glacon
  8. Mickey Et Chantal
  9. Pas Pareil
  10. Mon Petit Ami
  1. Mon Petit Cowboy
  2. Martine
  3. Ideal Standard
  4. Keep In Touch
  5. Superbagneres
  6. Nothing New (English)
  7. Nothing New (Remix)
  8. Sugar (Remix)
  9. No Parachute

Other Available Formats: Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

Pro Reviews: Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

  • All Music Guide

    There's something sexy about a girl that sings in French (both linguistically and stylistically), but besides Elinor Blake's charming pixie voice, the star of this show is producer/arranger/composer Bertrand Burgalat, who has put together a feathersoft but substantial bed of trippy music that heightens the image of April March as an ultrahip, haughty French chick. There is little rock influence to be found on Chrominance Decoder, only gogo organs, twirling horns, rolling drums, fauxjazz piano, and hollowknock percussion of the sort that one finds in France's reaction against rock roll, yeye. Burgalat is a master of delightfully giddy cartoonishness, ultrasmooth, undoubtedly continental, and oh so Parisian. The music may not be substantively French, but songs such as "Charlatan" and the fabulous "Pas Pareil" can't help but bring to mind an aloof woman in sunglasses smoking a cigarette while walking down the Left Bank, or a cafe jazz quartet accompanying the lazy afternoon sunshine in P...aris. "Sugar" does nothing short of swinging, swooping up the listener in its swirling palette of dayglo music, and "Mignonette" (and its virtual English rewrite, "No Parachute") can only be called adorable, while "Mon Petit Ami" is a wonderful, ceremonial march. The Dust Brothers remix a few cuts on Chrominance Decoder, and it is easy to see what might have attracted the duo to April March. Besides marvelous songs, there is plenty of room in the music for kitschy, smiling samples and rhythms. Indeed, the Brothers make "Nothing New" a sweet ballad the first time, then turn around and graft hiphop beats (albeit muted hiphop beats) and a buzzsaw guitar onto the song, completely changing its context in the remix. "Sugar" is altered much more substantially. Although the Brothers cannot alter the nature of the song's melody, they dispense almost entirely with Burgalat's delightfully woozy music, instead opting for sharper and less "cute" elements such as rocksteady (and doubletracked) drums, even inserting a break. These may not be dramatic revisions, but they are nice to hear and put a slightly different slant on the overall tone of the album. In general, there is a little bit of the giddy sweetness high of Kahimi Karie in April March a certain attractive tweeness but Chrominance Decoder is not simply empty calories. Blake can also affect a distanced, chanteuse quality reminiscent of Vanessa Daou, and that increases the listener's desire to get inside the music to figure out what April March is all about. She is certainly not as erudite as Edith Piaf, but you might say Blake sounds something like a teenage girl doing her best impression of the French legend, especially on "Mickey Et Chantal." That song is everything the definition implies: cute, refreshing, and slightly humorous, but fun, if somewhat less significant. Chrominance Decoder, at the very least, should put a smile on your face and a bounce in your step. - Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide Read more Less

Rate & Write a Review: Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Chrominance Decoder [Bonus Tracks]

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

April March

April March is actually one Elinore Blake (b. April 20, 1965), and, contrary to all appearances, she is not a French pixie but a Californian one. The first album she bought was England's Newest Hitmakers by the Rolling Stones, but you wouldn't know that from listening to the music of April March, which hearkens back to the pre-rock days of European pop and French ye-ye ... Read more