The Stereolab Albums Poll

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (267 of them)

I heard the singles on Switched On before I heard anything else, but otherwise the order is pretty random. It took me a while to hear MAQ for some reason.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Saturday, 12 March 2011 01:49 (fifteen years ago)

I still have the swirly pink Big Money single of "Light That Will Never Cease To Fail" b/w "Au Grand Jour", I think.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Saturday, 12 March 2011 01:54 (fifteen years ago)

nah a day smothered with corpses = the marxist thing to do peace ketchup

The north-east's Number 2 children's party magician (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 12 March 2011 01:57 (fifteen years ago)

oh god the motorik stuff is going to win this isn't it

Birds (Autumn Almanac), Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:33 (fifteen years ago)

etk will win cause it's the casual fan favorite

iatee, Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:33 (fifteen years ago)

whereas I feel like it feels like the greatest hits album of a band that isn't as good as stereolab

iatee, Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:34 (fifteen years ago)

oh god the motorik stuff is going to win this isn't it

guitars rule

mookieproof, Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:35 (fifteen years ago)

1997 Dots and Loops
2004 Margerine Eclipse
2008 Chemical Chords
2001 Sound-Dust
2006 Fab Four Suture
1996 Emperor Tomato Ketchup
2000 The First of the Microbe Hunters
1998 Aluminium Tunes
1999 Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night
2010 Not Music
1994 Mars Audiac Quintet
1995 Refried Ectoplasm (Switched On, Vol. 2)
1993 Transient Random-Noise Bursts With Announcements
1993 The Groop Played "Space Age Batchelor Pad Music"
1992 Switched On Stereolab
1992 Peng!

Birds (Autumn Almanac), Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:36 (fifteen years ago)

space age batchelor pad music was the first stereolab i heard. a revelation at the time. still sounds absolutely perfect to me.

Michael B, Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:39 (fifteen years ago)

I feel like they should have saved that name for the dots and loops album

iatee, Saturday, 12 March 2011 02:40 (fifteen years ago)

sound dust for me as well.

nonightsweats, Saturday, 12 March 2011 03:17 (fifteen years ago)

downloaded the demos thing, eaten something, last night. is this official?

brotherlovesdub, Saturday, 12 March 2011 15:33 (fifteen years ago)

Voted for Emperor Tomato Ketchup, it's my third favourite album of the 90's.

My top five would be:

1.Emperor Tomato Ketchup
2.Dots & Loops
3.Sound Dust
4.Margerine Eclipse
5.Transient Random Noise Bursts

I haven't heard a couple of the mini albums listed here. Fab Four Suture would be my least favourite.

Kitchen Person, Saturday, 12 March 2011 16:48 (fifteen years ago)

Still haven't been able to decide between Peng! and Emperor Tomato Ketchup. Not sure the tie will ever be broken.

emil.y, Saturday, 12 March 2011 16:53 (fifteen years ago)

Transient for this guy. I tend to like the earlier stuff better than the post-Dots stuff, which is generally pleasant but not terribly engaging to me. I think the later albums would be more effective if they were reigned in to more concise 45-minute runtimes (and yes, I am aware that my favorite is over an hour long, but it's their most motorik-heavy so it works). The last one I messed with was Sound Dust.

International Waters, Monday, 14 March 2011 15:27 (fifteen years ago)

Dots and Loops 4-ever for me.

(I've always been fond of Josh Kortbein's defense of the album.)

Joseph Beuys II Men (jaymc), Monday, 14 March 2011 15:58 (fifteen years ago)

To which I extended the following argument (here -- though I should note that I'm not particularly proud of the essay overall):

Kortbein is right to focus on rhythm as the component that makes Dots and Loops stand out, but he doesn’t extend this idea far enough. I don’t think he is suggesting that the beats on other Stereolab albums are any less prominent; as far as I can see, the difference is that “Jenny Ondioline” and “Metronomic Underground” use rhythm in a linear fashion, whereas Dots and Loops treats it circularly. To clarify, lots of the band’s work, and especially the early stuff, is devoted to a groove, but it’s a straight, immediate, almost mechanical 4/4; you bob your head as it pushes forward, like a car zooming down an empty highway or a train rapidly clicking past each rail. Whereas on Dots and Loops more than half the songs are in some other time signature (variations on 5/4 more common even than variations on 3/4), and even the songs that aren’t tend to hold back from emphasizing any particular beat too strongly, which creates a peculiar decentering effect. The rhythm is urgent and cyclical, but you’re not always sure where the cycle starts; rather than tilting ahead, you let yourself float, as though in a whirlpool.

Joseph Beuys II Men (jaymc), Monday, 14 March 2011 16:01 (fifteen years ago)

Margarine Eclipse has grown to become a real solid bedtime album for me. At this stage I've probably listened to it more than any of the other albums, though (given I'm usually falling asleep) not as closely as my earlier favourites like ETK and Transient.

Tim F, Monday, 14 March 2011 16:05 (fifteen years ago)

xxpost: good reads, never really noticed it but the focus on beats is otm. The rhythm design in Dots and Loops is very specific to the overall sound and has some particularities which no Stereolab record up to that point had done before. It does mark a swift from rock experimentalism into electronica.

Moka, Monday, 14 March 2011 16:41 (fifteen years ago)

jaymc otm, D&L really does some great things with unconventional time signatures. I wish they'd gone further in that direction before buggering off into bossa nova jazz.

I think the later albums would be more effective if they were reigned in to more concise 45-minute runtimes (and yes, I am aware that my favorite is over an hour long, but it's their most motorik-heavy so it works). The last one I messed with was Sound Dust.

― International Waters, Tuesday, 15 March 2011 02:27 (4 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

All the albums after Sound-Dust are less than an hour long.

Emperor Tomato Catsuuuuuuuup (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 14 March 2011 20:01 (fifteen years ago)

I'd stick with my ranking of a few years ago except to add the most recent couple to the bottom and flip Peng! and Emperor Tomato Ketchup to put ETK back on top where it belongs.

I love the weird production on Peng!, and the songs are just better than Switched On.

I think the problem with their recent music is these endless, aimless modulations that leave all their songs feeling diffuse. Like I'm looking forward to Tim "discovering" soul or dub reggae or whatever just to start grounding the songs in popular music again.

Pete Scholtes, Monday, 14 March 2011 22:48 (fifteen years ago)

i like the three comps more than any of their albums proper. then it's transient -> etk -> peng -> not music, then the rest, then CPGPVITMN way way down the bottom

rumpie's trusty nuts (electricsound), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:00 (fifteen years ago)

i think cobra & phases is by far my least favourite record by any band i have really loved

rumpie's trusty nuts (electricsound), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:01 (fifteen years ago)

mars probably belongs before peng there

rumpie's trusty nuts (electricsound), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:02 (fifteen years ago)

Aluminium Tunes is pretty good but the second disc is a bit meandering. Oscillons makes a great single album once you cut out all the alternate versions of singles and such. Serene Velocity is pointless if you have all the normal albums.

Not Music is the first slab album in 15 years that I've not been able to extract any joy from at all. It does almost nothing for me and I don't know why.

Head goes goes goes (Schlafsack), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:08 (fifteen years ago)

Gotta say, after "Transient", "Music For The Amorphous Body Study Center" blew my head off. It felt like they were synthesizing a number of lines of musical thought on that one into a different take on their krautrock mutation. I never felt they bettered it after it came out.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 14 March 2011 23:29 (fifteen years ago)

I still haven't heard Not Music--the only 'lab disc I've not listened to. From what I understand it's all stuff from the Chemical Chords sessions. I went back over the weekend and revisited Chemical Chords and remembered just why I never put it on--I can't stand the way that most of the songs just end, abruptly after 3 minutes or so. I thought I had a preview copy when I heard the mp3s--bought the record and it made just as little sense.

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:29 (fifteen years ago)

i think not music craps all over chemical chords. i probably like it more than anything they've done since ETK tbqh

rumpie's trusty nuts (electricsound), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:31 (fifteen years ago)

I take it back I haven't heard Fab Four Suture either.

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:32 (fifteen years ago)

Fab Four Suture (FFS, lolariously) starts and ends with the most fantastic whackjob of a march ever. It's not terribly cohesive as an album but still great. Plastic Mile is one of the top five songs they've ever done.

Chem Chords is brilliant but you can't very well become absorbed in the short songs the way you can with say Margerine Melodie or Refractions in the Plastic Pulse.

Head goes goes goes (Schlafsack), Monday, 14 March 2011 23:45 (fifteen years ago)

It's not terribly cohesive as an album

well, it is technically a singles collection

mookieproof, Tuesday, 15 March 2011 00:04 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah. I still regard it as an album as that was the planned result of all the singles, even though it doesn't work like one (although it definitely feels more like an album that the six-track Kybernetica Babicka release a few months before).

Head goes goes goes (Schlafsack), Tuesday, 15 March 2011 00:09 (fifteen years ago)

orright i'm just getting geeky now

Head goes goes goes (Schlafsack), Tuesday, 15 March 2011 00:10 (fifteen years ago)

I hadn't even heard of that one, guess I've been out of the labloop for a while

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Tuesday, 15 March 2011 05:12 (fifteen years ago)

Was just trying to figure out what the Macedonian flag reminded me of, then realized it looks like a detail from the Peng cover:

http://www.mapsofworld.com/images/world-countries-flags/macedonia-flag.gif

Joseph Beuys II Men (jaymc), Wednesday, 16 March 2011 17:53 (fifteen years ago)

top 5 today :

01. transient random noise
02. cobra and phases group (the first one i heard. and the one i listened to the most, despite the fact that is too long in runtime)
03. dots and loops
04. mars audiac quintet
05. margerine eclipse

never cared that much about 'etk' tbh/dunno why, really

rusty_allen, Monday, 21 March 2011 19:18 (fifteen years ago)

I still love playing Excursions Into "Oh, A-Oh" from Fab Four, which recreates the experience of turning off their later crap (and actually the start of Excursions is pretty decent) and blasting the wonderful Switched On instead. I wonder if other people have the exact opposite reaction.

dlp9001, Tuesday, 22 March 2011 02:45 (fifteen years ago)

I also kind of wonder if they did this trick elsewhere, since I haven't listened to all of their late albums w/great attention. "Excursions" is really pretty cool in the way it suddenly turns into old style Stereolab, pretty much on a dime (at 3:20 in), while still referencing the newer sound...

dlp9001, Tuesday, 22 March 2011 16:30 (fifteen years ago)

This is a really tough one to decide. Here's how I group these.

Top Tier:
1993 Transient Random-Noise Bursts With Announcements
1996 Emperor Tomato Ketchup
2001 Sound-Dust

Nearly as good:
1992 Peng!
1994 Mars Audiac Quintet
1997 Dots and Loops
1995 Refried Ectoplasm (Switched On, Vol. 2)
1998 Aluminum Tunes
1999 Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night

Moodles, Tuesday, 22 March 2011 16:43 (fifteen years ago)

All the music they've done since Sound-Dust I've liked a bit, but don't love. I think the loss of Mary Hansen really hurt them as a band and they haven't ever truly recovered.

Moodles, Tuesday, 22 March 2011 16:46 (fifteen years ago)

Tosh, the last two albums are fantastic.

Head goes goes goes (Schlafsack), Tuesday, 22 March 2011 20:51 (fifteen years ago)

i always vacillate between Transient, Emperor Tomato Ketchup and Mars Audiac Quintent. Today it's Mars.

dan selzer, Wednesday, 23 March 2011 12:54 (fifteen years ago)

Next Switched On will be called 'Constant Vacillations'

Head goes goes goes (Schlafsack), Wednesday, 23 March 2011 21:26 (fifteen years ago)

hi boob oscillator

corey, Wednesday, 23 March 2011 21:32 (fifteen years ago)

hi

boob oscillator (Schlafsack), Wednesday, 23 March 2011 21:36 (fifteen years ago)

oscillator say hi to boob

corey, Wednesday, 23 March 2011 21:41 (fifteen years ago)

oscilator iirc

ˆ°ᴥ°ˆ (electricsound), Wednesday, 23 March 2011 22:41 (fifteen years ago)

'Sound Dust' is massively underrated...it got me back into Stereolab after unloving them 'cause of 'Dots and Loops'.

the worst dong of the last ten years (Craigo Boingo), Wednesday, 23 March 2011 23:23 (fifteen years ago)

fake Stereolab song titles

Moka, Thursday, 24 March 2011 11:30 (fifteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Tuesday, 29 March 2011 23:01 (fifteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.