Cut Copy | In Ghost Colours
In Ghost Colours

Months after New Order announced their split, Cut Copy swooped in from Australia to fill the vacancy. That may sound like a backhanded compliment, but it isn’t, because the Melbourne trio doesn’t sound exactly like their Mancunian forebears. They do, however, scratch a similar itch for super-catchy synth-pop. Radio stations, dance clubs, and music critics have taken notice, and the group’s follow-up to 2004’s Bright Like Neon Love looks set to be their most successful effort yet. It certainly doesn’t hurt that DFA domo Andy Goldsworthy (associate of LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy) offers his production and mixing moxie. Listen closely, and you can also hear a little ELO, Brian Eno, and Orchestral Maneuvers in the Dark. Further, vocalist/keyboard player Dan Whitford has the perfect singing style for this kind of thing. Like New Order’s Bernard Sumner, it’s smooth, but not slick; yearning, but never desperate. In “Midnight Runner,” when he whispers, “There’s a secret I’ve been keeping from you,” it’s hard to resist leaning towards the speakers–or cranking up the headphones–for some insight, but Whitford isn’t telling, lending the romantic proceedings a dash of mystery.

From start to finish, In Ghost Colours goes down easy, but it’s hard to predict how much staying power it’ll have outside the club scene. Unlike New Order’s “Blue Monday” or LCD’s “All My Friends,” to name two gloriously insistent examples, there’s no sonic or lyrical edge here–nothing even resembling an edge. Fortunately, Cut Copy are too bouyant to qualify as bland, but there’s no reason synth-based dance music purveyors shouldn’t dig deeper, push harder. Resonance awaits those willing to take the chance.

Rating: 7.9/10
Be the first to write a comment.
Leave a comment
More Reviews
Album cover artwork for Ice Cream Spiritual by Ponytail
Baltimore's Ponytail look and sound as if they rolled straight out of the performing arts high school, pupils pinned with corn syrup and carnauba wax from an hours-long sucrose bender.
Rating: 7.6/10
Album cover artwork for Supreme Balloon by Matmos
The world is filled with instrumental alt-rock acts, most of which fall into distinct categories. Maryland duo Matmos sounds nothing like any of them.
Rating: 7.9/10
Album cover artwork for Replicas Redux by Gary Numan and Tubeway Army
The first full-length from synth-pop pioneer Gary Numan plays like Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell to Earth come to life.
Rating: 9.4/10
Album cover artwork for What Does It All Mean? 1983-2006 Retrospective by Steinski
This collection of defining mixes--covering every base regarding audio collage that’s been touched upon since the heyday of tape-splice edits--fills a long-standing gap in the history of hip-hop.
Rating: 9.2/10
Album cover artwork for @ The Blender Theater, NYC by My Brightest Diamond
Down in front and up on the stage, everybody was wearing party hats, because Shara Worden, aka My Brightest Diamond, was in a festive mood.
Album cover artwork for @ Bowery Ballroom, NYC by Polvo
Reunion Summer rolled on unabated this weekend in New York with the first visit from ‘90s notables Polvo in just over a decade.
 
Warning!
Are you sure?