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  Danse Macabre Remixes CD by The Faint
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The Faint - Danse Macabre Remixes

Danse Macabre Remixes

Music Artist :The Faint
Music Style :General
Record Label :Astralwerks
Release Date :2003-04-01
Store Price :$17.98

Artistopia's Price: $17.98

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CD Tracks/Songs


Disc 1

1. Agenda Suicide (remixed by Jagz Kooner)
2. The Conductor (Thin White Duke Mix by Jaques Le Cont)
3. Your Retro Career Melted (remixed by Ursula 1000)
4. Posed To Death (remixed by Mojolators)
5. Glass Danse (remixed by Paul Oakenfold)
6. Let the Poison Spill (City Street Riot Mix by Tommie Sunshine)
7. Violent (remixed by Junior Sanchez)
8. The Total Job (remixed by Photek)
9. Ballad (remixed by Medicine

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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD

a couple of standout remixes make this a keeper for dance music fans
Submitted on: 2007-08-09
while most of the tracks on the original CD are actually more synth/dance retro 80s than the remixes, the master works of Thin White Duke and Tommie Sunshine, the guys who have perfectly infused dance and alt rock numerous times, make this worth the purchase. The dance mixes by Jagz Kooner, Mojolators, and Junior Sanchez just don't have enough of that new waev sound to live up to the stylings of the band's originals. And all the remaining mixes are downtempo clunkers if your buying this disc for house and electro mixes.
More Harm Than Good
Submitted on: 2006-01-06
This album disappointed me greatly. I felt that each remix detracted from the original. I think a remix should either improve on the original or transform the original into something new and captivating, which is just not happening on this album. The one exception is "Posed To Death" (remix by The Calculators). The interweaving male and female vocals complement eachother beautifully. Unfortunately, the rest of the album is monotonous, shallow and poorly composed.
Worth checking out...
Submitted on: 2005-05-17
Don't go by the negative reviews from the others. This is a definitely a great remix set from The Faint from their Danse Macabre album of a couple of years ago. All of the remixes are top notch with my favorite being Glass Danse remixed by Paul Oakenfold. The Conductor remixed by Thin White Duke is another wonderful remix taking the original and making it very club friendly. My other 2 favorite remixes on here are Agenda Suicide by Jagz Kooner and Your Retro Career by Ursula 1000. Overall though every single remix on here are good. Definitely worth it if you are into remixes or electronica.

SJ
www.bestplaylists.com
Speaks More About The Faint Than People Care To Admit
Submitted on: 2005-03-15
I have to start out by saying I am in staunch disagreement with the majority of feedback this album is getting; however, I am not passionate enough in my great disagreement to feel I have a real cause defending this album. So I'm going to simply give you my take, without getting emotional, as I cannot help getting over say, an actual Faint album, or the likes of a new Interpol release... I think what has happened with the Danse Macabre Remixes is a common syndrome that sweeps over listeners for many albums, only here it is a little more understandable on their part, and a little less deserving of defense for the album. Any time something different comes along with the name of the same band attached, their fanbase tends to get queasy. People don't like change. I find change to be difficult as well, but I think I listen to an album much more than many of the reviewers who bash the new direction. This is not quite a new direction for The Faint, as it is not technically their craftsmanship. However, it is a statement from the band, and one that is rooted in their music. The Faint started as an Indie emo-type rock group with Media and suddenly made the monumental switch over to electronica. As they were barely a blip on the radar when their debut had come out, there was not a whole lot of protest for this radical change. But it was radical nonetheless. Blank-Wave Arcade was an excellent New Wave-Electronica rock amalgamation that would signal things to come. Death and sex had already been established as their primary vernacular. When Danse Macabre was released, it was even more dance-worthy and even darker and even better, especially as a flowing album. It took three years for them to follow it up, and I know many people have been grossly disappointed. This could have been predicted. A new album after a masterpiece... Fans are known to be unforgiving directly after the release of one they adore, especially if it shows signs of being different from the last. But in between, was this little gem of songs that the Faint had written and vocals had been preserved for other artists to interpret with new beats and melodies. The artists chosen, were not rock, not emo, and not necessarily what Faint fans listen to. I for one, don't carry any Paul Oakenfold CD's in my collection, and there is a good reason for that, despite his fame and good reputation. A lot of these artists on their own would not be my style. But I appreciate what they did here because it is different and because I think these Faint songs do lend themselves to interpretation. I think "The Conductor" is a wonderful change of pace, as well as the first version of "Posed To Death." "The Conductor" though admittedly a nuisance if not in the mood to hear "control" repeated endlessly, is an excellent emphasis of the song's theme with some great new music to accompany it. "Posed To Death" features male and female vocals harmonizing in a rather off-beat, quirky, vaguely creepy way that I find to be extremely charming. "Glass Danse," though many many times worse than the original, is not a bad redo in my opinion either, if for the sole reason that it emphasizes one of my favorite parts of the song ("I feel the social glare; I feel the attitude...") and makes it the chorus, instead of the original synth hook. I admire the creativity in these remixes which I think most people have overlooked because it is "not The Faint." I don't mind that it's not The Faint. I have every Faint album. And yes, I much prefer them, without needing to explain to what degree... But this is a nice little non-Faint album The Faint has offered us that I will take out every so often and truly enjoy. I would recommend listening with an open-mind, as I would with any album. I think you can comprehend and even appreciate the transition from Danse Macabre to Wet From Birth a bit better if you do. Take care.
-Ari
More Bang for the Buck
Submitted on: 2005-02-02
Danse Macabre was a great cd but the remixes just had more zing if you're into pushing your subs to their fullest. It's more of an ear candy release. It's like.. "lets take the Faint and turn the songs into something that would be a good soundtrack for a nightclub scene in some action flick". Danse Macabre is more for my indoor listening pleasure and the remixes are for the car when I like to rattle windows as I drive by. Just two different ways to enjoy the Faint.

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