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The discography of Stereolab, an English-French rock band, comprises thirteen studio albums, seven compilation albums, fifteen extended plays, sixteen singles, and twenty-three rarities compilations. Release dates listed are earliest worldwide. [1] [2] [3] [4]
It was Stereolab's last album to feature singer and guitarist Mary Hansen, who died in a biking accident the following year. [19] The first 1,200 copies of both the CD and LP issues of Sound-Dust were packaged with a handmade book sleeve. [20] A remastered and expanded edition of the album was released by Duophonic and Warp on 29 November 2019 ...
Stereolab's album and song titles occasionally reference avant-garde groups and artists. Gane said that the title of their 1999 album Cobra and Phases Group… contains the names of two Surrealist organisations, " CoBrA " and "Phases Group", [ 73 ] The title of the song "Brakhage" from Dots and Loops (1997), is a nod to experimental filmmaker ...
The album's title (a German onomatopoeia for a loud pop or bang) and cover art are derived from a comic strip named "Der tödliche Finger" that appeared in a 1970 issue of Hotcha, a Swiss underground newspaper. [15] Different panels of the same strip were adapted into cover art for other early Stereolab releases, and remain popular icons for ...
Pulse of the Early Brain is a compilation album by the English-French avant-pop band Stereolab, released on 2 September 2022 under Duophonic Records and Warp Records.It is the fifth installment of the band's "Switched-On" series which collects the band's rarities, such as the EPs Simple Headphone Mind (1997) and Low Fi (1992); bonus and exclusive tracks from Chemical Chords (2008); and ...
According to AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Dots and Loops is primarily influenced by bossa nova and 1960s pop music. [5] Barney Hoskyns of Rolling Stone found that the album continued Stereolab's progression towards a lighter sound that he termed "avant-easy listening", [6] while Michelle Goldberg of Metro referred to it as the band's "lounge apotheosis". [7]
Emperor Tomato Ketchup was released on 18 March 1996 in the United Kingdom by Duophonic Records, [6] and on 9 April 1996 in the United States by Elektra Records. [7] The artwork for the album was inspired by the LP cover sleeve of a 1964 recording of composer Béla Bartók's Concerto for Orchestra by the Bamberg Symphony conducted by Heinrich Hollreiser.
Electrically Possessed is a compilation album by the English-French band Stereolab, released on 26 February 2021 under Duophonic Records and Warp Records.It collects the band's rarities, and is the fourth of their "Switched-On" compilation series.