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Nympho

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Download links and information about Nympho by Armand Van Helden. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Electronica, House, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 01:10:30 minutes.

Artist: Armand Van Helden
Release date: 2005
Genre: Electronica, House, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 14
Duration: 01:10:30
Buy on iTunes $9.99
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Buy on Amazon $11.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Nympho (featuring Virgin Killer) 4:16
2. Come Play With Me (featuring Creme Blush) 3:53
3. Into Your Eyes 4:00
4. Sugar (featuring Jessy Moss) 5:34
5. Brainwashing (featuring Virgin Killer) 6:05
6. Hear My Name (featuring Spalding Rockwell) 3:27
7. Hot City Nights 5:20
8. Jenny (featuring Spalding Rockwell) 6:24
9. When the Lights Go Down 5:11
10. Juicy Juicy (featuring Virgin Killer) 4:37
11. My My My 3:03
12. Got Over You (featuring Virgin Killer) 4:52
13. The Teardrop (featuring Tim Holtom) 6:58
14. Wasn't the Only (Original Mix) 6:50

Details

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You would've made 2004's New York: A Mix Odyssey too if you were a former world-class house DJ who no one had heard from in a while. It was obvious, shameless, and pandering (electroclash, new wave — all the easy marks), but it was also the jam. 2005's Nympho is equally shameless, and it gives even more props to the kind of dirty sex where no one knows anyone else's name. The big Mix Odyssey hit single "Hear My Name" is reprised, and Van Helden taps Spalding Rockwell again for the less successful, weird femme-Ministry thump of "Jenny." Evidently Mary Louise Perlman and Nicole Lombardi weren't available for "Come Play with Me" — it features vocals from Misshapes models Créme Blush, instead. But it doesn't really matter who's singing on Nympho, from Van Helden himself (as Virgin Killer) to Aussie/New Yorker Jessy Moss, because the album is unblinking in its meaning. This music is about new positions and plunking cowbells, and guitar chords ringing out over insistent house hi-hats. Persistent, too, in the case of the incessantly repetitive "When the Lights Go Down" and "Into Your Eyes." It really feels like Van Helden isn't trying very hard with Nympho — any DJ with record-collection savvy and downtown connections might make the same record, and speaking of Ministry's heyday, some of Nympho could even be My Life with the Thrill Kill Kult. (See "Juicy Juicy.") But like he did with Mix Odyssey, Van Helden makes you forget the music's repetitive shamelessness in favor of getting sweaty in an underlit upstairs club somewhere, or even trying to emulate the activities the songs suggest. If that's the case, you're going to need a stretch limo, unisex lingerie, and a PA system that's all volume and treble.