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Kitsuné Tabloid by Phoenix / Kitsune Tabloid by Phoenix

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Download links and information about Kitsuné Tabloid by Phoenix / Kitsune Tabloid by Phoenix by Phoenix. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Alternative genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:08:49 minutes.

Artist: Phoenix
Release date: 2009
Genre: Alternative
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:08:49
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Love (Theme from Kiss) (featuring Kiss) 2:23
2. Rise Above (featuring Dirty Projectors) 5:00
3. Victory Garden (featuring Red Krayola) 1:50
4. I've Been Trying (featuring The Impressions) 2:47
5. I Am the Cosmos (featuring Chris Bell) 3:45
6. Pyjamarama (featuring Roxy Music) 2:52
7. I Had to Tell You (featuring The 13th Floor Elevators) 2:27
8. Shipbuilding (featuring Elvis Costello And The Attractions) 4:48
9. Send It On (featuring D'Angelo) 5:57
10. Love On a Real Train (featuring Tangerine Dream) 3:55
11. Stull, Pt. 1 (featuring Urge Overkill) 5:25
12. Aos Barões (featuring Lo Borges) 2:32
13. Master Charge (featuring Iggy Pop, James Williamson) 4:31
14. Lady (Falling In Love) (featuring Dennis Wilson) 2:09
15. It's Raining (featuring Irma Thomas) 2:06
16. In a Turkish Town (featuring Ritchie Valens) 2:08
17. I Think It's Gonna Rain Today (featuring Dusty Springfield) 3:15
18. Street Hassle (featuring Lou Reed) 10:59

Details

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Phoenix's entry in the Kitsune Tabloid mix series comes across as a success just by looking at the track listing; frankly, if the goal of a good personal mix of any sort is surprising but spot-on juxtapositions, drawing connections between unexpected sources, and just plain being entertaining, then the band had already knocked it out of the park to start with. Actual listening is the proof in the pudding, though, but it justifies the initial reaction — starting with Kiss's early instrumental funk/plod "Love Theme from Kiss" — even more of a strutter than the song of the same name — and ending with Lou Reed's art statement of purpose, "Street Hassle," the cuts hop merrily back and forth between the decades while still suggesting a meta-'70s above all else. In part, the most recent song choices confirm this — the Dirty Projectors' "Rise Above" has a sweetly lazy glam-rock flow not far removed from T. Rex, a perfect choice to include along with actual examples of the era like Roxy Music's "Pyjamarama," while putting D'Angelo's appropriately smoldering "Send It On" on a disc that also features Irma Thomas's "It's Raining," while the Impressions' lovely slow burn "I've Been Trying" is a similar example of cross-temporal sonics and styles happily blending. Any number of art rock examples get nods — the Red Krayola's "Victory Garden" and the 13th Floor Elevators' "I Had to Tell You" from the late '60s, Tangerine Dream's "Love on a Real Train" from 1983, the slow, sleazy sax-touched instrumental "Master Charge," from the Kill City sessions with James Williamson — and are appropriately off-kilter on their own. Full liner notes from the band explaining their choices add to the excellence of the whole.