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Petit Cochon

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Download links and information about Petit Cochon by The Prostitutes. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Electronica, Techno, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 38:10 minutes.

Artist: The Prostitutes
Release date: 2014
Genre: Electronica, Techno, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 10
Duration: 38:10
Buy on iTunes $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Powerful Magnets 1:30
2. The Bluffer'€™s Corporation 5:51
3. Tube Without Exit 2:20
4. Build Your Kits 5:30
5. Suck out the Reason 2:54
6. A Number Between Their Eyes 2:04
7. Cylindrical Habitat 4:29
8. Stains Left Unnamed 3:17
9. Suffocate, Purchasing 3:38
10. Four Basic Forces 6:37

Details

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Cleveland-based musician James Donadio has drawn much attention within the dance scene under his Prostitutes guise, both for his industrious and noisy-sounding techno and his more experimental efforts. His third full-length, Petit Cochon, is a combination of the two, combining repetitive and interchanging drum machine patterns with noisy static and organic found sounds, shying away from the traditional techno found on the two-part Truncheon Cadence and moving back to his familiar-sounding output of releases such as 2013's Crushed Interior. On paper, the album looks like it is there to be offensive — the Prostitutes name as well as Donadio being grouped with heavier artists like Shifted suggests this — but it's quite the opposite. It's dark in places, but never unnerving or that intrusive, and has vacant, reverberating effects as well as atmospheric layers that are both well-crafted and automated. Each track has its own individuality, shifting the sonic landscapes seamlessly without veering that far away from one another. "Build Your Kits" offers a club-based 4/4 kick, while "The Bluffer's Corporation" sounds like it could be a collaboration between the Boredoms and Actress. The record's best moment might be the last track, "Four Basic Forces," with its mesmerizing train-like rhythm, synth splutters, and a kick drum that progressively builds and then fades in and out, only to unexpectedly be brought crashing back in at the end. The album is a fresh and fascinating take on the destructive side of dance music and sits alongside some of the darker techno releases from Donadio's contemporaries.