Reviews
5 Out of 5-"An Album That Will Survive the Fleeting Tastes of Cosmopolitan Hipsters...", "Fabulous dance music....unites the club and indie-rock crowds in ways few have attempted since the '80s..." - Grade: A-, "This ISA One-Man Walking Jukebox with a Lifetime's Worth of Records in His Head...", "You can dance to almost anything here, but between breaths, you'll marvel at his control and the way each sound pops like a primary color.", Ranked #5 in Spin's "40 Best Albums Of 2005" - "With his trippy, studio-pop mimicry of Lennon and Eno, the man who taught the indie kids to dance now tricks techno tots into humming along.", "Self-reference, satire, retro, all of these are abundant on LCD SOUNDSYSTEM....For the anxious and disoriented who need to know where it's at, well, here's one place to start.", 5 stars out of 5 - "Here the will to change, improve, transcend and question positively thumps out in a liquid crystal display.", Included in the Wire's "2005 Rewind: 50 Records of the Year.", Ranked #1 in Mojo's "2005 Dance/Electronic Albums of the Year", "A set documenting, like the best, most heartfelt mix tapes, a sweet time that can't be fully recaptured." - Grade: B+, "Murphy produced a glorious dance record that poked fun at the cliquey, self-conscious scene it moved on from while still being an homage to the New York movements -- punk, disco, new wave -- that actually meant something.", 4 stars out of 5 - "Murphy has followed the single 'Losing My Edge' with an album that's just as good....these tracks either push the extremes of Murphy's dance-rock fusion...or fall unexpectedly far outside it...", 4 stars out of 5 - "Clouds of Beatle melody mushroom through 'Never As Tired As When I'm Waking Up' while the euphoric chant of 'Great Release' is almost ecclesiastical. More proof that cool is what Murphy makes it."