The Raveonettes - In and Out of Control *
CD
Performer
 
Title
 
In and Out of Control *
UPC
 
88388800132
Genre
 
Rock & Pop
Released
 
10/06/2009
List Price $13.97
Our Price $11.18
You Save $2.79
Track Listing - click icons to preview tracks in Windows Media Player.
1
Windows Media MuzeTune
Bang!
2
Windows Media MuzeTune
Gone Forever
3
Windows Media MuzeTune
Last Dance
4
Windows Media MuzeTune
Boys Who Rape (Should All Be Destroyed)
5
Windows Media MuzeTune
Heart of Stone
6
Windows Media MuzeTune
Oh, I Buried You Today
7
Windows Media MuzeTune
Suicide
8
Windows Media MuzeTune
D.R.U.G.S.
9
Windows Media MuzeTune
Breaking into Cars
10
Windows Media MuzeTune
Break Up Girls!
11
Windows Media MuzeTune
Wine
Notes / Reviews

Audio Mixers: The Raveonettes; Thomas Troelsen.
Recording information: Delta Lab, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Photographer: Camilla Stephan.
The Raveonettes fourth album, IN AND OUT OF CONTROL, marks another change in direction for the band, though it's much less noticeable than the shift between the glossy, overproduced PRETTY IN BLACK and the raw, noisy, and self-produced LUST LUST LUST. This time out, the duo of Sharin Foo and Sune Rose Wagner decided to record in a studio again, and enlisted the production and songwriting skills of Thomas Troelsen, who's worked with a diverse roster of artists that ranges from Junior Senior to Aqua, to his own excellent groups Private and Superheroes. Anyone fearing a return to the slick sounds that almost ruined the band will be glad to know that while there is more variety and a definite pop feel to the album, there is also plenty of noise and raw power to go around. The subject matter of the lyrics is totally Raveonettes too, touching on "suicide," rape, sadistic girls, heartbreak -- all providing the requisite levels of general malevolence one would expect. What the band and Troelsen do on the album is take the basic noise-plus-melody template that forms the band's core and give it a tweak here and there. Some sunny glockenspiel on "Last Dance," some electronic sound manipulation on "Boys Who Rape (Should All Be Destroyed"), and clunky New Wave drums on "Breaking into Cars" are some of the touches that brighten things up without diluting the band's intrinsic strengths. In general, the tightly arranged songs and use of different sounds from song to song make it perhaps the most listenable album of their career. It has some of their hookiest songs ("Last Dance," "Suicide," "Bang!"), some of their most ferocious sounding songs ("Break Up Girls!") and their toughest ("Boys Who Rape"), a couple of very pretty ballads ("Oh, I Buried You Today" and "Wine"), and no missteps. Thanks to the production, the performances, and the songs, the Raveonettes have delivered on the renewed promise of LUST LUST LUST and made a very good, almost great, noise-pop album.
The Raveonettes fourth album, In and Out of Control, marks another change in direction for the band, though it's much less noticeable than the shift between the glossy, overproduced Pretty in Black and the raw, noisy, and self-produced Lust Lust Lust. This time out, the duo of Sharin Foo and Sune Rose Wagner decided to record in a studio again, and enlisted the production and songwriting skills of Thomas Troelsen, who's worked with a diverse roster of artists that ranges from Junior Senior to Aqua, to his own excellent groups Private and Superheroes. Anyone fearing a return to the slick sounds that almost ruined the band will be glad to know that while there is more variety and a definite pop feel to the album, there is also plenty of noise and raw power to go around. The subject matter of the lyrics is totally Raveonettes too, touching on "suicide," rape, sadistic girls, heartbreak -- all providing the requisite levels of general malevolence one would expect. What the band and Troelsen do on the album is take the basic noise-plus-melody template that forms the band's core and give it a tweak here and there. Some sunny glockenspiel on "Last Dance," some electronic sound manipulation on "Boys Who Rape (Should All Be Destroyed"), and clunky new wave drums on "Breaking into Cars" are some of the touches that brighten things up without diluting the band's intrinsic strengths. In general, the tightly arranged songs and use of different sounds from song to song make it perhaps the most listenable album of their career. It has some of their hookiest songs ("Last Dance," "Suicide," "Bang!"), some of their most ferocious sounding songs ("Break Up Girls!") and their toughest ("Boys Who Rape"), a couple of very pretty ballads ("Oh, I Buried You Today" and "Wine"), and no missteps. Thanks to the production, the performances, and the songs, the Raveonettes have delivered on the renewed promise of Lust Lust Lust and made a very good, almost great, noise-pop album. ~ Tim Sendra

Spin (p.86) - "[T]heir sneaky cynicism has gotten even more hummable: `Oh, I Buried You Today' and `D.R.U.G.S.' are particularly propulsive in their surliness."
Billboard (p.33) - "Raveonettes singer Sharin Foo provides sassy yet vulnerable come-ons, while guitarist Sune Rose Wagner lends unfurling peals of psychedelic guitar."
Q (Magazine) (p.111) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[They] add just enough production gloss to the blend of girl-group sweetness and druggy darkness....Darkly funny and strangely beautiful."

Details
Performers
 
Producer
 
Engineer
 
Label
 
Vice Records
Catalog #
 
80013
SPAR Code
 
n/a
Year of Original Release
 
2009
Mono/Stereo
 
Stereo
Studio/Live Performance
 
Studio
Distributor
 
n/a
# of Discs
 
1
Minutes
 
37
Seconds
 
4