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Vega Intl. Night School / Neon Indian.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: MP233 | Mom+Pop MusicMP233-2 | Mom+Pop MusicPublisher: New York, NY : Mom+Pop Music, [2015]Copyright date: ℗2015Description: 1 audio disc (52 min.) ; 4 3/4 in. + 1 bookletContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Other title:
  • Vega International Night School
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Hit parade -- Annie -- Street level -- Smut! -- Bozo -- The glitzy hive -- Dear Skorpio Magazine -- Slumlord -- Slumlord's re-lease -- Techno clique -- Baby's eyes -- C'est la vie (say the casualties!) -- 61 Cygni Ave -- News from the sun (live bootleg).
Neon Indian (Alan Palomo, vocals ; musicians, Morgan Wiley, Chris Coombs, Abe Seiferth, Brandi Ullian, Jorge Palomo, Nick Millhister, Jason Faries, Mark Cobb).Summary: Neon Indian is the brainchild of Alan Palomo, whose 2009 debut record Psychic Chasms earned the 20-year-old a spot on numerous year-end lists. His third release includes the brand new single Slumlord.
Audiovisual profile: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Main Library CD POP/ROCK Neon Indian Available 33111008676401
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

While making Neon Indian's third album, Alan Palomo turned a crisis into an opportunity: When his laptop -- which contained demos of his new songs -- was stolen at the end of the Era Extraña tour, he started anew by drawing inspiration from his past. Vega Intl. Night School takes its name and sound from his previous electronic project VEGA and his pet name for his after-dark adventures, conveying the dazzling, fleeting allure of a night out. Era Extraña's crisper beats and textures hinted that Palomo might be headed in a more danceable direction, but on his third album, he finds ways to subvert expectations while remaining true to Neon Indian's essence. He applies his flair for mood-crafting to a palette of electro, funk, disco, new wave, and reggae, transforming his synth-heavy sound into a love letter to the fabulous keyboard tones of the '70s and '80s: Note the Baroque embellishments to "Slumlord"'s filter-disco and the squiggles that make "Street Level" sound even more like forgotten Paisley Park brilliance. Prince and Daft Punk are two of the album's biggest influences, not just in sound but in spirit. The way these tracks flow into each other recalls the uninhibited, possibly inebriated way Homework's first few cuts blended into an atmospheric portrait of nightlife, a concept Palomo runs with on Vega Intl. Night School. Sounding like a field recording from an '80s nightclub, "Smut!" captures the disorienting, intoxicating feel of entering a party that's already in full swing; "Techno Clique" expresses the anonymity and intimacy of dancing with a stranger, and the luminous synths that close "The Glitzy Hive" might as well be sunrise peeking through the club's doors. Vega Intl. Night School's more structured songs are so good that it's easy to wish there were more of them: "Annie"'s pastel reggae-disco is as breezy as the Miami Vice soundtrack or Palomo's chillwave roots, while the André Cymone-esque "Dear Skorpio Magazine" nails its period details (writing an actual letter to an actual magazine is so retro). However, these are just parts of the bigger picture, and the album's psychedelic collage of sound effects, interludes and songs actually feels more effortless as it becomes more elaborate. In its own way, Vega Intl. Night School is just as immersive as Neon Indian's previous work and even more impressionistic, with a flamboyance that makes it a captivating standout within his own work as well as his contemporaries'. ~ Heather Phares

Title from disc label.

Neon Indian (Alan Palomo, vocals ; musicians, Morgan Wiley, Chris Coombs, Abe Seiferth, Brandi Ullian, Jorge Palomo, Nick Millhister, Jason Faries, Mark Cobb).

Lyrics on container insert.

Hit parade -- Annie -- Street level -- Smut! -- Bozo -- The glitzy hive -- Dear Skorpio Magazine -- Slumlord -- Slumlord's re-lease -- Techno clique -- Baby's eyes -- C'est la vie (say the casualties!) -- 61 Cygni Ave -- News from the sun (live bootleg).

Neon Indian is the brainchild of Alan Palomo, whose 2009 debut record Psychic Chasms earned the 20-year-old a spot on numerous year-end lists. His third release includes the brand new single Slumlord.

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