Album Details
Title: Stars Forever Artist: Momus Release Date: 8/24/1999 Re-Released On: 7/18/2000 Label: Le Grand Magistery, Cherry Red, Phantom Import Distribution Album Type(s): Explicit lyrics sticker, lyrics/libretto UPCs: 616656001027, 5013929150225, 766481034971 Genre: Rock Styles: Synth Pop, Alternative Pop/Rock, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative Dance, Chamber Pop, Alternative/Indie Rock, Punk/New Wave, Twee Pop, Indie Pop, Shibuya-Kei Moods: Eccentric, Literate, Provocative, Campy, Irreverent, Quirky, Witty, Confident, Cynical/Sarcastic, Sophisticated, Stylish, Wry, Cerebral, Ironic, Poignant, Sexual, Silly, Sleazy, Acerbic, Rousing Total Copies: 0 Members Wishing: 1 Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 2 |
Track Listings Disc 1
-
The Minus 5
-
Akiko Masuda
-
Steven Zeeland
-
Mika Akutsu
-
Stephanie Pappas
-
Kokoro Hirai
-
Stefano Zarelli
-
Paolo Rumi
-
Natsuko Tayama
-
Girlie Action
-
Mai Noda
-
Robert Dye
-
Florence Manlik
-
Adam Green
-
Maf
-
Other Music
-
Tinnitus
-
3d Corporation
-
Miles Franklin
Track Listings Disc 2
-
Shawn Krueger
-
Jeff Koons
-
Noah Brill
-
Team Clermont
-
Bfent Bushboom
-
Indiepop List
-
Keigo Oyamada
-
Minty Fresh
-
Molton Jacobson
-
Reckless Records
-
Karin Komoto
-
Christian Carl
-
Bill Hardy
-
Mr. Kate Kenkins
-
Diego Zapparoli and Paola
-
Jack Curtis Dubowsky
-
El Topo
-
Richard Knowles
-
Olivier Schopfer
-
Momus
Additional Releases
| Year | Type | Label | Catalog # | | 2000 | CD | Phantom Import Distribution | | | 1999 | CD | Le Grand Magistery | 60010 | | 1999 | CD | Cherry Red | 002 |
|
Other Editions
- No other editions were found for this album.
|
|
Similar CDs
Members who requested this CD also requested:
Album Review
Grand artistic statement or money-grubbing sham? Befitting Momus' standing as contemporary pop's most eminent provocateur, Stars Forever is both -- a double-disc collection of analog-baroque cameos commissioned for $1000 each in the name of saving the singer's label from the ravages of legal fees, it's a frequently brilliant treatise on the never-ending battle between art and commerce, rising to the heights of the former as often as it succumbs to the depths of the latter. The idea behind Stars Forever is simple -- 30 "patrons" (among them everyone from modern artist Jeff Koons to hip NYC record store Other Music to the crazy kids who contribute to the online Indiepop List service) fork over a grand each for the honor of being eternally immortalized in a Momus song -- but the long-term ramifications of the project are complex and unsettling, and the paradoxes and questions it provokes are myriad. After all, who among us is truly fit to judge Momus' actions and intents? Should we respect the honesty of his "patronage pop" or deplore its capitalist shamelessness? Do these songs rob his music of the perversely personal bent which makes him special, or do they lift him out of the rut of self-obsession and offer an entirely new creative path? And what if the profits went not to a struggling indie label but to Sony? Furthermore, I'm getting paid to write this review -- how hypocritical is that? Perhaps the greatest value of Stars Forever is as a litmus test which forces each listener to answer these questions and countless others for themselves -- admire the record or despise it, it might just change your perception of pop music and the business that drives it forever. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Credits
| No credits were found for this album. | |
|
|