Leæther Strip - After the Devastation

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Album Details

Title: After the Devastation
Artist: Leæther Strip
Release Date: 1/31/2006
Label: Alfa Matrix
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPC: 882951006528
Genre: Rock
Style: Industrial Dance
Moods: Detached, Hypnotic, Intense, Bleak, Brooding, Cold, Ominous, Dramatic, Eerie, Gloomy, Nihilistic, Nocturnal, Trippy
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 2

Track Listings Disc 1

  1. The Shame of a Nation [Album Edit]
  2. Back in Control
  3. Death Is Walking Next to Me [Album Edit]
  4. A Boy
  5. Dying Is Easy Life Is Harder (Daddy Please Love Me)
  6. Sleep Is Only Heartbreak
  7. Slam
  8. Smerte
  9. Happy Pills (Gimme Gimme)
  10. Rip Like Cat Claws
  11. What If...
  12. Inner Exploration

Track Listings Disc 2

  1. Gaza Strip (March of the Innocent)
  2. Suicide Bombers [Album Edit]
  3. Carry Me [2006]
  4. Empty Space
  5. Junkie Do - Junkie Die
  6. Homophobia
  7. This Is Where I Wanna Be [Album Edit]
  8. One Man's Gain Another Man's Pain
  9. Giver Us Some Shelter (Katrina)
  10. One for One for One
  11. I Was Born That Day
  12. Leæther Strip, Pt. 3 [Symphony for Kurt]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2006CDAlfa Matrix1065

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Perhaps the only thing more surprising than the fact that Claus Larsen has returned to his mid-'90s electronic/industrial/darkwave alias Leaether Strip for the first time in nearly a decade is the fact that After the Devastation is a two-disc set largely inspired by the destruction of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina in September 2005. (There is also a special limited-edition three-disc set with a bonus remix EP, as well as a hyper-limited collector's edition with the whole kit and caboodle in a special messenger bag plus extra goodies.) Of course, other than some pointed samples of newscasts and first-person monologues (relating not only to Katrina but to other high-profile atrocities and social injustices of the new millennium's first decade), the political commentary is largely subsumed by Larsen's usual dark synths and crisp electronic beats. Even the small handful of songs with lyrics beyond a simple repetition of the chorus rarely venture further than to grasp slogans. As with previous albums by the Leaether Strip, the real point of After the Devastation is in Larsen's cool, stylish, club-centered rhythms, and as long as the listener isn't expecting instant-reportage lyrics in the manner of Bob Dylan circa 1963, those rhythms are reason enough to be drawn to these 24 pieces. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Claus LarsenProducer, Mixing