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Plastic Beach
 
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Plastic Beach

GorillazMP3 Music
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (162 customer reviews)

Price: $9.49
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  • Original Release Date: March 5, 2010
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. Orchestral Intro (Feat. Sinfonia ViVA) 1:09 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   2. Welcome To The World Of The Plastic Beach (Feat. Snoop Dogg And Hypnotic Brass Ensemble) 3:35 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   3. White Flag (Feat. Bashy, Kano And The National Orchestra For Arabic Music) 3:43 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   4. Rhinestone Eyes 3:20 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   5. Stylo (Album Version) [feat. Mos Def and Bobby Womack] 4:30 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   6. Superfast Jellyfish (Feat. Gruff Rhys And De La Soul) 2:54 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   7. Empire Ants (feat. Little Dragon) 4:43 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   8. Glitter Freeze (Feat. Mark E Smith) 4:03 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play   9. Some Kind Of Nature (Feat. Lou Reed) 2:59 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 10. On Melancholy Hill 3:53 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 11. Broken 3:17 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 12. Sweepstakes (Feat. Mos Def And Hypnotic Brass Ensemble) 5:20 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 13. Plastic Beach (Feat. Mick Jones And Paul Simonon) 3:47 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 14. To Binge (Feat. Little Dragon) 3:55 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 15. Cloud Of Unknowing (Feat. Bobby Womack And Sinfonia ViVA) 3:06 $1.29  Buy MP3 
Play 16. Pirate Jet 2:32 $1.29  Buy MP3 
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Product Details

  • Original Release Date: March 5, 2010
  • Release Date: March 5, 2010
  • Label: Parlophone
  • Copyright: (C) 2010 EMI Records Ltd This label copy information is the subject of copyright protection. All rights reserved. (C) 2010 EMI Records Ltd
  • Total Length: 56:46
  • Genres:
  • ASIN: B003A9OVS0
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (162 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,133 Paid in MP3 Albums (See Top 100 Paid in MP3 Albums)

Customer Reviews

That said, all I can say is this album is worth getting. Scatt3rbrain  |  21 reviewers made a similar statement
Very Good sounding song here. Roy Woody  |  25 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
46 of 50 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
I ventured on board the Gorillaz hype machine during Demon Days, their 2nd album and possibly their best to date. At the time I picked up the Deluxe version of Demon Days and loved the incredible quality of the package. With a great plastic slip, unique artwork and an entire mini-art book and DVD / CD it was truly an exceptional value as well as collector's piece.

When I saw the artwork for the Gorillaz latest album, 'Plastic Beach' I immediately thought of how great the last Deluxe edition had been and put in my pre-order. Upon it's arrival, the first thing that immediately struck me is how cheap it looked. Rather than any sort of slip case or plastic, everything in this "Deluxe" edition is cardboard. It looks terrible in comparison to the Demon Days deluxe package and basically it's a fold out cardboard piece with 2 sleeves that hold 2 smaller cardboard sleeves for the CD & DVD 'Making Of.' The saving grace for the packaging is the artwork, with vivid colors and images it almost provides the necessary incentive to pay about twice as much for this edition compared to the standard release.

With that said, I can't whole heartedly recommend this as a purchase. While the packaging is poorly made, the biggest disappointment by far is the included DVD. Prior to the release of Plastic Beach, I was lucky enough to see the music video for Stylo on youtube. It was great, with CGI Gorillaz members and even Bruce Willis. On the Demon Days deluxe edition, there was a nice variety of content included on the bonus DVD including the album's leading song in music video format.

On the Plastic Beach Deluxe edition, they have made a dire error that I feel should stop anyone who was a fan of the DVD in Demon Day's Deluxe from picking this edition up. As is becoming more of the norm these days, the producers of this package opted to include special downloadable and streaming content via the Gorillaz website rather than including said games, videos and more on the bonus DVD. In my opinion, this is incredibly disappointing and takes away from the actual physical package. The Demon Days DVD was solid and really made the purchase worthwhile ... the Plastic Beach is only a 45 minute "making of feature" that offers very little of the Gorillaz artwork or any mention of the Stylo video ... that's it, there is nothing else on the disc. I'm sure the bonus online content is quite good but down the road in 5 to 10 years, I'll still be able to pop in the Demon Days DVD and get everything in one convenient place, sadly the same cannot be said for this "Deluxe" edition.

For those on the fence about this edition, I say go with the standard and save your money ... only diehard Gorillaz fans will find the extras worthwhile and while the artwork on the packaging is incredible, the medium on which it is presented is cheap and disappointing.

2 1/2 stars out of 5 for the Deluxe edition(rounded up for Amazon.com)
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103 of 119 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Not quite Demon Days, but brilliant in parts. March 9, 2010
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
"Empire Ants" starts off like the nice-but-boring ballads from the last Blur album. Then it suddenly explodes into a dazzling rush of impossibly clean keyboards and Yukimi Nagano's lost, spaced-out vocals. It is an incredible, beautiful contrast with Damon Albarn's conventional balladeering in the beginning.

Ultimately, Plastic Beach isn't as visionary as Demon Days (surely one of the top five albums of the 2000s), but when it does come together, there's nothing else like it. The album's other peak is the lead single "Stylo," which unsurprisingly bears the most resemblance to the dark mood of Demon Days. It's packed with even more brilliant left-field juxtapositions than "Feel Good Inc." The music is based on a cold pinpoint-techno crawl with dark keyboard overlays. The lead vocal is passed from a smooth vocoded rap by Mos Def, to Albarn's fragile lost soul (much like in "Feel Good Inc."), to a colossal, histrionic turn by soul legend Bobby Womack. The smooth, easy way with which these three very different vocal styles alternate is remarkable, and the first two vocalists create a restrained counterpoint to Womack's overpowering, force-of-nature voice.

Alas, "Stylo" is the only time Plastic Beach flirts with darkness. The other catchy pop moments are of a more comic, whimsical nature. "Superfast Jellyfish" has De La Soul on lead vocals, but it's really a classicist British pop song masquerading as hip-hop. It has more in common with catchy, fey Blur songs like "For Tomorrow" and "Charmless Man" (and with predecessors like the Kinks) than with rap or electronic music. I predict that it will be massively popular in Britain, but I personally prefer the more dramatic tone of Demon Days.

Albarn produces the album himself this time, and it shows. Aside from the one brilliant moment in "Empire Ants," there are no sudden, abrupt shifts like the crashing rap verse in "Dirty Harry" or the move from keyboards to acoustic guitar to strings in "Last Living Souls." That was a large part of what made Demon Days so captivating -- you never knew what was coming next, even over the course of one song. Plastic Beach is less unpredictable.

Furthermore, Albarn's background in Britpop leads him to make less effective use of the rappers than previous producer Danger Mouse. On "White Flag," Albarn tries to create an unconventional Gorillaz juxtaposition by putting a string and woodwind section together with rapping. Unfortunately, instead of flowing together seamlessly like "Dirty Harry," it sounds really jarring. I think Kano and Bashy have an awkward flow, especially when compared to the effortless way in which Bootie Brown dominated a much more complex rhythm-and-strings combination on Demon Days. Additionally, "Sweepstakes" is a very ungainly and repetitive song (unfortunately much longer than "White Light") -- Mos Def basically yells a few lines over and over, a far cry from his own performance in "Stylo."

The huge number of collaborations on Plastic Beach means less than the sum of its parts. What's the point of getting Mark E. Smith on your album if you only have him sing a couple of lines? "Glitter Freeze" may have Smith's name on it, but it's basically an instrumental -- a good one, but you'd expect more. "Superfast Jellyfish" has Gruff Rhys on the chorus, but he sounds completely identical to Albarn. The title track features Mick Jones and Paul Simonon of the Clash, but there's nothing about it that really stands out from any other Gorillaz song. If Jones is participating in the vocals, I couldn't tell him from Albarn either.

On the plus side, "Some Kind Of Nature" features a hugely appealing performance by Lou Reed. His bemused affectations, together with the music-hall backing, make him sound like a more gravelly-voiced version of Bowie. The positive tone is really infectious, and Albarn provides a bit of creeping melancholy in the chorus. Furthermore, Snoop Dogg is the perfect choice for "Welcome To The World Of The Plastic Beach." His extremely lazy, luxuriant style is an ideal match for the tropical-resort image of the "plastic beach," and he offers a generally positive message, but his voice always has this sleazy, threatening undercurrent that is also perfect for Albarn's vision of "plastic" debris. The glitzy, chintzy horns blaring throughout the track are a great touch, creating a seductively futuristic, extravagant sound.

Also, Albarn always has Britpop balladry to fall back on. He finds two gems in this vein: "Rhinestone Eyes," where woozy synth-funk combines with his detached speak-singing (surprisingly poignant when it leans toward singing at the end of a line), and the gently rolling "On Melancholy Hill." Other songs like "Broken" cover the same emotional territory, but "Rhinestone Eyes" is by far the best.

I think we all wanted this to be the ultimate globe-trotting, ultra-hip, futuristic album. Actually, Plastic Beach is more like The Great Escape to Demon Days' Parklife. It has more pop, more hooks, more collaborations, more everything, and sometimes it's even better, but still, it was Demon Days that really nailed the mood of the decade. Plastic Beach doesn't have the same effect, but it has moments of brilliant inspiration.
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92 of 113 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Early Album of 2010 Candidate March 9, 2010
Format:Audio CD
I open this review with a very strong piece of advice: please listen to this album in its entirety. Then come back to it within a day or two (or sooner, if you are so inclined) and give it a second listen from beginning to end. If you do that, unless you really dislike "this kind of music", I'm relatively certain you will be enchanted with the album permanently. Plastic Beach is truly an amazing work.

Keep the following thoughts in mind as you navigate through other reviews of Plastic Beach. First, immediately discount any that express disillusion that this album is not the sequel to its stellar predecessor, Demon Days (2005). Comparisons to Demon Days (and, by extension, the 2001 self-titled debut album) are useful to the extent they allow you to see how the Gorillaz sound has evolved over the course of a decade. To truly appreciate this work fairly, however, you should judge it on the strength of its own merits. Moreover, this review is being written the day of its United States release, and there are currently a handful of reviews that rate the album poorly. These reviews seem to have a few things in common: they show very little regard to not only the craftsmanship and genius behind this work, but seem to be written from a jaded aspect that belies someone writing against a deadline and only taking time to listen to the album once (if they even listened that much).

That said, while this album isn't perfection personified, it really is quite good, easily earning a 9 out of 10 rating. Below I will grade each track individually, but first I want to address the album as a whole. Clocking in at just under an hour, this album is a cohesive whole that takes you on a sonic journey full of unlikely sights and stops along the way (often even within the individual songs themselves). It's not surprising that this album in its formative stages was originally named "Carousel" by its loving architect, musical wizard Damon Albarn. The album is a special kind of ride. At times the album makes you think, but not too hard, because it doesn't purport to take a stand on any of the issues it brings to the surface. Other times the album makes you want to sing along, but not too loudly, because you want to be able to appreciate the artistry at work in each song. Most importantly, the album makes you feel emotion. Whether it be exhilaration, abandon, wonderment, or disquiet, you feel it with force.

On to the snapshots of each song in the US track-list.

1) Orchestral Intro -- 4/5
This track lets you know you are headed somewhere important and maybe just a little bit different. If you listen closely, the fade-out carries a hint of distortion, which I take as an indication that the nature you are about to experience is quite unnatural.

2) Welcome to The World of The Plastic Beach -- 3/5
There's probably no truer living representation of hip-hop than Snoop Dogg, and he serves as an apropos master of ceremonies welcoming you to your destination. Snoop has always had a unique five-star flow, and it's on full display on this track. Ever since his debut album Doggystyle (1993), however, he has an uneven track-record of bringing the heat to whatever song he's spitting rhymes on. The frustrating thing about Snoop is that both the listener and he are in on the fact that many times he is as lazy a lyricist as the flow of his trademark delivery, and that is indeed the case in this song, using trite expressions like "Boss Dogg" (not once, but twice), "mirror, mirror on the wall" and "crack-a-lackin". For the record, my wife thinks that Snoop did exactly what he was supposed to do on this track: introduce, not steal the stage. Regardless, aided by the sick horns of the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, this song helps get you in the mood to groove.

3) White Flag -- 3/5
A light, flighty orchestral piece by the Lebanese National Orchestra For Oriental and Arabic Music (I think I got that right...) takes you to Bollywood and some other exotic places you've probably never been to as you skip across the sand of Plastic Beach for the first time. You are suddenly greeted by a hot potato back-and-forth rap between British grime rap stars Kano and Bashy set to a dub beat. Their wordplay forms the musical meat sandwiched between the previously mentioned beginning of the track and its conclusion, which is a synthesis of the orchestral part and the dub beat. The final outcome is both an unlikely treat and treatise from your locale.

4) Rhinestone Eyes -- 5/5
This song has video single written all over it. 2D's vocals take center stage for the first time. It's a heavily synthesized pop tune complete with catchy not-quite-a-chorus repeats of the phrase "Love Electric-tric-tric-tric-tric" that you can only imagine yourself chanting alongside Noodle. This song also carries that signature "Gorillaz sound" of keyboards and drumbeats that can be traced back to their debut album. This song is definitely one of the reasons I regard the album so highly.

5) Stylo -- 5/5
The lead single and video from the album. "Feel Good, Inc." it is not, but this fact only adds to "Stylo"'s charm. An unyielding beat accentuated by an insidious, haunting repetition of the phrase "Overload", a slick verse from Mos Def, and the undeniable raw power of Bobby Womack make this song an instant classic. You don't get "Stylo" at first, you just know it has a catchy beat. After multiple listens, though, you realize the song is consummate. It is worth mentioning that essential to the whole Gorillaz concept is the fact that their music is both an audio and visual experience. Taken in that light, the promotional video shot for this track by co-creator Jaime Hewlett does an excellent job of immediately engaging the audience and drawing them into Plastic Beach.

6) Superfast Jellyfish -- 4/5
Rumored to be the second video and single from the album, this song is dripping with sinister irony. De La Soul become the first rap artists to score a follow-up opportunity with the Gorillaz, and they do not disappoint in this twisted indictment of consumerism, cloaked in a breakfast meal jingle. Though not as in-your-face and extreme as, say, Johnathan Swift's 1729 pamphlet "A Modest Proposal" the implications of this song are meant to be frightening. Gruff Rhys also lends his vocals to the track that is both scary and scary good.

7) Empire Ants -- 5/5
The beautiful, peaceful beginning of this song shows Plastic Beach at its most serene. The guitar makes a rare appearance, and it strums blissfully along in concert with 2D's singing and piano accompaniment. Then, halfway through, the song it improbably explodes into a shimmering disco-pop tune completed by the vocals of Yukumi Nagano from the Swedish group, Little Dragon. This may very well be the album's best song, though "Broken" gives it a serious run for its money a few songs later.

8) Glitter Freeze -- 2/5
Personal preference here, but this is my least favorite song of the lot. Mostly instrumental with a few sparse words from curmudgeon Mark E Smith, this song is an aural assault on your eardrums and mind. Often, after this song ends, I'm relieved, because it feels like I've just been willingly violated, which might just be a microcosm for one of the tenets of the album, namely the willful violation of our own home planet. But just as soon as you begin to contemplate that we are off to our next song.

9) Some Kind of Nature -- 3/5
Many are split on this Lou Reed guest effort, where his sing-song voice takes Albarn's piano-based beatnik ditty for a quick spin. Some hail it as the watermark of Plastic Beach, while others decry it as its nadir. The song comes pre-loaded with a fully realized chorus and simulated clapping that beckons singing along. I'm still not sure what to make of it all, I find myself in neither of the previously mentioned camps of supporters or naysayers, but I believe it is a solid addition to the album regardless.

10) On Melancholy Hill -- 5/5
An endearing track. Listen closely and you'll hear a rhythm that lies beneath Coldplay's "Viva La Vida" and the song it borrowed heavily from "Foreigner Suite" by Cat Stevens. I doubt it is intentional, and it is otherwise completely overshadowed by what is quite an uncharacteristically upbeat, almost saccharine ode from Albarn. While this song is technically 2D from Gorillaz, it is also every bit just Damon being himself.

11) Broken -- 5/5
My favorite of the album. The song evokes Clint Eastwood with its pseudo-riff on "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly" theme by Hugo Montenegro. The song is beyond phenomenal, and I think this is no coincidence, another 2D solo joint that can just as easily be seen as Damon Albarn as himself. The beat is seriously sick and haunting at the same time. The production sounds as if lifted off a top-flight hip-hop producer's private instrumental songbook, but it is so much more due to Damon's vocals dominating the song. I don't care what he is singing about in this song, I just want to listen and feel his lament. It's why this album, and its creator, are one-of-a-kind.

12) Sweepstakes -- 4/5
Hated this song at first, due to the repetition of the beat and the rhyme. However, keep listening: the lyrics actually change, not in their content, but in their delivery, just as the song itself transforms into something greater than the sum of its parts. Several minutes of repetition in, you are greeted again by the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble amplified this time with a percussion section that evokes an American college football halftime band performance. Mos Def is most definitely a winner on this track. Read more ›
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Forward
Yet again another prime example of the ever forward experimentation of Gorillaz.. While familiar overall, all of the songs presented are a pleasant experiment in music as is the... Read more
Published 7 days ago by Krendolous
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite albums ever
This is by far, top 3 albums ever! I am biased in this, but i don't care. I love Plastic Beach! I loved Gorillaz older stuff, but this is amazing, even years later after it came... Read more
Published 23 days ago by Muffinman_187
5.0 out of 5 stars Welcome to the World of the Plastic Beach
If you wanna impress your friends or dumb girls who don't know anything about music, get a Vinyl and your Grandma's record player. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Jack Donald
5.0 out of 5 stars AHHH!!! :D
This was wonderful. I got it for my boyfriend for Valentine's day and he LOVES it. The case (or whatever you would call it) has all kinds of really neet artwork, and it's a lot of... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Naomi Steva
4.0 out of 5 stars Great album
I'm torn on how to rate an album like this. Pro: great theme and message. Con: inaccessible. Pro: experimentation and unwillingness to just make another album like their proven... Read more
Published 2 months ago by R. MCRACKAN
5.0 out of 5 stars The packaging will blow your head
I bought this LP for the music, but the artwork inside is marvelous, itself is worth the price of the vinyl.
Published 3 months ago by Rodrigo Marta
5.0 out of 5 stars The Final Gorillaz Album?
I've read articles and quotes from Damon & Jaime that they've lost interest in continuing with the Gorillaz project and if you listen to the Gorillaz Discography start to finish,... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Casey Rafter
5.0 out of 5 stars A Grand Album
This album caught me off-guard. I like Gorillaz, but thought it was only okay after my first listen-through.

Then I sat down and gave it a second go. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Bob Skerry
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Gorillaz Album to date
Great album. Since it's on vinyl it sounds (to me) like the songs blend into each other much better than their digital counterparts. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Jas
2.0 out of 5 stars not the best gorillaz album
If you liked the songs on the radio you will not like the other songs on the album. Did they climax on there previous album?
Published 4 months ago by Doug
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Plastic Beach by Gorillaz
screw censorship in art. ridiculous.
Mar 18, 2010 by QueSuerte! |  See all 5 posts
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