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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Sonic architecture on an American tour de force"., March 17, 2001
At the end of the eighties many observers said that rockmusic was dead. Then the Swiss trio The Young Gods introduced their sonic architecture, witch changed the future of rockmusic. The trio only use voice, samples and drums, and yet the make one of the most impressive walls of sound built on the components of tempo, movement and balance. Their 4th album "T.V. Sky" stands, with Nirvana's Nevermind, as the most important and album of the nineties. "T.V. Sky" is the most American influential album jet by TYG. Especially the almost 20 minutes long composition "Summer Eyes", shows that The Young Gods in an extreme intelligent way, manage to combine the universe and expression of bands like the Stooges and the Doors with elements from heavy metal, Stravinskij and samples you never thought was from an electronic instrument. If you think that rockmusic doesn't exist any longer, then simply listen to The Young Gods, and that will change your mind.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One for the skinflowers..., March 23, 2001
By A Customer
"Gasoline Man" is the only song I have ever felt compelled to dance to - particularly when that bluesy bass riff kicks in after Franz goes "Thank you wolf, you told me how to bite". Many said The Young Gods were trying to adopt an American style with this album, but the sound is still distinctly European with guitar samples, electronic noises and sound-washes constructing each song. "Gasoline Man" and "Skinflowers" will be remembered as European rock classics, but the real highlights of the album are the ghostly "She Rains" and the stunning, twenty-minute-long "Summer Eyes" ( which is comparable with the sixteen-and-a-half-minutes-long odyssey "Moon Revolutions" on "Only Heaven" ).
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5.0 out of 5 stars
you haven't heard this yet, I'm guessing., February 4, 2010
The Young Gods delivered an unsung 90s rock classic with "T.V. Sky."
While the song "Skin Flowers" took what little spotlight this great, pivotal, controversial album garnered, with its slithering Cult-like bass line and Doors-y keyboard vamp -- "T.V. Sky" is an ALBUM, one which spun within my Sony Discman, its green-and-yellow-snake surface blurring into an ever-expanding spiral as the deep, thirsty music of this trio -- banging away at the border of electronica and rock -- destroyed my idea that electronic music and "rock" were somehow irreversibly separate. The Young Gods were a vocalist, a sampler, a drummer -- influences veering from The Swans to The Doors to far, far more ambient, convoluted areas. Even ZZ Top makes a cameo, spiritually, on this disc. Yet the Young Gods' universal currency was industrial electronica.
"Hey, There Are Animals In The Room"
They were often so good it almost hurt, and "T.V. Sky" was that definitive moment. The song "Summer Eyes" really says it all -- 20 minutes of "Riders On The Storm" crash-landed into a planet of pure molten heavy metal lava. Many see "T.V. Sky" as the moment that the band grasped for that English-speaking, star-making demographic. Whatever. It's a platinum album even if no one else -- of any language -- ever heard or paid attention.
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