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<title>Music Videos by Gang Gang Dance on Rhapsody Online</title><link>http://www.rhapsody.com/goto?rcid=art.7420604&amp;rws=%2Fgang-gang-dance%2Fmusic-videos.rss</link><description>When Gang Gang Dance started gigging around New York City in the early 2000s, they were the last band anyone ever expected to make a great pop album. Early shows -- no doubt inspired by fellow New Yorkers No-Neck Blues Band -- were half performance art, half mystical ritual, with the band deconstructing noise rock, homemade electronica, free jazz, hip-hop and world music from Africa and Asia. Drummer Tim DeWitt and keyboardist Brian DeGraw had previously played together in the Cranium, an experimental post-hardcore outfit from Washington, D.C. They were strange, but not like Gang Gang Dance. Then things started to change. Each new album documented a band striving to alchemically transform all the weird stuff mentioned up above into a novel and all-too-fantastical breed of dance pop. After two challenging albums, they succeeded with the release of &lt;i&gt;God's Money&lt;/i&gt; in 2005. Over an undulating latticework of phantom bass drops, tribal percussion and crystal synths, vocalist Liz Bougatsos chirps, cries and coos like some kind of post-nuclear gypsy. In 2008 Gang Gang Dance upped the ante with the wonderfully psychedelic &lt;i&gt;Saint Dymphna&lt;/i&gt;, which actually boasts a dancefloor anthem or two -- sort of.
- Justin Farrar</description><category>Post-Modern Pop</category><language>en</language><ttl>720</ttl><pubDate>Sun, 27 Dec 2009 07:57:07 -0800</pubDate><image>
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<description>When Gang Gang Dance started gigging around New York City in the early 2000s, they were the last band anyone ever expected to make a great pop album. Early shows -- no doubt inspired by fellow New Yorkers No-Neck Blues Band -- were half performance art, half mystical ritual, with the band deconstructing noise rock, homemade electronica, free jazz, hip-hop and world music from Africa and Asia. Drummer Tim DeWitt and keyboardist Brian DeGraw had previously played together in the Cranium, an experimental post-hardcore outfit from Washington, D.C. They were strange, but not like Gang Gang Dance. Then things started to change. Each new album documented a band striving to alchemically transform all the weird stuff mentioned up above into a novel and all-too-fantastical breed of dance pop. After two challenging albums, they succeeded with the release of &lt;i&gt;God's Money&lt;/i&gt; in 2005. Over an undulating latticework of phantom bass drops, tribal percussion and crystal synths, vocalist Liz Bougatsos chirps, cries and coos like some kind of post-nuclear gypsy. In 2008 Gang Gang Dance upped the ante with the wonderfully psychedelic &lt;i&gt;Saint Dymphna&lt;/i&gt;, which actually boasts a dancefloor anthem or two -- sort of.
- Justin Farrar</description>
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