Product description I will ship by EMS or SAL items in stock in Japan. It is approximately 7-14days on delivery date. You wholeheartedly support customers as satisfactory. Thank you for you seeing it. Review French-born Vitalic, aka Pascal Arbez, first illuminated the world’s dance floors in 2005 with his debut OK Cowboy, an album so corking it made recent offerings from the likes of forebears Daft Punk look very limp indeed. Causing disco tremors all round with astounding singles such as Poney, the wall-dismantling La Rock and carving out the inside of skulls with My Friend Dario, it was one of the albums of the year, if not the decade, placing Pascal in a Gallic disco relay between the Dafts and the then-emerging Justice.Four years being deemed quite a while in disco terms, Vitalic has spent that time wisely inventing an album that is at least OK Cowboy’s equal. Flashmob delights in every way imaginable, showing that there are still legs in Gallic boogie; it makes merry with the blueprint he’s laid down, yet doesn’t go off on tangents of self indulgence. In short, Pascal hasn’t grown a beard, bought a cape or found his folk side. Phew.Flashmob continues much in the same vein as OK Cowboy, with pummelling compressed shards of intense mentalist disco and brain-frazzling wonkiness. With first single Your Disco Song leading the charge, the onslaught never lets up. Oscillating grooves hound throughout, with diva stylings illuminating Poison Lips, and the techno filth of Terminateur Benelux being quite literally the tune for all comers to beat from this moment on.Elsewhere, the cosmic electro of Station Mir 2099 and Alain Deloin are indicative of Kraftwerk’s prophecy rebooted for the now, while Chicken Lady is what Prince may’ve sound like if he’d had cybernetic implants crudely inserted during his early eighties imperial phase.Played loud enough, this album has the power to provoke actual riots and dismantle buildings. It’s genuinely colossal and makes Vitalic beyond future-proof and ready to lead the way again. --Ian Wade Find more music at the BBC This link will take you off in a new window
M**T
Dredd lives.
With the second track featuring in the Dredd movie, and sounding like a lot like Donna Summers I Feel Love, Flashmob a dramatic shift in style from Ok Cowboy. Very electro asn Goldfrapp-esque Flashmob grew on me like a rash, having to force myself to remove it from the car stereo for fear of listening to it too much.Still it is a Vitalic gem and highly reccommended.It's uniqueness is hampered by his third album Rage Age whic does feel slightly like it'c comprised from the songs that Flashmob left out.All in all still addictive
S**.
Sounds Continental.
One good track, the rest rather odd, it sounds like on one track he or who ever is singing about a Monkfish, perhaps it's the language but musically it's well..........car boot.
M**H
... tv but the rest of the cd is not brilliant
it was ok got for my husband because he had heard a song on tv but the rest of the cd is not brilliant
J**E
good cd
good cd
M**M
Five Stars
Excellent
C**S
Amazing album
Maximal house, slick as it comes.
A**S
Five Stars
Great products
A**R
Five Stars
Superb CD
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 weeks ago