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Cexcells
Cexcells

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Artist: Blaqk Audio
Label: Interscope Records
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy Used: $1.16
You Save: $12.82 (92%)



New (47) Used (37) from $1.16

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 35 reviews
Sales Rank: 28923

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 000951202
UPC: 602517414600
EAN: 0602517414600
ASIN: B000SM7R6K

Release Date: August 14, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Stiff Kittens
  • Between Breaths (An XX Perspective)
  • Snuff on Digital
  • Bitter for Sweet
  • Where Would You Like Them Left?
  • The Fear of Being Found
  • On a Friday
  • The Love Letter
  • Semiotic Love
  • Cities of Night
  • Again, Again and Again
  • Wake Up, Open the Door and Escape to the Sea

Similar Items:

  • This Is Forever
  • Decemberunderground
  • I Heard a Voice
  • Sing the Sorrow
  • Our Love to Admire

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
DAVEY HAVOK/JADE PUGET: TWO BOYS IN LOVE WITH SYNTHESISERS & SOFTWARE

BLAQK AUDIO, the electronic side project of AFI's Davey Havok and Jade Puget, will finally see the light of day in the form of the debut album CexCells. Recorded by the band in between AFI's extensive touring for DECEMBERUNDERGROUD and mixed by Dave Bascombe (Depeche Mode, Tears for Fears, Placebo), CexCells expands upon and fully indulges the dark electronic textures and influences increasingly prevalent in AFI's recent work. The results range from evocation of prima era Depeche Mode and early Ministry ("Stiff Kittens," "Bitter for Sweet," "Where Would You Like Them Left?") to four on the floor club-friendly fare ("On a Friday," "Snuff on Digital") to vulnerable balladry ("Wake Up," "The Fear").

The common thread running through all of BLAQK AUDIO's material-Havok's signature dark vocal and lyrical stylings combined with Puget's epic, emotional arrangements -will be instantly identifiable to AFI fans, despite the synthetic washes, keyboard flourishes and electronic beats supplanting the traditional guitar /bass/drum AFI frame work.

Album Description
BLAQK AUDIO, the electronic side projec of AFI's Davey Havok and Jade Puget, will finally see the light of day August 7th in the form of the debut album CexCells. Recorded by the band in between AFI's extensive touring for DECEMBERUNDERGROUD and mixed by Dave Bascombe (Depeche Mode, Tears for Fears, Placebo), CexCells expands upon and fully indulges the dark electronic textures and influences increasingly prevalent in AFI's recent work. The results range from evocation of prima era Depeche Mode and early Ministry (Stiff Kittens, Bitter forSweet, Where Would You Like Them Left?) to four on the floor club-friendly fare (On a Friday, Snuff on Digital) to vulnerable balladry (Wake Up, The Fear). The common thread running through all of BLAQK AUDIO's material-Havok's signature dark vocal and lyrical stylings combined with Puget's epic, emotional arrangements-will be instantly identifiable to AFI fans, despite the synthetic washes, keyboard flourishes and electronic beats supplanting the traditional guitar/bass/drum AFI frame work.


Customer Reviews:   Read 30 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars AFI members' electronic side project doesn't disappoint...   August 17, 2007
 13 out of 15 found this review helpful

First off, if you like AFI at all, this is a must own. The songs are just as well written as the stuff on the AFI album "decemberunderground". In fact, the song "37mm" off of that album was originally a Blaqk Audio song that became an AFI song. So if you like that song in particular, you will love Blaqk Audio. Blaqk Audio is Davey Havok and Jade Puget of AFI. The music on "CexCells" is almost entirely electronic. You would think that a side project would lack the quality and heart of the artists main project, but that's not the case here at all. This is actually one of the strongest electronic releases i've heard so far this year. The music is similar to Depeche Mode or early Nine Inch Nails but you can definitely hear the AFI twist mixed into it all. So far my favorites have to be "Stiff Kittens" and "Between Breaths". If you're into AFI or the electronic goth sound, you won't be disappointed. This album combines the two successfully. Just don't buy this thinking that you're going to get songs that sound just like AFI. If you're not into dark electronic music like Depeche Mode, VNV Nation, and Pretty Hate Machine-era Nine Inch Nails, then this may not be your cup of tea.


3 out of 5 stars Blaqk Audio   September 1, 2007
 12 out of 15 found this review helpful

I think like most AFI fans I have been eagerly awaiting this record since Davey and Jade announced it back after the release of "Sing the Sorrow", and also, like a lot of AFI fans, I was beginning to wonder if it would ever actually materialize after around, oh, the third year since the announcement of this groups inception with no music heard (with the exception of "37mm" from "decemberunderground", which gives you a pretty good point of reference for what you're going to get here). But when I saw that the song "Bitter For Sweet" was up on their MySpace page, I immediatley went and listened to it and became even more excited to hear the album.
So after three years of anticipation does this record live up to the anticipation? Well, yes and no.
"CexCells", the debut from Davey and Jade's side project Blaqk Audio, is a fully competent and at times exciting electronic album that bridges (the none to sizeable gap) between VNV Nation and "Black Celebration"-era Depeche Mode. Jade handles the production and the instrumentation while Davey takes care of the vocals and lyrics.
Jade has done a fine job with the music, layering keyboards and atmospherics excellently, all complimented by well programmed beats. Davey lowers his vocal register and loses most of his emotional balance that he showcases on AFI records to compliment Jade's programming to give the record an interesting, detached feel throughout.
But two problems come up when listening to "CexCells". One, the production that Jade gives to the songs can occasionally suffocate the songs and give them a sort of same sounding vibe after all (this is a problem with many electronic albums, however.) Also, occasionally, Blaqk Audio focus and leans a little too much on mood songs rather than creating memorable melodies. A few songs stand out--- the aforementioned "Bitter For Sweet", "Stiff Kittens", "Between Breaths", "On A Friday" and "Again, Again and Again" most notably--- but most of the rest just fade into each other. And though this allows for the record to have a continueus flow, it does make it a little monotonous at times.
But "CexCells" is a debut, and like all the best debuts, the potential to be great is there. And unlike most side projects, Blaqk Audio neither lean to heavily on their day job nor run completly away from what makes the main band great. AFI fans and fans of electronic music should eat up "CexCells" and purchase it immediatley. But it isn't flawless.
But it does make me anticpate the next Blaqk Audio record as much as the next AFI record.



4 out of 5 stars Davey and Jade successfully bring their signature anthemic stylings to electronic music   August 15, 2007
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Under the stand alone banner of "Blaqk Audio" the main creative force behind AFI decide to finally tackle the electronic pop and dance influences that have become increasingly apparent and dominant in their signature outfit. However this is anything but a tongue in cheek tribute album to their favotite retro bands, nor is it a goofy imitation of them. With "Cexcells," Davey and Jade in fact seem to be searching for their own voice in a somewhat alien medium. Simliarities to AFI are inevitable with Davey bringing a familiar tragic urgency to his vocals and mysterious lyrics while Jade's song compositions are once again aimed toward the anthemic with faint melancholy always lingering beneath the surface. While many of the songs have dance elements, they come across more as personal anthems to sing alone in your bedroom than songs to shake your booty to at a club.

Musically the album features the all to familiar sounds of electronic music: pulsing electric melodies, upbeat drum machines, snyth washed guitar ...etc. However, Jade manages to find some character in the cliche with weeping piano melodies and fresh dramatic arrangements. He doesn't reivent the genre or anything drastic but he does manage to create an effective emotional backdrop for the album's most crucial element, the unique vocal stylings of Davey Havok. Exploring his natural lower register more than ever before, Davey's performances ooze undersated sexuality and mature longing while still containing the energetic spark of his punk background. The aggression of AFI is gone but his ability to make a chorus as goofy as "Strip for me as I strip for you" sound like a spiritual call to arms is nothing short of remarkable; new wave or even most electric goth never sounded this convincingly urgent and flat out important.

Sadly, the album does have the unmistkable aura of well...a side project. While "CexCells" does indeed feel like an exhausting labor of love, the overall experience and accomplished epic scope of the last several AFI releases is noticably absent. This is very much a song orientated singles album that sadly comes off as being a tad top heavy with the boys possibly showing all their cards too soon; though the "b-side" is worthwhile there are no more surprises. Highlights include the somewhat raunchy grind of the single "Stiff Kittens," the harsh industrial touches of the dynamic shifting "Between Breaths," the uplifting dance/goth anthem "Snuff on Digital," the quietly desperate romance of "Fear of Being Found," and finally the climatic new wave powerhouse "Cities by Night."



5 out of 5 stars Similar to AFI's new stuff, but different too   September 20, 2007
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Finally some good electronica/futurepop music. Davey's vocals were meant for this kind of creepy music, I swear. The only thing I was a little disappointed about is that Jade doesn't provide any vocals. Other than that, it's amazing. Like AFI a hundred years in the future (picture Davey wearing skin-tight chrome pants xD).

So I think that fans of AFI will love this. And Blaqk Audio might just pull in some new fans along the way, both for itself and AFI.



5 out of 5 stars Good songs!   August 15, 2007
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Davey Havok's voice just gets better with each album he puts out, whether he is backed by guitars or synths. Davey and Jade's love for electronic music really shows. The overall sound is familiar for those who listened to electronic music in the 80's. But this stands on its own rather than being an imitation, and I think it deserves more recognition than to be labelled a "side project" album. I look forward to more from them in the future!

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