Review Round-up: Pendulum - In Silico
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Australian drum and bass duo Pendulum rocked the Radio One Big Weekend this year, and they’ve just released In Silico, their new album. And since it’s been a while since we’ve done an album review round-up, let’s have a look across the Internet to see what other bloggers are saying about In Silico.
With Propane Nightmares riding high in the UK pop charts, the hype is huge, and having listened to Propane and Granite, I might just have found a new favourite band…
Once I listened to the album in full, it just blew my mind. Pendulum have managed to just about match ‘Hold your colour’, but not better it, although you couldn’t actually expect them to better what I consider to be one of the best albums ever created.
The excellent (and highly recommended) Strange Glue give In Silico an impressive 8/10 scoring, and comment:
Pendulum have come up with a sound which takes the intelligent structure of rock, coupled with its attention to lyrical details and thrown it against the sheer might of drum ‘n’ bass, a force capable of spurring white people to attempt dancing. It’s not a perfect pairing though, some tracks, such as “Propane Nightmares” and “The Tempest” skew heavily to the rock side, whilst others, such as “Mutiny” and “Visions” go to the d’n'b arena. When the middle-ground is found - take “Different” for example - Pendulum really hit home the fact that these two schools of music can co-exist fantastically.
Leonie Cooper, reviewing the album for The Guardian, is less enthusiastic about Pendulum in general:
while they come over as obsessed with sonic futurism, they can’t help but sound a little dated, regularly doffing their caps to 1990s electro-rockers Apollo 440. Despite this, tracks such as Showdown and Propane Nightmares, with its mariachi horns and pounding punk synths, are laudable attempts to appeal to both the rock and the rave crowds.
The wrost review so far is by Jack Foley, writing for indieLONDON:
The drum ‘n’ bass sound is also a little too one-note, for me, quickly becoming tiresome. Whenever the album places the d’n‘b to the fore, I tended to lose interest…it’s a pretty tedious listen enlivened by only the odd good moment.
Glenathon likes the album, but doesn’t think it trumps their debut, Hold Your Colour:
I like them because their music is unique. A lot of the electronic music out there follows the same pattern. Pendulum doesn’t necessarily ‘break the mold’ to me…but they definitely have their own sound.
I’d probably say that track 2, 8 and 10 will keep me coming back to this album.
Goreki wasn’t a fan of their early work, but has newfound respect for them after listening to In Silico:
…on my first impression I was utterly impressed. Pendulum have done what I was hoping for and pushed the bar by developing what they had and brought in new elements. The opening track has a great rock sound to go with it yet retaining some of the drum and bass sound of their previous work.
So folks, you’ve had a mix of good and bad. The first two singles are definitely strong tracks. There is weaker material on the album, but my own feeling is that Pendulum have crafted something amazing that straddles two genres and creates something genuinely exciting to listen to.
Get the album, take it for a spin in your car with the volume cranked and hit the open road. I reckon it’s a hit.










June 10th, 2008 at 7:09 am
[...] return with Propane Nightmares, the second single from their In Silico [...]
July 24th, 2008 at 1:53 pm
Thank you for compiling this! I couldn’t find many reviewers that actually liked this album and I was getting afraid that I was the only one! You’re a good man Mr. McGarry!