Agar Agar – The Dog and the Future

French duo Agar Agar seem to be in a perpetual state of flux on debut album The Dog and the Future, and that’s no bad thing

Album Review by Robin Murray | 25 Sep 2018
Album title: The Dog and the Future
Artist: Agar Agar
Label: Cracki Records / Sony
Release date: 28 Sep

Agar Agar seem determined to sidestep any label placed alongside their music. The French duo – Clara Cappagli and Armand Bultheel – seem to be in a perpetual state of flux on debut album The Dog and the Future, and that’s no bad thing.

Italo-disco with a Gallic flourish, the frosted synths of opening jam Made segue into the surreal off-piste humour of Lost Dog, underpinning their technological savvy with a distinct grasp of the humane. Indeed, The Dog and the Future is a record that hurtles past barriers with a gleeful smile on its face, pitting heads down techno thumpers against gentle retro-futurist laments, all with a rich vein of surreal humour.

Sorry About the Carpet pits tropical percussion against a simple Kraftwerk-esque melody, the obstinate repetition leading to a sort of extra-dimensional take on those imperial Human League singles. Lead single Fangs Out opens in whispers, the distorted vocals offering high-pitched disruption before the upside down trap rhythms arrive to hurtle the song into a clipped, almost LCD Soundsystem navigated area.

Agar Agar stretch out into crunching proto-techno territory on Shivers, offering aural dystopia rendered with a human touch, but its finale pairing of Requiem and Schlafield fur Gestern offer the most fully realised snippets of their cinematic pop landscape. Echoes of those classic Moroder scores abound, a kind of Studio 54 glamour with a downtown feel – allowing each note to stretch out to its rightful conclusion, Agar Agar chart a wayward path, but it’s one worth persevering with.

Listen to: Made, Requiem

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