PRE-ORDER ITEM : Expected January 1st 1970. This item will only be shipped to you on or after the official release date. Please note any orders containing pre-order items won't be shipped until all items are available, so please order this separately to avoid delays. Please remember that release dates are at the mercy of labels, distributors, and pressing plants and will change constantly.
Escort burst on to the scene in 2006 with a string of critically acclaimed 12”s that included future classics ‘Starlight’ and ‘All Through The Night’, both DJ staples that get still get plenty of play on dancefloors. As DJs nursed their electro-clash hangover with a seemingly never ending stream of disco edits, Escort stood out, in part, by creating dance music the old fashioned way: with impeccable production, musicianship, and songwriting. The following several years saw them bring the same uncompromising approach to their live show. In an era where dance music is dominated by samples and computers, Escort took a sprawling ensemble to the stage and developed a reputation as one of New York’s most compelling live acts, capable of performing their elaborate recordings note for note. Late last year, Escort released their first taste of the new record, ‘Cocaine Blues’, a loose reinterpretation of the 1976 Dillinger classic that received rave reviews and quickly became an underground sensation, building even more anticipation for what’s to come. The entire album is steeped in the venerable tradition of clubland’s holy trinity — New York, Chicago, Detroit — but it seems particularly reminiscent of mutant-pop luminaries such as Kid Creole & The Coconuts and Ian Dury, who somehow managed to translate their sardonic sensibilities to the dancefloor. And by embracing the legacy of these forward-thinking but classic acts, they have yet managed to create something strikingly new. The album’s opener ‘Chameleon’ is a perfect example: a three-act play about the French serial impostor Frederic Bourdin, set to a beat that’s equal parts ‘Thriller’ and the Tom Tom Club. The tracks, ‘Make Me Over’ and ‘Why Oh Why’ seem to explore the lost possibilities of another era, rather than simply trying to re-create it. The 1937 standard ‘A Sailboat In The Moonlight’ is twisted into a lost August Darnell classic. The album also includes the definitive versions of their 12” DJ releases, which have been remixed, remastered, rearranged, and re-recorded specially for the album, to complete a release with absolutely no filler.