Pram's minimalist, Krautrock-influenced brand of electronica is not for everyone (singer/lyricist Rosie Cuckston's little-girl voice seems to be the deal-breaker for many),...
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Recorded for Stereolab's Duophonic Super 45s label, Music for Your Movies occasionally recalls its hosts more playful, jazzy moments, but make no mistake--these four songs...
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An expanded American CD reissue of Pram's 1992 debut EP, this is Pram at their most abrasive. The cacophonous opener "Dead Piano" finds singer/lyricist Rosie Cuckston...
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Rather like their friends and former labelmates Stereolab, Pram have moved from an austere and challenging form of experimental rock into something considerably mellower and...
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Released just under a year after their brilliant Museum of Imaginary Animals, Pram's Somniloquy EP features remixes from that album by likeminded artists such as Plone and...
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It's true that Pram has shared the same bubbly, French-pop sound of Stereolab and Broadcast. But that's where the similarities end. A few cuts into The Museum of Imaginary...
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Always one of the indie world's most elliptical bands, Pram keep churning out consistently good, consistently interesting albums that, even though they never sound alike,...
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