Love to Love You Baby: Disco and the Mechanization of Music
QUOTES critic REVIEWS Neuro
1. QUOTES FROM CRITIC REVIEWS OF “MIND ALTAR” BY NEURO
WWW.NEUROMUSIC.NYC+
It’s a safe bet that any given listener has not heard anything like this before. It’s
inventive, original and a bit strange. It’s also very strong. –GW Hill
…together, they create a unique blend of cosmic goth-rock and Pink Floyd-esque
psych-rock freakouts with glammy Bowie-like theatrics along with thought-provoking
and mind-altering lyrical themes for a genre-defiant sound that is truly all their
own. -Justin Kreitzer
Short’s writing tends to be on the dark side, and he makes progressive rock and
goth-rock sound like a perfectly natural combination (which makes sense in light
of the fact that many goth artists have claimed David Bowie and Pink Floyd as
influences). -Alex Henderson
Intellectually, the lyrics of Mind Altar are astounding in their references to the
dark side of traditional fairy tales and the bible, but what’s most astounding is
how these references reveal the inherent darkness in anything familiar: our culture, our
dreams, ourselves. –Alice Neiley
The record is relentlessly challenging and unique and sometimes falls flat on its face
but there’s nothing quite like this out there today. Adventurous music fans should
give it a try. - Michael Korn
The lyrics may be smart and the music might be complex, but singer Short is nearly
unlistenable. Not since Styx’s Dennis DeYoung has there been a singer so pretentious
and annoying as Short. - Dan MacIntosh
Mind Altar succeeds in doing something that most mainstream artists don’t do: it
provides listeners with something daring and unusual. -Alexa Spieler
There’s a dark aura that surrounds these twelve tracks, drawing together some elements
of Bauhaus but ultimately ends up feeling like a strange collision of Bowie, Meatloaf,
and Pink Floyd. -Andrew Greenhalgh