Harman Patil (Editor)

Trst (album)

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Length
  
51:58

Artist
  
Trust

Producer
  
Robert Alfons

TRST (2012)
  
Joyland (2014)

Release date
  
28 February 2012

Label
  
Arts & Crafts

Trst (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaendd8Tru

Released
  
February 28, 2012 (2012-02-28)

Genres
  
Electropop, Industrial dance music

Nominations
  
Juno Award for Electronic Album of the Year

Trust trst 2012 full album hd


TRST is the debut studio album by Canadian synthpop project Trust. Self-produced by the band, it was released February 28, 2012, through Arts & Crafts Productions. The record features a "gloomy synthpop" and industrial dance sound that has been described as "a combination of gothic rock and trance pop."

Contents

Trust shoom


Critical reception

Upon its release, TRST received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 71, which indicates "generally favorable reviews", based on 13 reviews. Consequence of Sound critic Alex Young thought that the band is "crafty enough to pack TRST with enough of their own quirks and curveballs to make for a surprisingly fresh debut, one that'll likely prove difficult to follow." Daniel Slyvester of Exclaim! stated that the album "comes off less conceptual and more song-based than their image suggests," and added: "The truth is Trust are masters of delivery and flawless executioners, proving to be much better mechanics than designers." musicOMH's Tim Lee called the record "a hell of a debut" and "a reminder that as ubiquitous as they may become, there's plenty of life in the old synth yet."

NME's Kevin "EG" Perry was also positive in his assessment, stating: "Cool kids Trust never want to be seen to be trying too hard, but finale ‘Sulk’ is where it all comes together, like Chromatics with an evil glint in their eye." Benjamin Boles of Now praised the band's stylistic combination of goth rock and trance pop. Pitchfork's Larry Fitzmaurice wrote: "While the amount of raw material here may be daunting for some, there are plenty of surprising melodic moments to indulge in." Art Ivan of Tiny Mix Tapes called the album "a f**king great dance record." Ivan further stated: "While it is so much more than this as well, considering the negative connotations "dance" can have within much music discourse, it's initially, at least, the album's most notable appeal."

Nevertheless, Matt James of PopMatters was more mixed in his assessment of the album, describing it as "a sharp 'n' smartly entertaining synth-noir debut yet it falls just shy of hitting the truly big numbers."

Track listing

  1. "Shoom" — 5:26
  2. "Dressed for Space" — 3:37
  3. "Bulbform" — 4:49
  4. "The Last Dregs" — 5:25
  5. "Candy Walls" — 4:37
  6. "Gloryhole" — 5:01
  7. "This Ready Flesh" — 3:25
  8. "F.T.F." — 4:09
  9. "Heaven" — 4:56
  10. "Chrissy E" — 4:15
  11. "Sulk" — 6:18

Personnel

Trust
  • Robert Alfons — performance, production artwork, layout, photography; mixing (5, 8)
  • Maya Postepski — performance, production; mixing (5, 8)
  • Other personnel
  • Mikey Apples — artwork, layout
  • Emily Lazar — mastering
  • Heba Kadry — mastering
  • Damian Taylor — mixing (1 — 4, 6, 7, 9 — 11)
  • Songs

    1Shoom5:26
    2Dressed for Space3:37
    3Bulbform4:49

    References

    Trst (album) Wikipedia