Includes remixes that highlight the production of the debut album.
Before their full-length debut, Scissor Sisters turned heads with underground club hits and a shocking, pink-hued cover of Pink Floyd’s progressive rock classic "Comfortably Numb." Reimagined as a Bee Gees-esque disco anthem, the track served as a manifesto for their sound. In FLAC format, the stark contrast between the driving synth bassline and Jake Shears’ soaring falsetto reveals a pristine separation of frequencies that compressed formats muddy up. Scissor Sisters (2004) Scissor Sisters Discography -2003-2012- -FLAC-
This radical, Bee Gees-inspired disco cover of the Pink Floyd classic is an audiophile’s dream. In a lossless format, the separation between the driving, synthesized bassline and the soaring falsetto vocals is pristine. The sharp hi-hats and squelching synth accents punch through without any of the harsh digital clipping common in low-bitrate rips. Includes remixes that highlight the production of the
The decade between 2003 and 2012 saw Scissor Sisters go from underground New York oddities to genuine pop royalty, leaving behind a discography that is both critically adored and commercially massive. Their music continues to be a staple in LGBTQ+ culture and dance clubs worldwide. Scissor Sisters (2004) This radical, Bee Gees-inspired disco
The Scissor Sisters exploded onto the scene in the early 2000s, bringing a, glamorous, and often irreverent queer aesthetic to mainstream pop music. Between 2003 and 2012, this New York City-based group—featuring the distinct vocals of Jake Shears and Ana Matronic, the musical genius of Babydaddy, the lead guitar of Del Marquis, and the rhythmic driving force of Paddy Boom—redefined the genre.