Ignoto

Ignoto is the debut album by the British post-hardcore band Yourcodenameis:Milo and was released in 2005 on Fiction/Polydor. The album develops the strong sci-fi/post-hardcore sound of the group from their first mini album, All Roads to Fault. Upon its release despite not being a commercial success, it was well received by critics.

Ignoto
Studio album by
Released18 April 2005 (2005-04-18)
GenrePost-hardcore
Length53:09
LabelFiction/Polydor
ProducerFlood, Yourcodenameis:Milo
Yourcodenameis:Milo chronology
All Roads to Fault
(2004)
Ignoto
(2005)
Print Is Dead Vol 1
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
God Is In The TV[1]
The Guardian[2]
Playlouder[3]

A striking feature of the album is the cover artwork, which was produced by renowned designer Storm Thorgerson (with Peter Curzon and photographer Rupert Truman), who has also produced artwork for such memorable albums as The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd (with Hipgnosis) and recently Frances the Mute by The Mars Volta. The photograph is of a distressed man sitting in a room lit by a bare lightbulb. The walls are covered in hundreds of light switches (the theme of the rest of the album's artwork), with a girl dressed in red seen to be lying, lifeless, in an adjacent and similarly decorated room. The girl in red makes other appearances in the artwork.

The tracks "17", "Rapt. Dept." and "Schteeve" were all released as singles or EPs.

The Universal Special Edition release features a rounded CD case, differing from the standard jewel-box case.

Track listing

  1. "I Am Connecting Flight" - 2:57
  2. "17" - 3:16
  3. "Titan Grip" - 3:06
  4. "Rapt. Dept." - 4:12
  5. "Schteeve" - 4:13
  6. "Team Radar" - 5:07
  7. "FiveFour" - 4:43
  8. "Yesterday's Head" - 4:07
  9. "Empty Feat" - 3:40
  10. "2-Stone" - 3:01
  11. "The General" - 3:19
  12. "Audition / Unfinished Drawings of Cats" - 11:22
gollark: He just manages to distract people from the terrible stuff by doing more terrible stuff.
gollark: Trump doesn't even cover it up.
gollark: > Earning tons of money through a job that indirectly exploits developing nations and then donating some part of that money to a charity that helps developing nations is probably a net negative for these nations.How do most jobs go around exploiting developing nations? Also, IIRC the figures are something like one life saved per few hundred/thousand $, so I doubt it.
gollark: There seem to be lots of "elites" who are basically *fine*, except you don't hear about them because people only go on about "SOME ELITES DID BAD THINGS".
gollark: > In capitalism, being selfish and ruthless tends to give you more profit and thus economical power. That's why most of the elite are bad, while so many of the poor have good hearts. Though the pressure to survive also ruins and corrupts the poor.Have you never heard of positive-sum stuff? Have you actually *checked* this in any way or are you just pulling in a bunch of stereotypes?

References

  1. God Is in the TV
  2. The Guardian
  3. "Playlouder". Archived from the original on 27 December 2005. Retrieved 26 December 2005.
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