| 1 | More Serotonin... Please | 1:29 | X | |
| 2 | Suffer In Silence | 5:52 | X | |
|
Featuring [Outro Fill] -
Joakim Montelius
Programmed By - Sebastian Komor | ||||
| 3 | Unicorn (Duet Version) | 4:11 | X | |
|
Recorded By [Vocals] -
Paul Humphreys
Vocals - Claudia Brücken | ||||
| 4 | Until The End Of The World | 5:52 | X | |
|
Guitar -
Ted Skogmann
Mixed By - Dan Frampton Vocals [2nd Voice] - Geir Bratland | ||||
| 5 | Rollergirl | 4:42 | X | |
| 6 | O.K Amp - Let Me Out | 9:50 | X | |
| 7 | Pikachu™ | 3:45 | X | |
|
Guitar -
Rico Darum
Voice [Female] - Kaori Kinoshita | ||||
| 8 | Spindizzy | 5:09 | X | |
| Vocals [Chorus] - Christine Klausen | ||||
| 9 | Detroit Tickets | 7:19 | X | |
| Voice - Ronald Miller (2) | ||||
| 10 | Photoshop® Sucks | 1:58 | X | |
| Vocals - Computorgirl | ||||
| 11 | Something I Should Know | 19:30 | X | |
|
Synthesizer -
Jon Erik Martinsen
,
Stephan L. Groth*
Vocals [2nd Voice] - Pål-Magnus Rybom* | ||||
Suffer In Silence, Unicorn, Until the End of the World and Rollergirl are all very good tracks to start with. While they all have a driving beat and catchy melodies, what makes them good is the actual lyrical content. If you understand what situation Stephan was going through at the time he wrote the songs, I think you will have more understanding for them. Until the End of the World is undoubtedly inspired by Stephan's then broken relationship with his wife. Pikachu is also a song about his daughter.
The track Photoshop Sucks is actually a surprisingly deep track if you listen to it. It deals with our modern age and how reality is distorted through computers, by the use of Photoshop. In the notes for the album, Stephan is actually saying "embrace the real things in life".
Nobody should judge Harmonizer for what it seems like at the surface. Don't compare it to older or newer releases, because Apop is a project in constant change, and Stephan takes it in whatever direction he wants. Harmonizer stands alone as Stephan's elegy after the breakup with his dearest treasure, now torn away. When I listen to Harmonizer, I feel sympathy, and although many of the songs are sad, they have a very positive and happy take to them. I don't think Harmonizer could've been done in any other way, and I wouldn't want it to either.