Hurry Up, We're Dreaming by M83
User Submitted Album

Hurry Up, We're Dreaming

M83

2011
3.43
Rating
88
Votes
1
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3
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5
Distribution

Album Summary

Hurry Up, We're Dreaming (stylised without spaces) is the sixth studio album by French electronic music band M83. The album was released on 18 October 2011, by Naïve Records in France and by Mute Records in the United States. The album was the last M83 album with keyboardist Morgan Kibby before her departure, and the band's first full double album. The album received generally favourable reviews from critics. It debuted at number 15 on the US Billboard 200 with first-week sales of 21,000 copies, making it M83's highest-charting album to date. It sold 300,000 copies in the United States as of March 2016. The album was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album at the 2013 Grammy Awards and was ranked at number 134 on Pitchfork's list of "The 200 Best Albums of the 2010s" in October 2019.

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Reviews

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Oct 11 2025 Author
3
Hurry Up, We're Dreaming is a nice French electronic / dream pop album. "Reunion" is a fantastic song. The first 6 tracks are great, but after these the quality drops and the songs get indistinguishable and boring.
Sep 17 2025 Author
4
This is pretty good. I think I recognised Midnight City from This is pretty good. I think I recognised Midnight City from somewhere. Interesting mix of electronic and indie rock. Drum machine was a bit cheap, especially in the snare, but eh. 4/5 based on the 45min I listened to - even that was only about halfway. I got the data I needed.
Sep 27 2025 Author
5
I normally give up on albums that last this long but this was so enjoyable and so different.
Sep 28 2025 Author
5
This album has a kind of grandiosity that I like very much! Some songs are very bombastic. While others are much more danceable. I thought of M83 to be a one hit wonder (Midnight City still is a banger), but this album proves me wrong
Oct 11 2025 Author
5
This was some nice 70s jazz with good variety to keep it interesting. The usual sax, steel drum song Opus Pocus… a lot to like here.
Sep 18 2025 Author
4
Very nice! 4 stars.
Sep 19 2025 Author
4
A bit long, but forgiven as it has 2 songs from the travis rice "higher" snowboard film soundtrack - when outro came on, all I could think about was Travis dropping out of a helicopter onto a crazy Alaskan spine in 1080p glorious slowmo
Sep 22 2025 Author
4
Synth-pop, ambient, shoegaze. Agradable para tenerlo de fondo. Un 4, venga.
Sep 29 2025 Author
4
Very much enjoyed this and even knew some! Although I don’t know where from.
Oct 03 2025 Author
4
This reminds me of early 20s. And I really appreciate it for what it is. It's not something I would listen to regularly, a bit too intense and epic. Definitely suited me more when I was younger. But I still think it's good music!
Oct 05 2025 Author
4
Hurry up, it’s that one song from those TikTok’s and others! Feels like this could’ve been on the list as a representation of the modern electro beep boop music but we still got here
Oct 06 2025 Author
4
New to me. Perfectly nice, finds a nice groove. Midnight City and the last song, Outro caught my ear and I also enjoyed Wait. 3.5 rounding up because it happened to be a nice day for gentle.
Oct 11 2025 Author
4
Rating: 8/10 Best songs: Midnight city, Wait, Ok pal, Year one one ufo, Steve McQueen,
Nov 03 2025 Author
4
Ethereal as shit, bro. I can get down. Not even really mad at the length. Just not quite enough range for it. 4/5
Nov 10 2025 Author
4
Never heard of M83, although I know "Midnight City". Enjoyed listening to this one while walking the dog, taking in the nature surrounding me, nobody bothering me. Pleasant experience. Quite enjoyed the story of the LSD trip caused by a frog lol.
Nov 18 2025 Author
4
Interesting And long 4
Nov 28 2025 Author
4
Yeah, right from the "Intro" on the first disk --hiring Zola Jesus's vocal skills to here create an epic and cinematic duet with Anthony Gonzalez (aka M83) -- it's easy to grasp the sheer ambition of this synth pop double-LP. The first disk harbors quite a few electronic rock bangers, with the humongous "Midnight City" being of course the most memorable of them. And I simply love the couple of ambient tracks concluding that first disk ("When Will I Come Home?" "Soon, My Friend"). M83's music might be a touch too naive and airy at times, even kitschy to a degree. But set along the right images or "mind pictures", said music can create the most beautiful soundtracks ever written for an imaginary film. I have to admit I have not listened to the second disk as much as the first one -- in it "OK Pal" is only a lesser rendition of the "Midnight City" for me -- but revisiting that second half today yielded its own couple of gems -- including "Splendor" and most specifically the "Outro", forever ingrained in my memory as the moving soundtrack for the last couple of minutes of one of the best TV series of all time, *Mr. Robot*. Of course, quite objectively, *Hurry Up, We're Dreaming* is part of that family of overlong projects that would have benefited from self-editing and a shorter runtime. But even with that in mind, it's probably the right album in M83's discography to suggest for this users list. 3.5/5 for the purposes of this list of essential albums, rounded up to 4. 8.5/10 for more general purposes (5 + 3.5) ---- Number of albums from the original list I find relevant enough to be mandatory listens: 465 Albums from the original list I *might* include in mine later on: 288 Albums from the original list I won't include in mine: 336 ---- Number of albums from the users list I find relevant enough to be mandatory listens: 58 Albums from the users list I *might* select for mine later on: 79 (including this one) Albums from the users list I won't select for mine: 143 ---- Emile... Ma propre balise temporelle... Tu trouveras mes trois dernières réponses sous les albums d'Eric B. & Rakim, Shpongle et Ookla The Mok
Sep 18 2025 Author
3
Modern electronic indie. Very much one of those "Two songs everybody knows and then 50 minutes of songs that vaguely sound like inferior versions of those two songs everybody knows" albums, but it ain't bad.
Sep 18 2025 Author
3
Familiar with some of the songs on the album, good modern indie music, just suffers from being too long an album.
Sep 19 2025 Author
3
A bunch of this felt very familiar to me and I can't figure out why. It was fine, didn't really wow me and I thought the overall sound was a little monotonous.
Sep 20 2025 Author
3
A solid indie electronic album. Midnight Coty has to be one of the most Shazam-ed songs ever. It’s been in so many movies and you hear that riff and it resonates. The whole album is definitely above average but it’s not as good as the first few songs let on. 7.0/10
Sep 23 2025 Author
3
Been there dreamt that
Sep 24 2025 Author
3
Fine, I guess
Sep 25 2025 Author
3
It’s always a nice feeling when you hear a song that recognize and have that oh huh it’s that song, from a band you aren’t familiar with from this list. Overall not really my thing but I think the music was decent.
Oct 01 2025 Author
3
3.5 if I could
Oct 02 2025 Author
3
Quite a good all-round album. Too long though
Oct 03 2025 Author
3
Not bad at all but was never really into them
Oct 31 2025 Author
3
Enjoyed parts of this. However it’s another that falls into a little bit too long for me.
Nov 01 2025 Author
3
HA du duduudu HA HA du duduudu HA HA du duduudu HA HA du duduudu HA type beat. If i ever make a pretentious but also objectively cool youtube video about something niche and unimportant but want to make it seem like the most important thing ever I know where to go find the soundtrack.
Nov 20 2025 Author
3
I absolutely love M83’s 2003 record, “Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts” - like, to the point that I considered it for my submission on the user list. It was kind of a long-shot candidate, but it was a contender nonetheless. On that record, M83 strike a very interesting balance to me. Their marriage of droning, arpeggiated synths and swirling, distorted guitars might not have been the most world-changing idea, but it hits a unique sweet-spot for me. It’s a bit like if you gave Sonic Youth some synths and sequencers and told them to go to town and record an album. It’s a beautiful, intense and occasionally sinister record and I don’t think very many (if any) other bands have made a record that sounds like it. It’s really such a great record, I love it and highly recommend it. The follow up, “Before the Dawn Heals Us” does expand upon that sound (“Don’t Save Us From the Flames”, “*”, “Teen Angst”, “Car Chase Terror!”), but also introduces a pretty unabashed love for 80’s synth-pop into the M83 fold. While I enjoyed some of that record, I could tell M83 was moving in a direction that wasn’t necessarily for me. It happens. So, I kind of lost track and didn’t really keep up with their releases. I mean, I knew that this record and “Saturdays = Youth” were critical successes and topped a lot of year-end lists, but I never bothered listening, because what I was reading about them kind of reinforced how I felt about the band - that the things I loved about “Dead Cities…” weren’t really integral to their music anymore. So, listening to this record today, I’m having a bit of culture shock, even though I could kind of see it coming. This feels like a completely different band…because it is, but also because it sounds like a band that is chasing something (a more contemporary/pop-oriented sound or more mainstream audience), rather than a band that is creating their own path. There was a song on this record (“New Map”), where I thought to myself, “What is this, a Broken Social Scene record?”…and I love Broken Social Scene, but it feels like a weird fit for what I know M83 to be. So now I feel like I should revisit the records between “Dead Cities…” and this one, to find out how they got here. I’m not saying this is a bad record. Not at all. It does retain the cinematic grandeur that was a part of the reason I loved M83 in the first place. It’s just…I wasn’t expecting this. I know bands change, but in a way, it feels like the band I love is barely present here. I mean, usually bands kind of retain a seed of who they were as they age and maybe the loss of Nicolas Fromageau from the band was much more impactful than I suspected years ago. I don’t know, this record has me thrown for a loop.
Nov 20 2025 Author
3
Hit and miss. A bit disappointing considering how much I enjoyed pieces of it.
Oct 05 2025 Author
2
Hey it's that band that wrote that one song also wrote 90 more minutes of music that sounds like that.