- Robert Devlin
- Albums and Singles
McMahan certainly has with this third release by the For Carnation, aband that has featured Dave Pajo, John Herndon, Doug McCombs, and BradWood. This time around, the principal players are different yet again-- save Brian's brother Michael, who also played on "Marshmallows" --and the guestlist is interesting to say the least (Britt Walford fromSlint, Kim Deal, Rachel Haden to name a few). Behind the knobs thistime as well adding some flourishes here and there is John McEntire,whose presence adds credibility to any release these days. It's notneeded here, though, as what's important is the power of these songs.Gone are the days of "rocking out" that McMahan exhibited in Slint, butdon't think for a second that he's lost his edge. These songs are atonce beautiful, menacing, soothing, and frightening. Imagine a recordthat can completely relax you but still scare the shit out of you. Andthe lyrics! The finest McMahan's ever written. When he speaks "Child --go back inside/where is your father now?" on "A Tribute To" you feelhis concern, his fear, his anger, and his detachment, all in one line.I heard the description "imagine if Slint made a trip-hop record."Don't believe the hype. Yes, there are some sampling and electronicexperiments here and there, but this record is far from trip-hop.Instead, McMahan is proving that his music isn't just getting better,it's becoming more vital than Slint ever was. Brilliant.
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- Jessica Tibbits
- Albums and Singles
The Noise Made By People combines moody yetenchanting torch songs (such as "Long Was the Year" and the album’sfirst single "Echo’s Answer"), charming psychedelic pop melodies ("ComeOn Let’s Go" and the highlight of the album "Papercuts"), and plenty ofhaunting instrumental pieces ("Minus One" and "Tower of Our Turning").Broadcast have proven to be adept at blending "real" instruments withelectronics, which is refreshing to hear in this type of music. Withthis release they seem to exhibit far more diversity than in the past,adding a maturity which was a bit lacking from the tracks compiled onWork and Non-Work, and have developed and refined their signaturesound.
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- Mark Weddle
- Albums and Singles
The first thing that caught my eyehere was the beautiful Van Gogh like cover. Then the name of the artistrang a few vague bells, I seem to remember it being dropped a few timeson the SWANS and Scott Walker e-mail lists and in The Wire magazine,all reliable sources for great music recommendations. A half minuteinto the first track at the listening station I knew this was for me.Dirty Three are an instrumental 3 piece from Australia with at leasthalf a dozen full length albums in 8 years. The music is composedsolely on violin, guitar and drums ... deceivingly simple consideringthe rich and full sound. Each piece is slow and melancholic as theclean guitar tones, violin and light percussion gently play off eachother. "I Offered It.." is the exception as it begins with severalminutes of solo violin then slowly builds into a barely contained rockfrenzy in the latter half. It's for the best that these tracks areinstrumental because the titles and music say everything that needs tobe said. "Whatever You Love, You Are" (great title) is a delicatelybeautiful album and I'm sure the more musically hip (i.e., fans of NickCave, the Legendary Pink Dots, SWANS, Godspeed You Black Emperor!,etc.) will agree. It looks like I have some back catalog catching up todo.
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- Administrator
- Albums and Singles
The result is as eclectic as the back catalogsof both players and it works. The 13 tracks ignore the traditionalboundaries of numerous genres, freely exploring and combining dance,ambient, lounge, country & western, Hawaian, swing, jazz, etc.Cole's pedal steel adds a unique vibe to Vibert's goofy samples and hiphop-lite beats, whether it be as ambient backing or lead licks. Italmost seems as if Cole's parts are merely samples but that's thething, they're not. The blend of 'real' and machine music is seamlessand sounds natural. Three tracks also have vocals, which is unfortunatein the case of Addie Brik's whining and moaning on "Nick Cave" butfunny in the case of Bobby Valentino's spoken intro and outro pieces.And with track titles like "Swing Lite - Alright", "Hipalong Hop","This Stuff is Fresh" and "Party Animal" ... how can you possibly gowrong? "Stop the Panic" isn't mindblowing but I don't think it'sintended to be. It's certainly interesting and a lot of fun. It'salways good to hear talented musicians from such supposedly differentgenerations and musical worlds collaborate. Vibert and Cole arecurrently on tour in Europe.
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- Administrator
- Albums and Singles
Stunningly beautiful choral samples on "Tudor Fruits" aren't far from the similar choral samples heard on "The Sea Priestess" from Astral Disaster. I wish I could figure out what the items listed in "Tudor Fruits" had in common during the spoken sections. Keep in mind, however, this is not a Coil record, despite the guest vocals from John Balance. While it is does move and meld, it lacks a certain continuity apparent on nearly all Coil releases. This should also be available through many of the recommended brainwashed stores so save your bidding money.
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- Jason Olariu
- Albums and Singles
On this double Cd, those two long out-of-print albumsappear in their entirety, along with a previously unreleased thirdalbum (all self-titled, by the way). Taking inspiration from folk,rock, and the more oddball indie rock that was happening at the time(The Meat Puppets and Minutemen, for example), The Donner Party craftedcatchy indie rock. Sometimes humorous and playful ("Would You Like ToHave Something To Eat?"), occasionally frightening, such as on theschizophrenic ramblings of "Chocolate Shake." Showing their progressionfrom Husker Du-inspired edgy punk-pop of early Donner Party, to themore experimental leanings of their later stuff, this compilation is agreat showcase to an often over-looked band. Tracks such as "Notker TheStammerer", clearly the blueprint bands such as Soul Asylum and Swellfollowed, rock hard without devolving into childishness plagued by someof their material. Maybe it's that divide, between Dead Milkman-likeimmaturity and honest punk-pop tunes with loads of hooks, that made TheDonner Party not get the attention they deserved (a lot of people,critics especially, like their music straightforward, with nosurprises). Let's hope with the re-release of this old material,history will be corrected.
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- Rainer Padamsee
- Albums and Singles
Current 93's effort is entitled "Immortal Bird" and is evidently fromthe forthcoming album "Sleep Has His House". There is an immediatechange of atmosphere, as dark synths and Cashmore's instrumentationgive an ambience not dissimilar to the Island material, albeit a littleless electronic and well integrated with quietly strummed guitars. Thevocals open shortly after with "What drives us on? What drives us on?".Tibet then launches to a tragic and poignant verse, neither sung norspoken, in much the way that he employed his melancholic vocals on SoftBlack Stars.
The song is reminiscent of "Moonlight or Other Fields..." in that bothhave a short spoken-sung section culminating in a final line ofhalf-rhyme "and the gun, and the glory that was to come" (Moonlight...)/ "Your eyes wide, and shot through; With Sea blue" (Immortal Bird).
The lyrical section lasts only for the first two and a half minutes ofthe song, whereafter the melody plays on, gradually and subtly soundingmore enforced and more desperate. Initially I was a little disappointedthat the last four minutes of the song are all instrumental, but onrepeated listening I find this works very well; we are all left hangingto Tibet's last line while the music drags us along and away.
The holistic effect is very depressing, much more so than the track byAntony and the Johnsons. As with Soft Black Stars, the lyrics soundautobiographical ("I was nothing for you but the shadow of anotherlove" ) and at the same time surreal ("shift your skies to pasturesblue, streaked with passing and loss/ Moonlight sweeping over Northernbeaches where the trees are stripped silhouettes of memories") andmetaphor-laden ("in your vault of skin").
It is, in his own words, the sound of his own "particular fall". Andyet nevertheless David Tibet once again manages to evoke emotions,moods and meanings which are universal.
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- Administrator
- Albums and Singles
You might expectthis to be kitschy or maybe good for a laugh and nothing else, buthonestly, it's actually got very emotive vocals (in that big '70's rockway) that remind me of Waters-era Pink Floyd. The whole album has aDuets theme, so it's the melvins with (in order:) Leif Garrett, DavidYow(Jesus Lizard), Hank Williams III/Henry Bogdan(helmet), Mike Patton(Mr. Bungle/Ex-Faith No More, Fantomas), Foetus, Skeleton Key, Tool,David Yow/godzik pink, Hank Williams III/Henry Bogdan, Bliss Blood,Kevin Sharp (Brutal Truth). The first David Yow song is very punk-ish(it is a Jesus Lizard cover) sounding every bit as drunk as the linernotes say he was during recording and the better of the two; the secondDY song is a bit more metal/grindcore with a very avant-garde jazz bitin the middle by godzik pink ("interlude") then right back into the DYyelling. The HW3/HB tracks are great, a real high point in the album(the first one is "Ramblin' Man" a Hank Williams Sr. tune, the other is"Okee From Muskogee" by Merle Haggard). Tool sounds very un-like itselfhere, kind of ambient-metal I'd call it and then the first 4 minutes ofthe 14min song are over and it starts sounding a bit more like Tool.The Feotus song is a great dirge-y ballad which is cool actually; theonly thing that it has going against it is the fact that it's rightafter the Mike Patton track which is so amazingly good that it kindaruined me for the rest of the album for a bit. The song ("G.I. Joe")starts with electronic squeals and beatboxing turns into a very denseeclectic song quickly. The bottom line is that this is a great albumthat I'd recommend to anyone who likes albums that are more on theeclectic side of the spectrum -- especially if you like any of theartists on this disc.
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- David A. Banton
- Albums and Singles
I think my initial reservations about the new"accessible" sound were valid, and I'm not yet sold on all the songs,but there is certainly enough here to make this a keeper. Letting go ofthe past and accepting this on its own terms was a start (and thanks toRichard Leviathan for his thoughtful comments in private); beginning to"hear" the lyrics and how they inform the music has been particularlyhelpful.
"Operation Valkrie" was perhaps the obvious choice for the pre-releasepromo single, but my current favorite is "The Wolf's Door". It's thatrare gem of a song that conveys a deep sense of melancholy, yet alsomanages to be uplifting and a source of strength... I can't get thatchorus out of my head! I am also leaning heavily towards "Serpent'sWine". Nice work!
Life is a field of Emptiness.
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- Alan Ezust and Julie Geanakakis
- Albums and Singles
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- Alan Ezust and Julie Geanakakis
- Albums and Singles
The first song sounds almost like a 60s beatles ripoff, and then turnsinto this very dirgey noise with some The The-like electric harmonicasounds. The elephant trumpet samples mixed with orchestral sounds inSnowfish add a very surreal quality to an otherwise manic piece. Everysong just goes nuts half way through, providing no end of surprises,and yet there is a cohesive theme that carries through the whole CD,providing a very entertaining trip. If you enjoy high-energypsychedelic weirdness, unexpected and out of context sounds throwntogether in a rhythmic way, and occasionally amusing spoken wordsamples, this CD is for you. One small comment about the packaging - itis incredibly difficult to insert and remove the CD, so one of thefirst things I did was trim the packaging so it would fit into a jewelbox. It was a very easy operation to perform.
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