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Winter Wine View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 16:29

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

^That makes even more sense. Peach means buttocks too!

You wish Snow Dog

My computer's broke
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 16:31

Had a closer look again.I wonder what those little black bits on the tongue are???

Chocolate?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 16:49

Originally posted by Aaron Aaron wrote:

what the f**k is the knife all about

The whole thing is a bit disturbing, don't you think?  The sweat...the knife...the butt...and what the heck are those black flecks on the tip of the tongue?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 20:37
It's a peach, of course. End of question!
RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 20:42
This is funny
My recent purchases:
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 21:22
Yeah, pretty weird and definitely suggestive
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2006 at 22:08
the more I look at it and the more I read the thread  it's starting to look more and more like a tounge licking someone's a**hole 

 That's definately and acquiered taste

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2006 at 05:35

I have no merits other than having read the Acquiring the Taste book written by Paul Stump, but it is about arse licking

Read my review below

GENTLE GIANT Acquiring The Taste
Review (Permanent link) by Hugues Chantraine @ 8:26:22 AM EST, 2/24/2004

SPECIAL COLLABORATION

3 stars  —  3,5 stars really!!!

Well if GG never got any success (commercial or critical) in their own country, it might be a bit their own doing, with their cocky and overly elitist attitude bordering on provocation (get back in your crib Mr Johnny Rotten) towards the establishment. The overly superior tone and borderline pretentious text inside the album, the rather ugly cover depicting ass-licking towards the music industry as well as the very-related album title did not go unnoticed by all the “establishment» who clearly chose to give the album the silent treatment, maiming the band were it hurts most: exposure and therefore sales.

Another factor for the lack of success (at least on the home front, because on the Continent, they will gain a solid cult following) is that the music is anything but easily accessible due to rather wild, unexpected, opaque, oblique, obscure – and dare I say obtuse? – musical choices , that seems to complicate – sometimes needlessly – their songs. From the clumsy Moog intro of opening track about French language “founding father”(Rabelais) characters (see Cert1fied and Cortese’s reviews for more details) to the Generator-less VDG mating with Hendrix wah-wah sounding-finale, everything spells un-commercial, adventurous, odd and rather quaint, but there is a sheer brilliance coming through this Oeuvre. I find some tracks to be relatively aimless (notably Edge Of Twilight and its intrusive percussive break and Moon Is Down) and so odd in construction that they remind me a bit the sloppy songwritings of KC’s SABB album: I like to be surprised in the music I listen to but I also expect it to roll around naturally, not taking non-natural twist for the sake of it. Wreck and Black Cat are your typical GG tracks that we are so accustomed to and their unique renaissance-influenced vocals being now firmly established. One of the risk of being groundbreaking is that sometimes your work can sound incredibly outdated and in this case is the title track with its clumsy Moog playing (only Emerson had mastered the Moog synth at the time). The last track being sometimes superb, sometimes very awkward especially with the pedal effects, it serves as a fitting outro for this difficult but indispensable album.

If I sound harsh on this album, it is because while re-writing this review (it paled in comparison to my fellow colleague reviewers), I found most a bit over-ecstatic about this album.


 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2006 at 17:34
It doesn't have to be acquiring the taste of ass...
My music!

"THE AUDIENCE WERE generally drugged. (In Holland, always)." - Robert Fripp
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2006 at 17:38
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:



Well if GG never got any success (commercial or critical) in their own country, it might be a bit their own doing, with their cocky and overly elitist attitude bordering on provocation (get back in your crib Mr Johnny Rotten) towards the establishment. The overly superior tone and borderline pretentious text inside the album, the rather ugly cover depicting ass-licking towards the music industry as well as the very-related album title did not go unnoticed by all the “establishment» who clearly chose to give the album the silent treatment, maiming the band were it hurts most: exposure and therefore sales. 

 

It that really true? That's very clever!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2006 at 17:44

Originally posted by Bj-1 Bj-1 wrote:

It's a peach, of course. End of question!

Indeed it is a peach...but its is obviously implying something about oral sex.

 

It doent need to be an ass.



Edited by Oxygen Waster
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2006 at 05:51
Originally posted by Oxygen Waster Oxygen Waster wrote:

Originally posted by Bj-1 Bj-1 wrote:

It's a peach, of course. End of question!

Indeed it is a peach...but its is obviously implying something about oral sex.

 

It doent need to be an ass.

Paul Stump is quite categoric about this arselicking bit and it is so obvious once you know of it

let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2006 at 15:02
Of course the artwork incorporates multiple associations. What you see in it might reflect more of your own thoughts than of the image itself.

But whatever you see in the picture buy the now published gourgeously remastered album in paper sleeve. Repertoire records. At last. After their first "Gentle Giant". Hopefully "Three Friends" will follow.

Acquring the Taste, Pawn Hearts, Tarkus - those 3 were released in the same year (1971) and were at the peak of progressive rock music. Add Close to the Edge from 1972 if you like.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2006 at 17:54

This is interesting from the GG website:

"George Underwood, creator of the "giant's head" logo for Gentle Giant, also designed several other album covers that were never used. For Acquiring The Taste, his design was the Giant's tongue licking a pearl in an oyster shell. It was rejected by the band as being too similar to "In the Court of the Crimson King."

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2006 at 17:59

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Yeah one is worried that its ass lickin', but on opening up the cover its only an apple...phew!

I think this is the most reasonable explanation. It's just a joke from the band.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2006 at 20:55
I find the double entendre ironic, because it suggests that liking their music is as hard as liking to lick arseholes. Or maybe it's what's below the arse...Either way, I think it works out more that they're insulting themselves.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2006 at 21:12
Originally posted by Ghandi 2 Ghandi 2 wrote:

I find the double entendre ironic, because it suggests that liking their music is as hard as liking to lick arseholes.


Hey if it's a hot chick there's nothing hard about liking it!

Have this CD on order will get it next week.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2006 at 21:36
It's just a joke. It looks like ass-licking, but I knew before seeing the whole thing that it wasn't an ass... They aren't a hip hop/rap band 

Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:


GENTLE GIANT Acquiring The Taste

Review (Permanent link) by Hugues Chantraine @ 8:26:22 AM EST, 2/24/2004
SPECIAL COLLABORATION

3 stars  —  3,5 stars really!!!

Well if GG never got any success (commercial or critical) in their own country, it might be a bit their own doing, with their cocky and overly elitist attitude bordering on provocation (get back in your crib Mr Johnny Rotten) towards the establishment. The overly superior tone and borderline pretentious text inside the album, the rather ugly cover depicting ass-licking towards the music industry as well as the very-related album title did not go unnoticed by all the “establishment» who clearly chose to give the album the silent treatment, maiming the band were it hurts most: exposure and therefore sales.

Another factor for the lack of success (at least on the home front, because on the Continent, they will gain a solid cult following) is that the music is anything but easily accessible due to rather wild, unexpected, opaque, oblique, obscure – and dare I say obtuse? – musical choices , that seems to complicate – sometimes needlessly – their songs. From the clumsy Moog intro of opening track about French language “founding father”(Rabelais) characters (see Cert1fied and Cortese’s reviews for more details) to the Generator-less VDG mating with Hendrix wah-wah sounding-finale, everything spells un-commercial, adventurous, odd and rather quaint, but there is a sheer brilliance coming through this Oeuvre. I find some tracks to be relatively aimless (notably Edge Of Twilight and its intrusive percussive break and Moon Is Down) and so odd in construction that they remind me a bit the sloppy songwritings of KC’s SABB album: I like to be surprised in the music I listen to but I also expect it to roll around naturally, not taking non-natural twist for the sake of it. Wreck and Black Cat are your typical GG tracks that we are so accustomed to and their unique renaissance-influenced vocals being now firmly established. One of the risk of being groundbreaking is that sometimes your work can sound incredibly outdated and in this case is the title track with its clumsy Moog playing (only Emerson had mastered the Moog synth at the time). The last track being sometimes superb, sometimes very awkward especially with the pedal effects, it serves as a fitting outro for this difficult but indispensable album.

If I sound harsh on this album, it is because while re-writing this review (it paled in comparison to my fellow colleague reviewers), I found most a bit over-ecstatic about this album.


 



I have to disagree with your review, Sean Trane. Acquiring The Taste was the first record I've heard from Gentle Giant and I have to say that it didn't took me very much time to get into it and that I never found it aimless. It stands as my favorite album from the band, altough I only know Gentle Giant, Acquiring The Taste, Octopus and Three Friends.

I believe that if they really were keen on the "pretentious" thing they would have done the classic 20+ minutes epic/suite that every big band was making at the time (don't get me wrong, im not criticizing Supper's Ready or A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers for example, I love both )


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