Reviews that Stand Out |
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Zitro
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 11 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1321 |
Posted: September 26 2005 at 21:36 | |||
The 1-star review of Roger Water's 'Wall in berlin DVD and CD' really stand out!
uuaaahh
But he/she makes a good point : the music was badly affected by those guest musicians (especially in Another Brick on the Wall pt1 and pt2) |
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krauthead
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 30 2005 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 509 |
Posted: September 26 2005 at 18:27 | |||
There's words like butt and gay, maybe it's some sort of code |
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*Dancing madly backwards on a sea of air* - Captain Beyond
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Starette
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 14 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 502 |
Posted: September 26 2005 at 17:52 | |||
Hehe- some people, despite the fact they can't speak english well, should really be made collaborators because they write intelligent criticism that I ENVY almost as much as I envy Rob-the-good's talent in reviewing And it's not always because the bad english makes it just plain hillarious Bj-1 although that review by Ozalan was pretty damn funny. Take this recent review for example: http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=48539 I'm only just getting into In the Court of the Crimson King and because I love it so much so far, I may have reason to disagree with some of what this man writes but only because I'm allowing the album to soak into my brain at the moment. He, on the other hand, knows the album well and is stepping back to take a look at the bigger picture quite effectively. His english (that he politey apologises for in the first sentence) only has a few glitches but that doesn't stop him from getting the main points across in a way that definitely attracts attention from the average musical intellectual. Well done and thank you for some good reading Eduardo! |
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50 tonne angel falls to the earth...
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Bj-1
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 04 2005 Location: No(r)Way Status: Online Points: 31327 |
Posted: September 24 2005 at 15:33 | |||
One of the funniest review i've ever read!! Especially the "butt" parts |
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RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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Dick Heath
Special Collaborator Jazz-Rock Specialist Joined: April 19 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 12812 |
Posted: September 24 2005 at 15:20 | |||
Thanks Trotsky for those words. Occasionally things come together, here inspired by a record I first heard in 1969. I feeling devious at the moment, as I thinking to add (if it is not there already) and then write a review of Come Taste The Band by Tommy Bolin and his backing band at the time, Deep Purple...................... Edited by Dick Heath |
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: February 21 2004 Location: Scotland Status: Offline Points: 15585 |
Posted: September 24 2005 at 13:15 | |||
If there was a "Most improved reviewer" prize, i wonder who would win it! DREAM THEATER — all of those who give bad reviews to this masterpiece: [%*!#] off and die !!!
DREAM THEATER "Falling To Infinity " After the masterpiece that was "Awake" and Kevin Moore was an important part of that, they must take the decision of him to go after that record. They decided to recruit Derek Sherinian to replace him (even he couldn't reach his phenomenal virtuosity) and they rerecorded their Majesty-classic "A Change Of Seasons" which was a highly acclaimed present for their fans. After that they began to work on their new full-lenght record "Falling Into Infinity, but they had big trouble after the composing of it with their record company. The new atlantic label bosses watched on the list with sold records in America and freezed the budget for the their new record. Now Portnoy & co. started a march through the label-offices of their record company to show diverse label-managers, who they are, which music they make and that the new release is already long awaited in Japan, Netherlands or Germany. The crux: Dream Theater signed a worldwide guilty deal, which forbids them, to get self-managed and release their new record outside of God's own country without acception of the New Yorker main-quartier. So DT started an own tour in spring '97, to present the fans a part of their new material live. Back in the States, they must accept a diverse compromises, to don't miss the train in front of their noses completely. One compromise was, that they accepted the wish of their label to recruit producer Kevin Shirley, who made himself a name as producer of bands like Bon Jovi and Aerosmith, who's exercise was to win the American market back in the sence of the company, that finally takes this album some edges and some inspired surprising moments, which was a reason for big discussions in European and Asian fanbase-quartiers and rumbled on DT's image as revolutionary pioneers of the prog scene in the 90's. Beside all these problematic relationships, "Falliing Into Infinity" is really a strong effort, but can't stand any qualitative match with one of their past material. But there's enough to discover there in the end, so let's take a look on the tracks here, which is the most important:
"New Millenium" begins with a keyboard intro and with a underlined glockenspiel, 'til the bass part by John Myung breaks it and the song slowly builds up in a Rush-inspired part after one minute. The sitar part after close two minutes sounds well and James LaBrie's voice fits perfectly to the mood. The refrain is a good one and is shoutable at live concerts. A good live song though and a good start for the record. I only wished more surprising moments on here, but it's really a solid DT-song in a Rush-inspired style (especially the guitar work of John Petrucci. (Track rating: 8/10 points) "You Not Me" would be a good radio single, with a haunting refrain and good keys of Derek Sherinian, who clearly uses a simplier style than Kevin Moore, but his playing fits to the simplier work on here. It's an accesible song, but if you search for complexity, look elsewhere, this is a more mainstream-oriented one. I really like it though. (Track rating: 7.5/10 points) "Peruvian Skies" is one of my favourite tracks on here. This song is very atmospheric and moody in the first part and is getting heavier throughout the song. The refrain is memorable and dreamy, perfect song for Dream Theater and with very flexible instrumental parts. This is a song, which is unusual and somehow something special. The guitar solo of Petrucci is absolutely haunting and grateful, with nice underlined keys of Sherinian. James LaBrie's vocals are also great, like Portnoy's drumming. Excellent! (Track rating: 9.5/10 points) "Hollow Years" turns down the heaviness of the previous track and is a nice acoustic ballad, which also got a well made video clip. This may be poppy at times, but is a well warm place to relax and I really like it. Not progressive at all, but enjoyable and with a strong refrain. Nice, just nice. (Track rating: 8/10 points) "Burning My Soul" turns up the volume of the previous song and is a heavy DT-smasher in the style of "Pull Me Under", even not as good as and less progressive. An excellent live track, with an shoutable chorus. For fans found food, for non-fans even not. This is more solid heavy metal with a prog edge and more solid average in a compositional sence, it's enjoyable though, if this is your taste. (Track rating: 7/10 points) "Hell's Kitchen" marks the instrumental piece of the record and is in an equal brilliant instrumentation like the phenomenal "Erotomania" from AWAKE, with beautiful acoustic and lead guitar by master John Petrucci. The synth-keys of Jordan Rudess are the quintessential underlines which make this one so workable. After three minutes they more and more push themselves forward in a complex jam, that's what the instrumental brilliance of DT is all about, so this is really an excellent istrumental. Maybe not as brilliant as "Erotomania" but close. (Track rating: 9/10 points) "Lines In The Sand": The name of the second longest piece on the album and with a guest appearence by Doug Pinnick of King's X who sings here together with James in the refrain. For a DT-long track this it got a more unusual style. It's bluesy and hard rockin', with a nice quiet part, which contains a great guitar solo by Petrucci and nice piano playing. This is a strong lengthier track on the album, which is getting better and better in the ending part. An definitive highlight of the album! (Track rating: 9/10 points) "Taking Away My Pain": A ballad, which is dedicated to John E. Petrucci and like a big part on here written by John Petrucci. This is a song about letting a loved one go, at this point John's dad. It's a moving piece and John wrotes all his inner feelings about it on here. This is very personal, so I don't want to discuss about the song in particular, which isn't really progressive, just a personnal piece by the compositional motor and lyrical heart of the band. (Track rating: 8/10 points) "Just Let Me Breathe" was written by Mike Portnoy, you hear this in the style of it. It's heavy and straight, with a groovy guitar by John Petrucci, pounding bass and cool vocals by James LaBrie, who sings here a bit like James Hetfield of Metallica, not as clear as on "The Glass Prison" but you still can hear the influence, specially when he shouts "Yeah!". For metal-heads a funny thing, but for prog-heads? A matter of taste. This song is good though, but nothing really special. (Track rating: 7.5/10 points) "Anna Lee": Dream Theater are strong in writing ballads and "Anna Lee" is another good example. The piano is simple but works pretty well on here, James sings with full emotion, he also wrote the lyrics for it. The song is about holding together and the fear to live alone. A nice one and the best slow song of the record IMO. (Track rating: 8.5/10 points) "Trial Of Tears": The longest track of the record and closer to the album is seperated in three parts, which belong together in musical and lyrical aspect. The only song on here, which was written by John Myung is about spending life in New York City, with all it's dark sides and lightful. The whole band works very well together on here, they play the ball to each other and any single one brings a perfect work on this. All five musicians end the record in one greatful final, even it's more a solid lengthy track by Dream Theater than an really outstanding. (Track rating: 8.5/10 points) All in all is left to say, that "Falling Into Infinity" was DTs least acclaimed record to date, but they once more did a great job, because they didn't repeated themselves. The record got it's best moments, when John Petrucci brings on his strong solo parts, the band jams together in great complexer parts and in the quieter moments. The production on here is a step backwards from the powerful sound of the both previous studio records, but this release is better, than some fans and press say it is. Recommended to fans of 80's Rush and people, who just want great music in their collection, even it's not highly acclaimed. Record rating: 8 + 7.5 + 9.5 + 8 + 7 + 9 + 9 + 8 + 7.5 + 8.5 + 8.5 = 90.5 / 11 tracks = 8.227272727 points = 8/10 points = 4/5 stars Excellent addition to any prog music collection. Edited by Easy Livin |
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: February 21 2004 Location: Scotland Status: Offline Points: 15585 |
Posted: September 24 2005 at 11:16 | |||
We are of similar taste Salmacis, aren't we! Thanks for the feedback though!
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salmacis
Forum Senior Member Content Addition Joined: April 10 2005 Status: Offline Points: 3928 |
Posted: September 24 2005 at 09:40 | |||
Yes, I'd like to read your reviews of the Uriah Heep albums, Trotsky- I always find your reviews very interesting. My other favourite reviews are always by Bob McBeath- apart from 'Soft Machine Third', 'Yeti' by Amon Duul II and 'First Utterance' by Comus, which are admittedly an acquired taste, I agree with pretty much all of them. The review of Nektar's 'Recycled' was particularly excellent, I felt. |
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Starette
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 14 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 502 |
Posted: September 24 2005 at 07:29 | |||
hehe- good point that. You summed-up my LIFE by saying 'So much music- so litttle time.' So little.......TIME!...Gah...the pain it causes me ....to NOT BE ABLE...to review...alll the albums I love so much.....its too much for me!!! (ok ok- I'm overreacting but that's what I'm thinking half-the-time at the moment.) I seriously have a stack of albums on my stereo waiting to be reviewed. But I have to tackle Uni work first and it's painful letting the albums just sit there- i tell you.
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50 tonne angel falls to the earth...
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Trotsky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 25 2004 Location: Malaysia Status: Offline Points: 2771 |
Posted: September 23 2005 at 02:50 | |||
Thanks, Starette ... Actually when I came on board I made a conscious effort not to spend too much time reviewing the bands with a lot of exposure ... which is kind of wierd because I have the vast majority of albums by Yes, Genesis, Rush, King Crimson, ELP, Pink Floyd, Gentle Giant and Jethro Tull and they are among my favourite prog bands ... so while making references to them, I haven't reviewed any of their albums yet ... Also now there are some other "not wholly prog" bands like Traffic, Uriah Heep, Queen and Deep Purple on the site ... I have every studio album by all four bands ... but I haven't got around to doing them either ... So much music ... so little time ... and can you imagine if my reviews were as in depth as yours or Rob The Good's ... |
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present." |
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Starette
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 14 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 502 |
Posted: September 23 2005 at 02:07 | |||
Trotsky- your've done a LOT of reviews and I read some: they're pretty awesome! But you havn't done early Genesis yet? Here's another one by this random Rob-the-good guy: http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=41672 Grrr- I wish I had that much knowledge of the band's previous works and what the lives of their members were like: see how he writes as if he knew the band personally? AND he reviews each song separately, therefore analysing the whole album *properly*. THAT is what I admire. This man should be made a collaborator- no doubt about it. |
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50 tonne angel falls to the earth...
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Trotsky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 25 2004 Location: Malaysia Status: Offline Points: 2771 |
Posted: September 21 2005 at 02:09 | |||
Love this review SOFT MACHINE Volume Two — One of about half dozen albums in my lifetime, first heard being played on a record shop's speakers and I had to have it - (btw that was Musicland In Kingston, who had stock of the US import many weeks before the album's UK release date in the 60's).
This wasn't quite like what I had ever heard before. This was new: especially rock music being putted together and played like I had never heard before. Side one is really one track, despite the sub-titles offered on the sleeve notes: a long song which keeps changing tempo and modes and ideas (and these at first seemed quite whacky). This sounded to me to be cutting edge rock - yet tempered by jazz, illuminating in my mind what I had only read in magazine reviewing the performances of the more avante gard bands of the British psychedelic underground. I could just about cope with the jazz (I had heard the likes of Mike Westbrook and a few of the other young British jazzers) but it wasn't the lacklustre trad heard too often on radio (or the modern jazz of Brubeck), this was something particularly British. And then there was that vocalist: what a strange voice, what were those freaky lyrics - subsequently John Peel called it 'the school of anti-song', and within the last few months saxophonist Theo Travis called it one of the rare examples of 'jazz vocal with a British accent'. Both definitions after 35 years of listening to Robert Wyatt as a vocalist, hitting close to the centre of the target. It took a Saturday afternoon to crack those lyrics with the daft opening featuring the British alphabet and then sung in reverse order about 4 minutes later (note: Y is heard in LH channel while the rest of the alphabet in the RH stereo channel - watch-out for those throw away jokes). Through the longer, complex instrumental breaks Wyatt comes back, here singing about the joys of being a British hippy, then something in Spanish lost in the mix and finally coming back to thank Noel Mitch & Jim for 'our exposure to the crowd' before thanking Mike (Ratledge or manager Jeffreys?, is the current debate) for ???? (well this is being debated as well). Then the coda and a free jazz ending. Amazing stuff and only half way through. Side 2 has a change of mood although it gets even more jazzy. That is apart from 'Dedicated To You But You Weren't listening', (the most covered Machine song???). A song written by Hugh Hopper, sung by Wyatt to an acoustic guitar, with its metaphysical lyrics (how many songs include lines like: "Famous Parabolic Version" or "Give Me The Cure, Give Me The Cure, Give Me The Cure, Help me".......?), a beautifully weird song that haunts. Then the band are back down to business with just over 10 minutes of avante rock (or avante jazz ??) instrumentals - and a great potted drum solo from Wyatt. And the rest of the band/ Ratledge - frightening, complex, accomplished on keys - nobody sounding like this before not even Keith Emerson, who then would have been the immediate comparison, (in passing: how can anybody omit Ratledge from a keyboard poll- suggests limited musical horizons). And Hugh Hopper, replacing Kevin Ayers on bass, providing Machine with a very different sound, low in the bottom and muddy with a fuzz effect that filled the space that a three piece group might leave in their wake. Hey apart from the 3 minutes of "Dedicated", there is no guitar................ however, the saxophone does duties in support c/o Hugh's brother Brian. This is a seminal British album,THE precursor to British jazz rock, the half way house between psychedelia (of 'Soft Machine') and jazz rock fusion ('Third' and after). But also an album that also has large chunks of recognisable straight prog rock. This especially comes home to you when you hear Soft Machine's 'Live At Paradiso' - recorded 2 weeks after they finished 'Volume 2'. In Amsterdam, Soft Machine as a three piece lacked the jazz sax, and with a considerable shuffle around of tune order, the music of 'Volume 2' sounds less jazz-based. Instead the progressive rock elements are more obvious - perhaps allowing direct parallels to be drawn with The Nice. In summary a great timeless album but one that is far from safe. |
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present." |
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Starette
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 14 2005 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 502 |
Posted: September 20 2005 at 19:29 | |||
Well you can't get *much* more professional than this: http://www.progarchives.com/Review.asp?id=45010 Who is this Rob-the-Good guy? I'd do ANYTHING to get up to his reviewing-standard! |
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50 tonne angel falls to the earth...
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Jared
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 06 2005 Location: Hereford, UK Status: Online Points: 19293 |
Posted: September 07 2005 at 17:57 | |||
^^^probably not, but it's about as much a review as many of them are, which slip through the net...it wouldn't convince me of the albums merits if I was undecided...put it that way!
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Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
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tuxon
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 21 2004 Location: plugged-in Status: Offline Points: 5502 |
Posted: September 07 2005 at 17:33 | |||
is it a review than? |
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I'm always almost unlucky _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Id5ZcnjXSZaSMFMC Id5LM2q2jfqz3YxT
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Jared
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 06 2005 Location: Hereford, UK Status: Online Points: 19293 |
Posted: September 07 2005 at 17:26 | |||
GENESIS - Abacab (1981)
Review (Permanent link) by Dima Panoff @ 7:14:59 AM EST, 9/7/2005 — I can't understand so much negative noise about it! 1) as for me, i'm also a 'prog-encyclopedia', etc; and i like gabriel's period more than collins's one. And i like all the progressive arena of the 70-s (incl. Classical names, all these close to edges', canterbury, rio, free-jazz, and so on, and so on) much more than the 80-s - with their punk/new wave phase, etc.
But speaking about 'abacab" release - what's wrong with it? Very fresh sound, tasty material (to be compared to 'duke', for instance) - and nothing in common with all the rest groups of the time. Forget about gabriel, forget about 20-min epics by 'yes-crimson-vdgg- zappa..." - it's 1981!!! And it's really interesting, crazy and fresh!!! And no cliches here! ^^To be honest, I saw this one earlier on, and couldn't believe that Abacab would ever receive a 5 star review, but fair play to him if he's convinced its a masterpiece!
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Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: February 21 2004 Location: Scotland Status: Offline Points: 15585 |
Posted: September 07 2005 at 14:25 | |||
I've edited this one back now to focus on the album, but I thought I'd post the full text here for posterity! It will surely bring back fond memories for anyone who grew up singing "I am a Pizza". GENESIS We Can't Dance — Well, as I type this review, I am listening to Abba's Greatest Hits Vol. 2. I know what you're thinking: since when are Abba prog? Well, for one thing, Abba played an important role in why I give this much-hated album by the three-man line-up of Genesis the five-star rating. The legend says "a masterpiece of Progressive Rock," thus the rating may be unjustified, but this album holds an important place for me. It was, in fact, the start of my Genesis fandom! I hadn't yet heard Selling England By The Pound, but I was in for a surprise when I eventually did, because it sounded nothing like this album. The story begins back in the early 1990's...
When I was in kindergarten or grade 1 (I can't remember which), my dad and I were driving around town and the ultra-cool song "I Can't Dance" (with its childlike chorus, its pulsating rhythms and its surf-flavored keyboards) came on the good old FM radio in our car. My dad told me this song was by Genesis, a group led by Phil Collins. Being five, six or seven at the time, I had no idea who Genesis were. I only did know Phil Collins was a singer and the only thing I ever heard from him was just A FEW notes of No Jacket Required. But I did enjoy the song nonetheless (and what 5-to-7-year-old wouldn't?). In grade school, the teachers would make us sing along with the usual children's songs like Raffi's "Baby Beluga" or Charlotte Diamond's "Four Hugs A Day" or "I Am A Pizza," and did I enjoy those songs immensely (and what kindergarten or grade 1 to 3 wouldn't?). Well, when I got the fourth grade, and heard "Hells Bells" (the opening track on AC/DC's Back In Black), my love of music had a dramatic change. Hearing the ominous bells (hence the title), the riproaring guitars, the threatening lyrics, and especially Angus Young's gut-wrenching guitar solo, I suddenly felt like I was filled with power, filled with fire and filled with the hatred of anything that only a sissy would like. This thought was confirmed when I got a copy of Nevermind by Nirvana (the one with the baby on the cover) and absolutely ROCKED to "Smells Like Teen Spirit." I knew right there and then that I would never listen to any Raffi again, because I knew that I felt not only too old for that, but that Raffi could beaten in a fight anyday by Bon Scott, Angus Young or Kurt Cobain! In grade 4, the music I LOVED to listen to was HARD ROCK, ALTERNATIVE ROCK and HEAVY METAL! In the summer of 1996, I took a trip to Kamloops and found some more great CDs in the collection of my older cousins. I made some tapes of them and listened to them during a road trip to Lethbridge. The only I really loved the most was the 1989 eponymous debut album by Skid Row (you know, the group with Sebastian Bach). I just couldn't get enough of the slashing guitar or Sebastian Bach's ear-splitting scream. Man, I never tired of "18 And Life," "Youth Gone Wild" or "I Remember You." When I returned home, I saw an old advertisement of their sophomore album Slave To The Grind. Since I was enjoying the first album so much, I thought it would be so cool not to just own that album, but own a Japanese copy of it. So that same summer, I composed to a letter to one of our friends in Japan, and knowing how much she liked me, I knew she wouldn't mind the slightest to buy me the CD (I did repay her eventually, so stop looking!). The CD arrived the following month just as I had requested. Along with the package came an envelope from Columbia House (yep, I was a member at that time!). I opened the Columbia House envelope first and looked at their latest catalogue. My mom was very strict on the music I listened to, mainly the lyrical subject matter. I noticed the Slave To The Grind CD was given their equivalent of a "parental advisory" warning in the thing. I had no idea about the lyrics being explicit (they sounded fine on the first album), so I thought, "Oh, they can't be that bad!" So I opened the CD and gazed at the lyrics. Well, I noticed one track on the CD was titled "Get The F*ck Out." One look at the title and you can probably guess what was in store in that track. The lyrics pictured a man who was telling an innocent woman with a "double D" and "40-foot do" to get lost otherwise he'd "beat [her] to a pulp" or kill himself and have his corpse inside her bed. My parents eventually found out about this and eventually it turned into a battle. No matter how much I kicked and screamed and cried, they wouldn't let me keep it (and I tried to every way to reason with them saying I wouldn't even listen to the track!). (Mind you, if we had bought that CD as a domestic one at any retail outlet in the Vancouver area, I would have happilly gotten rid of it, but since it was a Japanese import---and I wasn't as serious a collector at the time---I found it too painful to get rid of.) In November, we eventually settled and I agreed to trade the CD. At the store we went to, I remembered the pulsating "I Can't Dance" and when I saw a copy of We Can't Dance on the shelf, I knew right away I would get that CD. We only got two dollars of credit for the Skid Row CD since nobody buys them anymore, but I had enough for the CD. When I got it home, I bought it mainly for that old radio hit. But instead, what I got was one of the most aweing listens ever. (Normally, I write more detailed reviews on the album itself, but since I have a story to tell, I'll just describe the tracks in brief). "No Son Of Mine" had some great drum machine and shimmering keyboards; "Jesus He Knows Me" was a good energic track that mocked televangelists; "Driving The Last Spike" was a pretty 10-minute track describing the construction of England's railroad system (a track like that could have never appeared on a Phil Collins solo album); "Never A Time" was a touching, almost cathartic track; "Dreaming While You Sleep" was a moving, enigmatic track; "Tell Me Why" was a very bouncy British pop- sounding number; "Living Forever" had the best keyboard solo on the entire album (kudos to you, Tony!); "Hold On My Heart" was a slow promising track with some great guitar fills in which Mike Rutherford sounds like Carlos Santana; "Way Of The World" was a gorgeous, aural track with a great chorus; "Since I Lost You" (written for Eric Clapton's late son) was a slow, sad track with a good guitar solo; "Fading Lights" was a perfect 10-minute album closer in which all the members try to show off their musical skills before wrapping it up forever (this was Phil Collins's last hurrah with Genesis - he quit five years later). Needless to say, I felt I was sucked into another dimension and almost totally abandoned hard rock and heavy metal all together (but I still love Back In Black and Nevermind). Soon, I started bringing in Genesis albums by the numbers and enjoying almost of them, whether they were telling stories on "Foxtrot" or saying a tearful goodbye on "Invisible Touch." But wait - THERE'S MORE! Later that year, I discovered Abba! (I first heard them while staying with some relatives in August 1994). But I didn't think they were that good until I saw four albums and actually listened to one of them. I'll never forget rocking to "S.O.S." I knew there that Abba would be next greatest musical discovery. In fact, to make up the Skid Row CD, some friends of ours who went to Japan got me a Japanese copy of the Abba Gold: Greatest Hits CD. And when I listened to it, that evening and I fell for Abba and never looked back! In fact, "Thank You For The Music" is playing on my headphones right now and I know that Abba will live forever in my musical mind. So that's the story for all you readers. It was this album that made me a Genesis fan forever (in fact, not counting the first, last or live albums, I think my least favorite Genesis album is "Trespass") and I still enjoy the early albums with Peter Gabriel. To this day I refuse to ever buy another Skid Row CD, but just think: if my parents had let me keep that Japanese Skid Row CD, it's not likely I would ever become a fan of Genesis or Abba! Sometimes changes can be for the good. (Note: I respect everyone's opinions on this site, so I won't diss any of you anti-WCD people. I just wish, however, Genesis didn't make Calling All Stations.) |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: August 04 2005 at 07:46 | |||
This review of Drama has just been posted - "It is produce an exact, well-made progressive・rock album. The methodology to which the thickness and the depth are put out by unisons of two or more musical instruments developed with the element and the following ASIA that starts becoming YES causes vocal etc. and the gap of Horn without Ka like Anderson, and the heard part is abundant in the album of ASIA. It is likely to be enumerated in the tune with the strongest the sense though "Into the Lens" etc. are the masterpieces. " Couldn't have put it better myself! Except - who is Ka? |
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Easy Livin
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: February 21 2004 Location: Scotland Status: Offline Points: 15585 |
Posted: August 01 2005 at 15:48 | |||
An of course, we're renowned for our healthy eating. Deep fried Mars bar anyone? |
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 23 2005 Location: Caerdydd Status: Offline Points: 32995 |
Posted: August 01 2005 at 15:17 | |||
I don't know, you Scots seem to have a canny knack for hanging on to life! I mean, you won't let anything go will you? |
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