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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: August 25 2008 at 12:47 |
Review 67 (really), Peter Gabriel (1),
Peter Gabriel, 1976
Peter Gabriel's solo career seems, from
the range of stuff I've heard so far, to be the ultimate musical
chameleon. Even the classic prog giants don't cover quite as much
ground musically as I've heard from Gabriel, and I haven't actually
heard all that much of him yet. This album, too, is musically very
diverse, with subtle and obvious eclecticism pervading most of it.
Despite the wide range of styles covered, I feel that Peter Gabriel
(1 of 4) is a very successful album most of the time, and never slips
so badly it causes a lot of annoyance. Down The Dolce Vita is, in my
humble opinion, one of the finest pieces of (rock) music ever
recorded, and the quality of the rest is hardly shabby either. Great
stuff.
The highly eclectic Moribund The
Burgermeister is a superb opener. Compelling quiet rhythm section
work is supplemented with both Fripp guitar wailing and droning,
water-drop effects and bursts of more standard strutting from guitar
and synths. Gabriel's vocals acquit themselves brilliantly, with
harmonies, the menacing 'I will find out' and some sarcastically used
accents particularly standing out as both unusual and excellent.
Lyrically, the song meddles in both entertaining and more serious
ideas, without being too fixed to lose the mystery.
Solsbury Hill, probably Gabriel's
second-most-known piece, is also fairly distinctive. Aside from the
superb vocal (self-harmonising, if I'm not mistaken, with two
different sounds that give a slight edge) and lyrical content, the
upbeat banjo stands out. Tony Levin's jabbing and whumphing bass
rhythm is quite compelling. As much as I feel the keyboard riff is a
bit obnoxious, it does add some more options and layers to the music.
However, the song really breaks out during the little mini-explosions
on drums at the end of each verse and finally on the ending
instrumental section, with a belting guitar and fun jabbering from
Gabriel to boot.
The rocker, Modern Love, is a bit more
conventional than the first two songs, but nonetheless very strong,
with superb and fascinating swirly bass-work from Levin, the classic
70s high hammond chord, Andy 's drumming matches these with little
crashes supplemented with tin-pot sounds and a solid beat. Gabriel is
again a stand-out vocalist, albeit sounding virtually nothing like
himself, much grainier than usual, and his innuendo-wrapped lyrics
are at the same time amusing and quite compelling. The guitar chords
are immaculate, even if a little upstaged by Levin.
The hilarious barber-shop quartet
followed by unusual song that is Excuse Me also works in its own way,
with a neat tuba provided by Levin, great vocals and fairly nice
lyrics, solos and little melodies added by all things involved,
including one particularly fine guitar burst and a weird little synth
tone that sounds a bit piano-meets-tympani.
Humdrum is far more subdued, with a
soulful vocal and sustained, soft piano contributing the opening
verse, before a gorgeous recorder-guitar dominated break and a
reiteration of the opening section with more contributions. A second,
extremely pretty section features a gorgeous acoustic guitar part and
lush keyboard parts. Not as memorable as the rest of the album,
perhaps, but nonetheless I enjoy it every time
Slowburn is the second heavily
rock-based piece of the album, and it too is very strong, with a
completely different, but no less fascinating, bass part. Amusing
'aaa's punctuate some of the vocal sections, and the synths and
programming are brilliant. The drumming and guitars are plain rock
awesomeness, and the softer sections don't at all break the flow of
the piece, but rather add slightly more emphasis to it. An odd
soundscape thing with all sorts of synth ideas and glockenspiel leads
down to the end.
Waiting For The Big One is a rather
laid back song, with wonderful piano crawls, a light and cheery
vocal, little guitar additions are the order of the day, and the
rather larger guitar strut with large harmony feels a little out of
place in the piece. Gabriel's vocal is, as always, tailored to the
piece, with good range and sound, and a rather neat bluesy solo
punctuates the middle.
The amazing Down The Dolce Vita is
almost definitely one of my top twenty songs. Aside from the superb
merge of the LSO with the rock band and utterly compelling rhythm
guitar riff, Gabriel's vocal is again a stunner, with constant and
effective flourishes, stark edges and amazing lyrics (“'So long',
said four men to their families/be strong, 'til we get back home”.
Levin's bass jumps up at the high end, adding these little throbs of
energy in between his more standard backing. The drums and percussion
are forceful and have a great roll, and the orchestral jabs on the
concluding verse. A final stark flute-based conclusion segues
straight into Here Comes The Flood. This song alone would justify the
album's price for me.
Here Comes The Flood is an amazingly
emotional piece, with jaw-dropping vocals and lyrics ('stranded
starfish have no place to hide') complimenting the soft piano,
acoustics and backing organ, as well as the hollow percussion sound.
The heavily harmonised chorus is effective and potent, as is the
roaring guitar solo, and the piece gradually builds to its climax
without losing any of its essence. The conclusion, I feel, is
slightly too insubstantial, but that is the only gripe I have with
the piece.
So, overall, a wonderfully diverse
range of goodies here, and while it doesn't quite hit the masterpiece
mark for me, it comes very close. Vital and enjoyable listening, and so far
detached from Genesis that I don't think your opinion of one will
have any bearing on your opinion of the other. Highly recommended. I look forward to hearing more of Gabriel's solo material soon.
Rating: Four Stars Favourite
Track: Down The Dolce Vita --- Usual bunch of welcoming criticism and comments stuff. Will have more questions once I've heard 2, 3 and 4 for myself.
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LinusW
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 27 2007
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 10665
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Posted: August 25 2008 at 12:50 |
Looks like I have to open up my wallet here...
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: August 25 2008 at 18:24 |
tswrtht
Off for Duke of Edinburgh expedition. Hope to return in one piece. If you see an unwashed late teenage figure with a pretentious proto-mustache and hair vaguely like 70s Jon Anderson next week, please don't throw stones at him, he means well.
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LinusW
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: September 27 2007
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 10665
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Posted: August 25 2008 at 18:54 |
TGM: Orb wrote:
pretentious proto-mustache
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Truly epic.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: August 31 2008 at 13:08 |
The Least We Can Do Is Wave To Each
Other, Van Der Graaf Generator, 1970
The Least We Can Do... comes a
little before the thoroughly incredible H To He, Who Am The Only
One, and is a good and fairly
interesting album. However, though Van Der Graaf Generator would
probably be my joint favourite band, I can't say that this compares
very favourably with the following four masterpieces they were to
release. Hammill's vocals are consistent and excellent, but certainly
don't have the experimental and quirky edge which instantly drew me
into the group's work. Equally, the instrumental and lyrical content
is all quite strong with a number of high points, but still overall
feels a bit vulnerable in comparison with the following albums.
I'd
say that the two soft songs, Refugees and Out Of My Book, are a bit
more successful than the aggressive and grandiose choices, and the
album as a whole is fairly consistently solid, but the soul-tearing
moments of instrumental fury are missing in a few places. Lastly, I
actually dislike White Hammer's vocal section. Essentially a good
album, with its own individual feel and merits, but more of an album
for the band's fans than one I'd consider a general milestone of
progressive rock.
The
bleak Darkness 11/11, the lyrical opposite of Rush's Freewill
(brilliantly phrased, denying the possession of Freewill and from a
first person viewpoint) opens the album with incredible force, wind
sound effects; neat basslines and piano pervade the piece. Jaxon's
superb twinning of the electric sax and acoustic sax, comes to the
forefront in the instrumental sections, and Bantom's organ and Evans,
though not often coming to the forefront, are extremely effective
when they do.
The
gorgeous Refugees is an incredibly human and connective song about,
essentially, leaving a way of life behind. Lush cellos and flute hold
up the piece's substance, while Hammill's extremely high and clear
vocals convey the remorseful lyrics ('we're refugees, walking away
from the life we've known and loved/nothing to do nor say, nowhere to
stay, now we are alone'). Throughout the piece, the vocals are
changing, moving to a lower range, and being supplemented by
substantial backing harmonies, and with them moves the music,
incorporating superb percussion and piano (this time from Hammill). A
truly beautiful song, with a lovely organ/flute ending.
White
Hammer is the only Van Der Graaf Generator song I've so far heard
that I actually dislike. Not only are the lyrics a bit of a mess, and
lacking in impact, but the delivery is equally a little flat. The
force just doesn't reach me. Admittedly, a range of vocals are used,
from grandiose to aggressive to a more intimate tone, but they don't
really work for me. There are a few positives to be had in the
musical content, Hugh Bantom's organ rocks appropriately, if a tad
repetitively, in between its more reflective tones, while Nic
Potter's bass is enjoyably mobile and energetic. The rather light
cornet from Gerry Salisbury works quite well in providing a dated
feel.
However,
the real merit of the piece is the very, very strong instrumental
conclusion that follows the rather weak vocal section. The organ
takes on a force of its own, as do the saxophone wails. This gritty
terror evoked by Jaxon and Bantom and potent elephantine percussion
lead the song to its conclusion.
Whatever
Would Robert Have Said is probably my favourite of the album's darker
and heavier pieces, with gritty guitar from Nic Potter complimenting
Hammill's frantic vocals, the underpinning acoustics, and organ
throbs, as well as a superb set of lyrics ('I am the peace you're
searching for, but you know you'll never find/ I am the pain you
can't endure, but which tingles in your mind'). All the performances
are top notch, with David Jackson's soft sax complimenting the
Frippish guitar wails suprisingly well. A real force and atmosphere
is continued throughout.
Out Of
My Book is the album's second soft piece, with a rather more acoustic
focus, and odd flutes and complimentary organs backing up the vocal
changes. Guy Evans percussion is highly impressive here, adding in a
few touches without intruding greatly, and Nic Potter's bass again is
strong, adding an almost-plucked counterpart to the acoustics. The
lyrics and vocals are sublime, and the piece overall is a complete
success.
After
The Flood is an awkward piece to review. Long and certainly
grandiose, with a fierce set of sax riffs and organ additions, and
enough neat additions from acoustics and all sorts of bizarre sounds
to hold up the instrumental side (which includes a rather amusing
Mission-Impossible-reminiscent-section). It is unfortunate that the
highly repeated 'The water rushes over all...' and 'and when the
water falls again...' are nothing more than grandiose. The delivery
just isn't personal enough for my liking. Still, Evans is on top
form, and there's plenty to enjoy, especially the 'And then he said:
(Einstein quote here)' section. It just doesn't quite satisfy me
constantly, which is a bit of a shame as an ending piece.
The
two bonus pieces, a neat aggressive acoustic-led piece called Boat Of
Millions Of Years, and a single cut of Refugees (substantially
different from the album version, so still a worthy conclusion), are
both strong and interesting. The former is strong on all counts, and
fits in with the album's feel.
So, if, like me, you're a fan
of Van Der Graaf Generator, this should definitely follow the four
big albums, and should have more than enough good material to keep
you satisfied, even if it's no match for the following four. If not,
the soft pieces do need to be heard, but I can't imagine the album as
a whole doing a lot for you. Characteristically dark, frenetic,
multi-faceted and solid. Three stars.
Rating:
Three Stars Favourite
Track: Refugees --- OK, feet have stopped bleeding, blisters on shoulders and hips mostly recovered, hatred of Yorkshire hill-top plants and unchartered moors slowing ebbing away. Can review again.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: September 02 2008 at 07:20 |
Review 69, Script For A Jester's Tear,
Marillion, 1983
Script For A Jester's Tear is a hard
one for me to review. Several aborted efforts have ended in deletion.
The reason for this is that it is an album which is extremely
consistent in both its strengths and weaknesses, and the number of
both of these makes it sort of challenging to write about without
feeling like the review's becoming a list. Still, I'll try.
Clearly there are a lot of musical
ideas in the constantly changing pieces; we get touches of
psychedelia, symphonic moments, quirky light jaunts, an arena-rock
solo and even a tad of blues. All of the members (except Pointer)
seem fairly involved and capable, though not individually massively
distinctive. The lyrics are pretty solid, depressive and
entertaining, and the general accusations of sounding too much like
Genesis... well, I don't really see it.
The negatives really come from the
execution of some of these ideas. Various sound effects similar to
those on The Wall often feel like forced insertions, especially
damaging to Chelsea Monday, and they are a bit too frequent for my
liking. Mick Pointer, as often mentioned, does not do the world's
most sterling job here, but I honestly think that he isn't that
much of a hindrance to the band's ideas. Complex and distinctive drum
parts aren't there, but they aren't really called for. Finally, the
trite Garden Party doesn't really seem to fit the album's mood for
me, and I think that the weaknesses simply make the overall album
less of a pleasure to listen to. Overall, the album's still pretty
strong, but its charm was, for me, too soon worn away by the
weaknesses.
The
title track has pretty much all of the strengths, and very little of
the weaknesses, with the soft 'Here I am once more... in the
playground of the broken hearts' executed brilliantly by Fish. His
vocals and the lyrics throughout are to match, and the band supports
neatly and provides new contexts for it. The fact that the same line
is executed again with a virtual roar and not feeling at all out of
place alone makes for pretty good listening. Mark Kelly's keys
control a lot of the tempo changes and ideas, while Rothery's superb
rocking solos add force, and the rhythm section, especially Trewavas
do manage to escape monotony and make their own contribution. The
psychedelic ideas are equally at their most successful, with repeated
words and whispered overdubs intensifying the atmosphere. The song's
a sample on PA at the moment. Have a listen for yourself, and enjoy.
A brilliant
opener, and not to be missed. The ambiguity of He Knows You
Know extends beyond the title, with spat-out words, great lines like
'Light switch. Yellow fever. Crawling up your bathroom wall/Singing
psychedelic praises to the depths of the china bowl', and the
psychedelic ideas and repeats fit in solidly. Pete Trewavas
especially seems to be on top form, with great aggressive bass-work.
The keys fit in over the top, adding a couple of riffs and chords
over which Rothery's guitar can characteristically explode all over
the place as well as adding a couple of subtle edges to vocal lines.
The fairly random tack-on of the maddened phone call at the end is
admittedly nice in the context of leading up to The Web, but feels a
little off in ending He Knows You Know. Still, I do enjoy it a lot.
The
Web begins with a series of very aggressive, almost big-band on
guitar-and-drums, stabs, before Fish joins in to provide a rather
excellent set of vocals, both featuring some extended bits of vocal
phrasing which are quite interesting, as well as the more normal
lines. His own aggressive confusion (something that so few vocalists
can handle well) is supplemented by harmonies and low key effects.
The musical side is initially little more disjointed than the
previous couple of pieces, occasionally feeling like a bit of a crib
for his vocals, though it pulls together very well later on. The
swelling and whirling keys are a highlight of the piece, and, though
Pointer is a bit more of a drawback here than on the previous couple,
the playing is otherwise top notch. Not quite sure what it is about
Rothery's almost cut-off, yet extremely full, guitar tone that gets
me every time, but it does. Unfortunately, the ending seems a little
vulnerable in comparison to the rest of the song, with a rather
uninteresting set of riffs crossed with irritating synth tones,
though there are still a few points to commend in there. Overall,
however, the piece is another success.
Garden
Party is a bit of a disappointment following these pieces, with the
voices on the opening feeling a little too unnatural to me, and the
repeated jumpy bass-and-drums riff being present for far too much of
the long and rather sarcy piece. A few of the effects do work well,
as do some of the keyboard choices. Fish letting his hair down with
the lyrics and vocals is a partial success, with a couple of amusing
moments (particularly the Chaucer rambling and a rather fed up 'Oh
god, not again'). Only of a few of the ideas really fail, most
notably the repeat of 'flash', but the piece overall simply doesn't
feel very satisfying to me.
Chelsea
Monday contains the worst of the special-effects barrages, with
idiotic paper/news announcements and supposedly Cockney or Australian
(I can't work out which) conversations with needless line repeats. A
couple of less driven-into-the-ground effects supplement Fish's
vocal, but without the precision that characterises some of the
earlier choices. Pointer's percussion, also, doesn't add a lot,
feeling needlessly shouty. However, I absolutely love some of the
other components of the song. Trewavas' superb bass line, Rothery's
wails and Fish's high, slightly more like Peter Gabriel than usual,
vocals are thoroughly enjoyable. The emotional Gilmour-esque guitar
soloing rips through the headphones the first couple of times, and
the acoustics and keyboard touches add a bit more survivability to a
song that desperately needs it. This was my favourite piece from the
album on the first listen, but the cringeworthy effects uses
seriously damage it for me now. Shows off the Floyd influence, but
not in a heavily positive way.
Forgotten
Sons, thankfully, is a much more rewarding experience, with a range
of kicking riffs from all quarters (especially the mock blues/hard
rock one from Rothery), and a serious range of emotions and ideas,
including a rather more biting and impressive sarcastic opening
becoming gradually a bit more serious and without losing the satire.
Heck, even Pointer sounds good on this one. Fish's vocals are
powerful and biting, and with lines like 'You're just another coffin,
on its way down the emerald isle' and his mock prayer, the lyrics
match. Psychedelic edges and wails jump out at all points and add a
lot of fun. A keyboard solo section is brilliantly handled by Kelly,
and the general atmosphere is tremendous. Hearing the 'halt, who goes
there?' line gives me shivers every time, and I'm quite impressed
that somehow the range of ideas is stunningly summed up in an ending,
complete with a choral mellotron and Fish at his most Gabriel-esque,
perhaps the only things which remind me bluntly of Genesis in the
whole album. A great conclusion.
So,
strengths everywhere, but some really, really annoying weaknesses
around the middle and not enough consistency in the fascination.
Don't get me wrong, it is a good album with some very good tracks,
and I can understand why it's so well-regarded, but I still get that
painful twinge in anticipation of Chelsea Monday's 'she had a smile
on her face' every time I go to connect the CD with the CD player.
Should be a definite purchase if you're a bit fonder of The Wall than
I am. Perhaps the only people I wouldn't really recommend it to are
those who are really picky about drummers. Enjoyable, and it nets
three stars from me.
Rating:
Three Stars Favourite
Track: Script For A Jester's Tear ---- Well, first review as a reviewer. Don't think I did too badly on it, but welcome to all views. Many thanks to those who've kept my interest in reviewing alive through general banter, encouragement, recommendations, discussion and writing their own.
It's a great honour to represent the site. I'll try to deserve it and I'm going to be editing a couple of ratings and reviews to match my current viewpoint and the quality I want to get them up to, so new reviews might slow for a week or two.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
Status: Offline
Points: 25210
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Posted: September 02 2008 at 07:55 |
Congratulations on the promotion Rob and many more fantastic reviews to come.
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kenmartree
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 14 2007
Location: oregon
Status: Offline
Points: 356
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Posted: September 02 2008 at 09:52 |
I hadn't heard the news about the promotion, congrats, you deserve it!
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: September 02 2008 at 11:20 |
OK. Final Listish
UK - UK Red Queen to Gryphon Three - Gryphon Turn Of The Cards - Renaissance In Spite Of Harry's Toenail/Lady Lake (Compilation) - Gnidrolog Pictures At An Exhibition - ELP Ahvak - Ahvak Peter Gabriel 3 - Peter Gabriel Nadir's Big Chance - Peter Hammill Chameleon In The Shadow Of The Night - Peter Hammill The Quiet Zone/The Pleasure Dome - VDG World Record - VDGG Soft Machine - Volumes 1 & 2 Phoenix - Asia Genesis Live - Genesis Even In The Quietest Moments - Supertramp Doomsday Afternoon - Phideaux Fear Of A Blank Planet - Porcupine Tree The Great Deceiver Vol. 1 - King Crimson A Live Record - Camel A Saucerful of Secrets - Pink Floyd Hunky Dory + The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust - David Bowie Mujician (vol. 1/2) - Keith Tippet Giant Steps - John Coltrane Still Got The Blues - Gary Moore Are You Experienced? - Hendrix Experience Led Zeppelin II Disraeli Gears - Cream Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - The Beatles Quadrophrenia - The Who Free Hand/Interview - Gentle Giant In Rock - Deep Purple (slightly cheaper than s/t) At The Filmore East - ABB Time Out - Brubeck Quartet Death Walks Behind You - Atomic Rooster Misplaced Childhood - Marillion Songs In The Key Of Life - Stevie Wonder The Thoughts Of Emerlistdavjack - The Nice
Italian stuff and Maneige will come separately, for all too obvious reasons. Wallet repairs, mainly. Believe that's 36 Albums, which should keep me happy for a while.
Oh, and, Warrior On The Edge Of Time or something - Hawkwind
Edited by TGM: Orb - September 02 2008 at 11:22
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: September 02 2008 at 15:51 |
Ordered with two or three small alterations (Sgt. Pepper's and Coltrane dropped, Leg End added). I think the Italian stuff will have to wait a while. Was not cheap, all in all, but hopefully will be rewarding.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: September 03 2008 at 13:25 |
OK. Some ratings changes made.
Also, with that last order, an Images And Words CD was included. Should be at least... fun to review.
Speaking of that, working on a review now.
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jimmy_row
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 11 2007
Location: Hibernation
Status: Offline
Points: 2601
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Posted: September 03 2008 at 13:45 |
sweet mother of ..children, Rob! Lots of good stuff in there, many I don't have yet; looking forward to the reviews.
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
Location: n/a
Status: Offline
Points: 8052
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Posted: September 03 2008 at 16:30 |
Review 70, Clutching At Straws,
Marillion, 1987
From the very promising Script For A
Jester's Tear, Marillion seem to have developed a bit for Clutching
At Straws (this reviewer doesn't yet have the intervening albums).
Though it's still essentially got the same feel to it, the playing
from all five members is much stronger than on the debut, and the
band cohesion is far tighter. Psychedelic touches appear to have been
ironed out and better incorporated, and a couple of guest vocal
additions and new styles or influences rear their heads.
The biggest distinction between the
albums, other than the general much-better-played, but
slightly-less-memorable Clutching At Straws, is the fact that the
latter feels sympathetic. There's none of the biting aggression of
Chelsea Monday or Garden Party, or even Forgotten Sons, simply this
overwhelming depression characterising the album. The lyrics are the
main factor behind this, slightly cleverer than those of Script, and
extremely well-written, but the musical atmosphere matches it. Solos
don't appear to be there for the sake of a solo, but to enhance a
point, and the much improved taste in the percussion parts does
especially give the sympathetic tone to the album.
The moody Hotel Hobbies opens the
album, with good performances all round, atmosphere contributed by
Rothery's relatively minimal playing and the extremely strong bass
part from Trewavas. Fish shows off a couple of Hammill-like vocal
phrasing flourishes and the band as a whole makes an extremely good
impression, showing off their solid use of dynamics and Rothery's
incredible impact as a soloist. It segues right into the more
accessible...
Warm Wet Circles, with more subdued
elements, featuring Fish very prominently, as well as a very good
performance from Mosley, while the remaining members provide some
textures as well as a couple of more controlling leads from Kelly's
piano and Rothery's biting guitar. A couple of almost-imperceptible
additions from guest vocalist Tessa Niles are more than welcome. Fish
is usually excellent, from the early Marillion pieces I've heard, but
here he excels himself in both the slightly nervous and yet assertive
tones of the album and a powerful 'she nervously undressed in the
dancing beams of the Fidra lighthouse'. An extremely good piece, all
in all, and the most rewarding of
That Time Of The Night is the first of
the album's pieces that are perfectly good, but don't make that much
of an impact. Fish's vocals and lyrics are fine, and his 'o-oh' has
an interesting rapid vibrato sound, but the band's parts don't really
seem much more than adequate to me. Mosley fits in a couple of
Peartesque rolls and Rothery adds a couple of extremely nice slippery
guitar whirls. Warm Wet Circles is brought back to mind pretty
bluntly. Tessa Niles again appears to be featured, though I'm not
sure, since the booklet is contradictory. Not bad at all, but not
inspirational either.
Going Under is a different sort of
piece, with a couple of acoustic guitar rhythms backed by some very
neatly handled (especially a flute effect) synths. Fish provides a
low key vocal with, again, strong lyrics. A nice idea, and well
executed.
Just For The Record is a more
rock-focused piece, re-using of one of the rhythms of Garden Party
(could be mishearing) a little, and featuring a range of little vocal
effects (whether whispers or little harmonies). Mark Kelly's keys and
the whirly supported electric guitars work nicely, as does the rhythm
section. The general development and inclusion/exclusion choices are
quite nicely done, and the dudu-dududu rhythm around 'When you say I
got a problem, that's a certainty' is particularly
brilliant.
Wuthering wind effects introduce us to the superb
White Russian, a schizoid trip through the narrator's mind and
thoughts of censorship, with brilliant demi-nonsensical lines and
roared lines from Fish, as well as little changes everywhere
throughout the song. Mosley gets to rock a bit more than previously,
and Trewavas' bass also gets its highlight in the soft middle
section. Rothery, a superb guitarist on the rest of the album,
especially shows up, with a range of brilliant guitar tones and some
truly shrieking solos. The lush choral mellotron makes its
appearance, among a range of other keyboard instruments. A
glockenspiel or something similar echoes the 'Where do we go from
here' melody to end the piece, stopping a note short on the last
repeat. A real highlight for me, with all the elements coming
together to make a great communal piece.
Incommunicado doesn't work so well for
me. Fairly fast playing on all fronts, and matching vocals. Kelly's
organs and synths, as well as Rothery's guitars continue a fairly
nice set of riffs throughout much of the piece, and Fish's rather
more hurried vocals are good, despite the irksome number of
'incommunicado' repeats. The issue, really, is not any of the
individual components. I like basically all of the parts, sans a
couple of small repeats crammed in, but I just don't enjoy the end
result much. Perhaps it's that the rather upbeat feel of the song
doesn't really mesh too nicely with the downbeat album, and the fade
isn't really welcome in an otherwise very neatly segued or concluded
album.
Torch Song is the second of the album's
purely slow pieces, with really unstrained vocals from Fish, a fairly
successful speech inclusion backed by some little guitar touches. As
usual, all the players are solid, and the small background keyboard
and guitar touches support the general rhythm. A piano solo fits in
quite nicely to segue to...
Slainte Mhath, a piece featuring a
Celtic rhythm with complete electric instrumentation and some
tentative keyboard-based imitations of a traditional flute, as well
as a much more traditional-styled vocal (complete with Scottish
accent) from Fish. This is very well crossed with the more strutting
and electrifying inclusions, and the general ideas are established
before they are combined. A very enjoyable piece, and a welcome
addition of diversity.
Sugar Mice is another slow one, with
soft rhythm guitar backing Fish's soulful and repentant vocals, and a
couple of small background touches pervading it. Rothery gets an
opportunity for a fairly standard extended solo, using a couple of
tones without overstressing it. A return to the softer theme of the
song concludes it nicely, preparing us for the real gem of the album.
The Last Straw is a simply brilliant
ending, with well-written lyrics, great vocals from Fish including
the savagely tense background calls, a solid multi-instrumental riff
or two, soft breaks with swirling synths and superb foreshadowing
from Rothery as well as a threatening rhythm section. And suddenly,
all the presence built up by Rothery explodes into one
soul-wrenching, energy-filled solo, further emphasised by Fish's
shouting vocals. An almost-mantric duet from Fish and Tessa Niles
with rolling backing from Kelly leads us out to the album's negative,
self-perpetuating ending.
So, all in all, a very good bunch with
two or three pieces that don't quite make as much impact as the
others, but generally very well written, consistently well played,
and noticeably (even for me, and I don't often notice production on
an album that much) superbly produced. Even if you're not an instant
convert to the Marillion/neo-prog fold, I'd still consider the album
a good choice, and if you don't enjoy The Last Straw, I don't know
what's wrong with you. A deserved four stars.
Rating: Four Stars Favourite Track: The Last Straw --- As always, thoughts and opinions very welcome. Going to write a piece about guitar foreshadowing at some point in the near future, as that is a real catch for me at the moment (I mean, Fripp on Lizard was listening to that the other day and that is just incredible preparation for an incredible solo).
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Queen By-Tor
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Posted: September 03 2008 at 16:34 |
Rob likes a Marillion album!? Good review as always - that's one I need to spin some more.
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TGM: Orb
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Posted: September 03 2008 at 16:41 |
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 21 2007
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Posted: September 05 2008 at 18:44 |
Review 71, Pawn Hearts, Van Der Graaf
Generator, 1971
If music is a form of expression, Pawn
Hearts is surely a masterpiece of music. The lyrical and musical
content fit together seamlessly, oozing depressive and mournful moods
into the listener's mind, and Hammill's vocal delivery only further
improves the intentionally convoluted lyrical ideas of the stunning A
Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers. Dissonant and furious tones, as well as
tender, hopeful melodies, hammer in the maddening disorganisation of
the world and light the all too distant beacons of the human mind.
Everything about this album is expression, getting across moods and
ideas. Clustered and claustrophobic production values add tension and
give a slightly maddened and busy tinge even in sections where the
music itself is sparse. The enormous studio experimentation and
daring also tear their way in to the listener's consciousness, giving
an element of unpredictability and anticipation to the three pieces
included.
Of course, such an album will not appeal to
everyone... it batters the human mind down rather than trying to
entice it, and just as swiftly it withdraws into its shell, dark and
nebulous... demanding real attention and involvement. However, if you
are ready for the journey, if you are entrapped by this bleak and
maddened atmosphere, there are few experiences quite as enjoyable and
intense. Enjoyment might not be the obvious word for the result of so
dark a piece, but it is the only word that really fits.
Lemmings, an apocalyptic psychological
and philosophical piece, has the feel of the inevitable. Hammill's
vocal creates uncertainty, fear and damning, sometimes mocking,
condemnation equally without any restraint, and his 'what course is
there left but to die... I really don't know' is indescribable in its
emotional grip. A set of brilliantly written lyrics convey a life
without real purpose, unable to simply happen, before giving the only
answer, the only way to go about life, to live in the hope of 'saving
the little ones', to seek the final meaning. Lyrically, it's
basically the Still Life album in 10 minutes. The music is equally
stunning, with jaunty acoustic parts creating a personal feel.
Keyboards, both organ and more effects-based things, take a very
prominent role in the more edgy schizophrenic sections, intertwining
with savagely distorted saxophone gratings and licks. Guy Evans'
percussion additions, leaving a lot of space for the leads, give a
continual sense of interest and of the smaller spaces. The ending is
derived from a drawn-out bit of negative atmosphere development,
which is in itself quite unusual, and suggests a sense of futility
and a lack of resolution. Masterful.
Man Erg is a contrast, in
some ways, but so similar in others. It is more concerned with a
philosophical question of free will, and Hammill's vocal, while no
less personal and touching, is more grand and decisive. Lyrically, it
is almost without equal ('I too live inside me/And very often don't
know who I am/I know... that I'm no hero/Well I hope, that I'm not
damned'. The compositional side has been a bit more fully approached,
I think, with some very clever echoing of the aa-aa aa-aa aa-aa
theme, a moving piano intro, and some of the overdubbing and sheer
mass of contents that will characterise the second side. Organ and
piano touches and melodies, sometimes attractive, other times utterly
visceral, sustain a background, while Jaxon's saxes and flutes add
dissonant disconnection and a soaring sense of positivity at separate
times. Had I really been told before really listening this piece that
a band could convey the uncertainty of free will, and a schizophrenic
mind, I would probably have been of the 'pull the other one'
persuasion, but Van Der Graaf Generator do manage it. And they manage
it brilliantly.
A Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers is only lightly
describable. This twenty minute suite, with an incredible density of
material in some places, but at others stripped down and almost
vacant, is daring in both instrumentation and sounds, using effects
constantly and effortlessly to give a mystical gravity to the piece.
It pulls in and drowns, and drags about the listener, demanding in
the snarling voice of Jaxon's sax or Evans' insistent and crashing
drumming, before leaving them to float in the ocean of reverent organ
thoughts, almost feeling like an intruder in a sacred ceremony.
Multi-part melodies and twists alternate with pure instrumental
atmosphere, each fulfilling its role and creating alternately
intimacy and distance.
Hammill's vocal in itself, lyrics
included, deserves a full five-star review. His tones of uncertainty,
aggression, demanding, bleakness, loss and demented hope are all
so... expressed. Unusual vocal touches are here, choices of where to
place the stress, developments in force, a willingness to sound
different as the song requires it. The way he sings 'would you cry,
if I died?' or 'alone, alone, the ghosts all call... pinpoint me in
the light/The only life I feel at all... is the presence of the
night' takes is loneliness embodied, the menace in 'no paraffin for
the flame/no harbour left... to gain' is palpable. The resignation of
'now I am the stranger I stay in/ah, well' or the hope of 'Oceans
drifting sideways/I am pulled into the spell/I feel you around me/I
know you well'. The vocals are just so expressive and connective. It
is incredible.
Just touching on the musical sections
briefly, the opening Eyewitness is one of the finest introductions
I've ever heard for a long piece, with bleak lyrics, distant, but
distinct (as opposed to blanketing mellotron or organ) keyboard
sounds give the isolated feel. SHM is menacing (and a play on HMS,
coincidentally), with fierce vocal delivery and a compelling
saxophone groove. Presence Of The Night/Kosmos Tours features some of
starkest atmosphere, with the modulation of density at its high point
and a particularly wowing performance from Hammill. (Custard's) Last
Stand took a while to grow on me, but it has done so, with an
attractive piano expressing a sort of hopeless dejection. The Clot
Thickens likewise was a grower, with Hammill making particularly
obvious use of vicious overdubs and a growling backing matching it.
Land's End (Sineline)/We Go Now is the cathartic release of the
piece, with an incredible solo that sounds like Fripp, but could be
Banton, and an uplifting points of light in the ocean of being (to
steal part of a phrase from Mr. Gabriel) image. All of the fear, all
of the tension, that has been built up to that point, are let out
inspirationally.
So... a masterpiece of progressive
rock, however reused that phrase is.
Onto the bonus
material: Theme One was a band instrumental cover of a piece
written by George Martin and features some nice playing, especially
from Banton, but doesn't really succeed the album's atmospheres, even
if it does rather suitably prepare us for an overall decent set of
bonus tracks. W is much more satisfactory, with strong vocals and
tinges of psychedelia, even if it's cut off a bit short. The
completely chaotic Angle Of Incidents is a delight to the ears every
time, with rolling playing from Evans dominating the piece,
supplemented by little growls or wisps of music from Jackson and
Banton. Ponker's Theme is a more typical and melodic saxophone
showcase, though it is enjoyable. Banton's Diminutions is another set
of dark textures, this time very keyboard-centric. All in all, a very
respectable set of bonuses, and the superb Angle of Incidents would
probably justify a purchase of the remaster if you really enjoy the
album.
Well, love it or hate it, I can't name
an album as purely given to expression as this one, and that alone
makes it worthy of the masterpiece title. Adding to that, it contains
a lot of very interestingly and neatly incorporated studio-based
experimentation, and the all too rare, even in the classic period,
complete and unpredictable control of the music's density. A final
point for my 'objective' judgment is that Hammill's lyrics and vocals
on this particular album are even more superb than his other
performances. I'd consider this the finest ever album in that aspect.
Thus, I think its status as such a prog landmark is entirely
deserved, and even someone who doesn't expect to personally enjoy
this sort of album should own it and engage with it. Personally,
the album is an incredible experience, with almost physical pull at
times. I love every moment of it. Either way, it gets a masterpiece
rating from me, even if Van Der Graaf Generator's superb discography
offer a couple of albums that are even more enjoyable from a personal
viewpoint
Rating: Five Stars Favourite Track: A Plague Of Lighthouse
Keepers --- I really, really enjoyed writing that review, and I think it is exactly the sort of thing I'm aiming for. What are everyone else's opinions on this?
Going to get some VDGG discussion going on around here (because the Suede Room... it isn't enough...) with a few focus questions when I've really thought of them and hopefully gotten those two new albums from them I ordered.
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Queen By-Tor
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Posted: September 05 2008 at 18:58 |
Nice . I agree on all accounts, and it was a very well written review there Rob
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febus
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Posted: September 05 2008 at 19:51 |
Not a Hammill fan by any means, but because of your brillant writing style, one(me for example ) wants to read the whole review.
Rob, you are the #1 reviewer, the PA uber-reviewer.. ...
I am impressed..i.won't dare to write anymore
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TGM: Orb
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 18:11 |
Review 72, The Wall, Pink Floyd, 1979,
double-album
(ooooh....)
There are few albums that inspire as
much of a mixture of feelings in me as The Wall. On the one hand, the
heights are absolutely brilliant, and some signature characteristics
are used immensely well, on the other, there is nothing remotely
memorable about several of the pieces, some leave me completely
uninspired and some of the 'filler' (will explain what I mean by this
later when I come to them) is really nothing more than that. In
addition, the ending is feeble
and so utterly unconvincing to me that it alone brings down the album
somewhat. I'll try to explain the pluses and minuses in a bit more
detail:
On the
positive side, the inclusions of phone calls, voice clips, film
moments and sound effects is generally very, very nicely done. It
fits into the pieces very well, keeps up album flow and adds a bit
more interest. Equally, the guitar work and vocals are generally
quite clean and forceful, and is responsible for most of the album's
real high points. Lastly, when everything does come together, which
isn't often enough for my liking, it comes together magnificently.
On
the minus side, there are plenty of individual tracks that draw my
finger towards the dreaded skip button. More generally, the lyrics
don't really satisfy me that much overall, being very
self-referential, a bit ridiculous story-wise, but without the clever
allegorical style that made albums like The Lamb and A Passion Play
so enjoyable from that perspective. Additionally, a few of the pieces
seem lyrically so un-needed as to make me cold to them by default.
Finally, Wright and Mason are mostly boring on this album. At times,
they do make valid contributions, but nothing remotely comparable to
their roles on, say, Meddle or Wish You Were Here.
In The
Flesh (I), after the light theme of the opening (echoed in the
closer) provides a relatively effective start to the album with
superb hammond sound from Wright and really grappling guitars from
Gilmour. Mason, also, is on top form, with bass pedal throbs and very
fitting clear percussion sounds. The vocals and lyrics, equally, are
pretty good ('If you wanna find out what's behind these cold eyes/
Then you'll have to claw your way past this disguise!'). A superbly
bombastic start to the album, with taste moderating the intentionally
overboard sound.
A baby
wailing brings us onto The Thin Ice, another solid cut, with some
really haunting work from Wright's swirling synths and cautious piano
as a highlight, and excellent vocals from Gilmour, whether or not
they stretch the 'oooh'ing a bit too much. Waters' more aggressive
vocals contrast neatly, and a fine snarling solo from Gilmour also
marks the piece. The end segues through a thunking, almost electronic
bass beat...
to
Another Brick In The Wall pt.1, which is the first of the few really
fantastic songs on the album, with extremely well-written and
accusing lyrics, as well as a brilliant harmony of empty menace over
the minimalistic electronic bass-line merging with some little guitar
and keyboard effects. Children's voices and the occasional shout
punctuate the background.
The
Happiest Days Of Our Lives is a moderate mix of biting anti-school
aggression and the defiant mockery of these oppressive figures. The
rhythm section, unusually for Floyd, takes a really dominant part and
handles it finely, and the screeching segue is almost unmatched...
Unlike
the following Another Brick In The Wall pt. 2, where, simply, not a
lot is going on. The guitars and riffs are very much repeated, the
loud children's chorus is simply irritating, and so horrifically out
of tune that I usually end up skipping. The lyrics are solid, and the
bluesy solo in the middle ain't bad, but those are the only nice
things I'll really say about it. The first of the 'let's throw in a
few vocal loops' things flops a bit. A phone segue takes us onto...
Mother,
which is one of the most lauded songs of the album. Unfortunately, it
bores me. A couple of the creepy lyrical lines and deliveries are
pulled off with great menace ('ooh ma, is it just a waste of time?',
but the acoustic theme is simply un-interesting to me. The additions
are mainly propping that up, and since I'm not too keen on it, they
don't really help... equally, the self-referential lyrics are a bit
of an irritation for me, but that's just preference speaking. The
final couple verse and answer are a bit of an improvement, but still
not so incredibly fascinating that the words 'classic' come to my
mind.
Goodbye
Blue Sky has a much stronger and more interesting acoustic, with some
haunting background bass supplementing it as well as dark and fairly
assertive additions. Much as a couple of the lyrical lines feel a bit
basic, it works, and the piece is overall quite enjoyable while
handling a psychological menace.
The growling aggression of
Empty Spaces is a complete and delightful contrast, with wailing
guitar, psychedelic force added by Wright's effects and the German
distorted spoken additions, and a forceful and compelling beat. The
vocals have this guttural, probably distorted, power behind them, and
the piece as a whole, though brief and mainly intended as a lead up,
is very effective.
Unfortunately,
the following Young Lust is simply not a piece I enjoy. The rhythm
section is pretty basic, Gilmour's guitars have such a synthetic edge
and the plain rock ends up mainly being plain, without quite enough
action to keep me interested. Wright's chords on the hammond have a
simply bored vibe, and
the lyrics are for the first time a bit of an insertion, rather than
a necessity. Not as awful as I'm making it sound and it does at least
do the decency of being memorable, but it does nothing for me. Noch
ein phonecall-based segue...
Straight
into One Of My Turns, also sometimes lauded as a highlight, with a
bit more plot-exposition and some very disjointed keyboard work,
which I can understand, even if it doesn't hit me. The vocals for the
first time feel a little too vulnerable and empty, much as that is
the only real option for the piece, and the lyrics do have their
moment in the opening section. The musical side... well, it's just
not especially fascinating for me.
The
breathless and dark Don't Leave Me Now is another very Wright-driven
track, even if it's not quite as fascinating as some of the previous
ones, and, much as the lyrics are horrific and dark, the rather thin
delivery simply doesn't quite work out the way I think it meant to.
Three minutes I didn't need to spend, and one superb conclusion, with
a whirling guitar, some moving piano touches and the 'oooh babe'
motif being used really well.
The
biting and hammering aggression of Another Brick In The Wall pt. 3 is
the real highlight of the first side for me. The lyrics are
brilliantly written, and the forceful, striking electronic-ish beat
backed up with little band additions is incredibly compelling.
Vocals, effects, guitars... everything works.
Goodbye
Cruel World ends the first disc in a subdued way, with a fairly
feeble two-note bass thing over some repeats of the organ riff from
Another Brick pt. 3, and a simple lyrical set to signify the
completion of The Wall (a theme which I've stopped following mentally
by Young Lust, anyway...). It doesn't make a great impression.
The
second disc starts out promisingly, with the exceptional Hey You. A
more medieval-feel guitar theme holds up neatly by itself, giving
enough space for the other additions to really hit home. Simple
though it is, everything fits neatly, and emphasises the emotions of
the narrator. More importantly, we get the amazing guitar theme
(diao-da-da-dao...) that will be repeated in the second side in its
purest and most stunning form. The vocals also express themselves
much more clearly and freely than I feel they've done on the majority
of the first side, and the lyrical content is again quite impressive
('Hey you! Would you help me to carry the stone/Open your heart, I'm
coming home'). Superb in and out of context.
Is
There Anybody Out There is another menacing piece, with just one
repeated, maddened line arranged precisely and a mass of psychedelic
keys with a couple of guitary and bass sounds, even reminiscent of
Echoes. A really pretty acoustic solo from Gilmour highlights the
second part of the piece, and much as I'm not the biggest fan of his
acoustics in general, this one works beautifully.
Nobody
Home features some fiddling with a vocal repeat, as well as a
generally good vocal side. The orchestra feature for the first time,
if generically, and Wright's piano gets a little space to expand. The
first half of the lyrics I really enjoy, the second... don't really
impact on me. Overall, however, it is a satisfying piece overall.
Vera
is the first of two lyrically pointless pieces. There is absolutely
no conceivable reason for it to be where it is,
in my opinion. Perhaps on the first disc, it would have fit a lot
better, with the touching vocal from Waters and the lush cello not
dragged down by plain irrelevance.
Bring The Boys Back Home is
the second. The bombastic orchestra is pretty generic, but the
highlights of the song is in the vocal wailing accompanying it, truly
bizarre. Unfortunately, the segue has the worst of the vocal loops
overuses, despite the menacing Is There Anybody Out There?
reprise.
Comfortably Numb is a piece I have mixed opinions on.
The lyrics are great, but clearly a complete insertion. Equally, the
music is fine, but it doesn't match the album, which, at its best is
downcast and sullen... the rather upbeat themes of this one have
never fit for me. The orchestra inclusions irk me a little, as does
the chorus-dragging-on-so-much part. The guitar solos... well, I like
them enough, the second much more so than the first, but wouldn't
really consider them mindblowing, especially since I'm not the
world's biggest guitar person. It's understandable why it is so
popular, but I feel quite confused as to why I'm listening to it in
the middle of a clear concept album, which it isn't an integral
part of.
The
Show Must Go On, comparatively, is a piece that was clearly
well-meaning, but simply feels like a bit musically invalid to me,
especially the vocals. It's clearly trying, but I simply don't like
the harmonies and Gilmour's voice on it. The lyrics... equally, feels
a bit fill-up inspired. The only substantial plus is the semi-yodel
thing handled in the opening harmony.
In
The Flesh (II) echoes the first one pretty precisely, in terms of its
musical content, albeit acoustics and slightly more stretchy choral
things feature prominently. Lyrically, however, the altered context
and vocal performance really does give it a fair bit of validity. The
lines are again well-written, and quite neat, albeit I completely
fail to understand why Pink (erk!) decides he's being Hitler for the
evening... The conclusion is, however, great.
Run
Like Hell features another more basic beat, and some guitar 'waves'
(I like to call them) that, while perhaps interesting to a guitarist,
don't get me. The vocals, while experimental and cleverly arranged,
also have no effect on me. So we have. a song where I really feel
either of the leads and the rhythm section is pretty basic. A
slightly redeeming synth solo from Wright marks the end of the piece
and returns of the Another Brick 3 theme work, but that's all I can
really find to like.
Waiting
For The Worms, after a slightly slow opening, features a kicking
guitar theme from Gilmour as well as menacing multi-tracked vocals
and vicious lyrical madness. Repeats of the godly guitar-theme of Hey
You are like ambrosia for my ears, and the overall piece is a very
impressive and compelling one despite a vulnerable beginning.
Stop
is a deliberate, short anti-climactic break, with really nice high
piano playing from Wright.
The
following The Trial features the orchestra in its full role, really
arranged for maximised effect, and an array of the bizarre characters
involved in the album arrayed against our protagonist. The vocals
around the line 'crazy... toys in the attic, I am crazy' are
wonderfully supplemented by the harp playing. Meanwhile, however, the
refrains on that just don't work for me. Though it features again
that phenomenal guitar theme, added to the judge's blustering, the
piece could have been so much more enjoyable for me with a tiny bit
of trimming, and the 'tear down the wall' shouting, while really the
obvious way to do it... feels so obvious that it's almost out of
place.
Outside The Wall provides possibly the world's most
ineffectual conclusion, especially in the context of such a dark
piece. With a really light sax theme echoing the opening, and a
slightly irritating light vocal complete with daft refrains not
really doing anything for the lyrics. An instrumental repeat... well,
why bother. Doesn't work for me.
So,
individually, a lot of the pieces are alright, a few are really,
really strong, and not a huge number really fall flat horribly.
However, as a whole, it simply doesn't feel quite there to me, and it
falls down to aggressive examination. I'm not that keen on the
concept, and I really do not like the ending. Also, I really don't
have the money spare to do what some have suggested and head for the
film just to understand the concept a bit better... if I'm not the
album's greatest fan, and I think the concept is basic, I'm not going
to splurge on it, to be honest. It is quite an interesting album from
a few perspectives, but the interest... it passes too quickly, and
one listen will generally give me just as much information as ten on
any individual feature.
Two stars is admittedly a bit harsh,
but I simply don't find it entirely satisfying, and that's even as
someone who's generally positive towards Floyd.
If you're not a fan of the band, it is admittedly so big and
influential a recording that it's probably a necessity. Equally, it's
interesting to look at why this album succeeded so highly, but in and
of itself it isn't, in my view, the masterpiece some proclaim it to
be.
Rating:
Two Stars Favourite
Track: Another Brick In The Wall pt. 3/Hey You -- OK, well, I think that rating alone would be a cause for trolling/discussion aplenty. Questions aren't needed :p. Well, let's try it.... (see bottom of post) IIRC, I'm the only collab to give that less than three stars, though that may have changed since I looked over the reviews a while back. I tell a lie. there are three others, at least.
Profuse thanks to Febus and Mike-Tor for their compliments, even if it's doing no good at all for my ego ... Let us hope that my skills haven't gone with my hair (*muttering about regulations*), which coincidentally resulted in my week or so hiatus of anger.
Still waiting for the new stuff to arrive. Album of the Week: Still Life - VDGG. Had an epic forty-minute singalong, complete with weird inflections and a decent dose of air organ. Song Of The Week: Down To The Waterline - Dire Straits. I'm such a pop fan. Brilliant lyrics, though.
Now... 1) Should a concept album be taken only as a whole? If so, even when many of the tracks are, basically, unimportant to the concept? 2) Why is the concept of The Wall brilliant? Explain to me... 3) Did the multiple-release of The Wall (film, album, live show etc.) impact on the music's studio performance significantly? 4) Would The Wall have sold better as a single album? Would it have had more artistic value (in your view) as a single album? Personal answers: 1) Not necessarily: the individual pieces do contribute to my view of it as much as the arrangement and segues do. When parts of the album aren't key, the album becomes very divisible. 2) It's not :p. Enlighten me 3) dunno. Suspect it could have really gutted the improvisation, but Floyd had stopped being improvisational by then anyway, so I hear. 4) I don't believe it would. Ironically, I think the fact that it's a popular double album has amplified a sense of curiosity in people, and sort of disguised/made more acceptable the rather more inaccessible psychedelia because nice rock tunes punctuate it so much. I don't feel that the whole thing is artistically necessary, and could have gone for a more condensed version myself, but that's just me.
These days, there are so few double albums that it makes The Wall look like an exception, whether or not it actually was.
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Queen By-Tor
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 18:25 |
Would the wall have sold better as a single album!? It's the number 3 selling album of all time! (last I checked) doesn't sell much better than that Anyways, very well written as always Rob. I heartily disagree with everything said and I think that Antoine might as well, but you put up a good argument. For me the album was more of 'an experience' than just an album, and for some people that 'experience' just doesn't click, I guess you're one of them . As for the concept of the album - I think a lot of people can draw parallels to the story dealing with isolation and self questioning, along with false idolization and oppression from various authorieties (mothers, school masters, law, ect) not to mention the heartbreak of having the person whom you trust the most (the ex-wife, in the case of this story) abandon you. While the story is terribly non-linear, I think a lot of people also appreciate how open it is, many high-schoolers I know have written essays on it, and all of them different, people can come up with their own meaning for it whether the band intended that or not. I don't really feel like putting up an argument, but that's how I see it . Anyways, what a friggen long-ass review Rob. You certainly poured some passion into an album you detest
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