My People Were Fair and Had Sky in Their Hair... But Now They're Content to Wear Stars on Their Brows [debut]
release date: Jul. 5, 1968
format: 2 cd (2015 remaster - Deluxe Edition)
[album rate: 2,5 / 5] [2,32]
producer: Tony Visconti
Label: A&M Records / Universal - nationality: England, UK
Tracklist: 1. "Hot Rod Mama" - 2. "Scenesof" - 3. "Child Star" - 4. "Strange Orchestras" - 5. "Chateau In Virginia Waters" - 6. "Dwarfish Trumpet Blues" - 7. "Mustang Ford" - 8. "Afghan Woman" - 9. "Knight" - 10. "Graceful Fat Sheba" - 11."Weilder of Words (Robard de Font Le Roy)" - 12. "Frowning Atahuallpa (My Inca Love)"
Studio album debut by Tyrannosaurus Rex originally released on Regal Zonophone. The 2 cd Deluxe Edition contains extensive material. Tracks #1-1 to #1-12 are identical to the original mono album LRZ 1003, released Jul. 5, 1968 on Regal Zonophone. Tracks #1-13 to #1-18 are recorded live for the John Peel BBC Radio Show "Top Gear", Picadilly Studio1, London, Oct. 12, 1967, and tracks #1-19 to #1-24 are recorded live for Top Gear, Mar. 11, 1968.
All tracks are composed by Marc Bolan, who is credited on guitar & vocals, and he is accompanied by Steve Peregrine Toke, credited on percussion, bongos, Chinese gong, pixiephone and vocals.
The style may be quite unique but it only really shows Bolan's inspiration in celtic folk, bluegrass, and psychedelic folk. There's not much rock in any of these tracks and it basically works as a musical testimony of his early stages in music before making his journey from psychedelic folk to glam rock.
[ allmusic.com 3 / 5 stars ]
[ just music from an amateur... music archaeologist ]
"Dagen er reddet & kysten er klar - Jeg er den der er skredet så skaf en vikar!"
04 September 2013
Richard Hawley "Late Night Final" (2001)
Late Night Final [debut]
release date: Oct. 15, 2001
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,34]
producer: Richard Hawley, Alan Smyth, Colin Elliot
label: V2 Records - nationality: England, UK
Track highligts: 1. "Something Is....!" (4 / 5) - 2. "Baby, You're My Light" - 4. "The Nights Are Cold" (4 / 5) - 10. "Long Black Train" - 11. "The Light at the End of the Tunnel (Was a Train Coming the Other Way)"
Solo album debut release by Richard Hawley (originally released on Setanta records) after leaving the britpop band Longpigs and after playing with Pulp. The music is diverse from what he helped producing with Longpigs, a band who played a combo of dreampop and britpop. Here, Hawley is playing AND singing (which is new) chamber pop, and it really sounds nice, fine, and very cool. Music critics loved the release but the album failed to sell any great number of albums. Compared to his later efforts, this first attempt only lacks the really great songs but the tone, the style, and the coolness is ever-present even on his first album.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]
release date: Oct. 15, 2001
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,34]
producer: Richard Hawley, Alan Smyth, Colin Elliot
label: V2 Records - nationality: England, UK
Track highligts: 1. "Something Is....!" (4 / 5) - 2. "Baby, You're My Light" - 4. "The Nights Are Cold" (4 / 5) - 10. "Long Black Train" - 11. "The Light at the End of the Tunnel (Was a Train Coming the Other Way)"
Solo album debut release by Richard Hawley (originally released on Setanta records) after leaving the britpop band Longpigs and after playing with Pulp. The music is diverse from what he helped producing with Longpigs, a band who played a combo of dreampop and britpop. Here, Hawley is playing AND singing (which is new) chamber pop, and it really sounds nice, fine, and very cool. Music critics loved the release but the album failed to sell any great number of albums. Compared to his later efforts, this first attempt only lacks the really great songs but the tone, the style, and the coolness is ever-present even on his first album.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]
Marie Key "I byen igen" (2011)
I byen igen [debut]
release date: Aug. 26, 2011
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: Andreas "Maskinen" Sommer
label: Sony Music - nationality: Denmark
Track highlights: 1. "Mere snak - mindre musik" - 2. "Se nu herhen" (4 / 5) - 4. "Partners in Crime" (feat. Bjørn Fjæstad) - 5. "Stå op" - 6. "Er du Okay?" - 7. "Man må ikke lege med folk" - 8. "Tabt mit hjerte" - 10. "Hun er i byen igen"
Studio solo debut album by Marie Key (aka Marie Kristensen) after having released two albums with Marie Key Band - the final one being Hver sin vej (Aug. 2009). Stylistically, it's a move into a more electronic universe with Marie Key as primary artist, but with compositions arranged together with producer Anders 'Maskinen' Sommer, who has been the one part of Danish synthpop duo, Stoffer & Maskinen. The music is quite unique and with both "Mere snak - mindre musik" and especially "Se nu herhen", Key experienced much airplay on the national Danish radio station, DR P3. With this, Key has taken a substantial step up after leaving the band behind and with that she has also left behind a certain amount of conformity.
[ Gaffa.dk, Soundvenue 4 / 6 stars ]
release date: Aug. 26, 2011
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: Andreas "Maskinen" Sommer
label: Sony Music - nationality: Denmark
Track highlights: 1. "Mere snak - mindre musik" - 2. "Se nu herhen" (4 / 5) - 4. "Partners in Crime" (feat. Bjørn Fjæstad) - 5. "Stå op" - 6. "Er du Okay?" - 7. "Man må ikke lege med folk" - 8. "Tabt mit hjerte" - 10. "Hun er i byen igen"
Studio solo debut album by Marie Key (aka Marie Kristensen) after having released two albums with Marie Key Band - the final one being Hver sin vej (Aug. 2009). Stylistically, it's a move into a more electronic universe with Marie Key as primary artist, but with compositions arranged together with producer Anders 'Maskinen' Sommer, who has been the one part of Danish synthpop duo, Stoffer & Maskinen. The music is quite unique and with both "Mere snak - mindre musik" and especially "Se nu herhen", Key experienced much airplay on the national Danish radio station, DR P3. With this, Key has taken a substantial step up after leaving the band behind and with that she has also left behind a certain amount of conformity.
[ Gaffa.dk, Soundvenue 4 / 6 stars ]
03 September 2013
Richard Hawley
~ ~ ~

~ ~ ~
02 September 2013
Dead Kennedys "Too Drunk to Fuck" (1981) (single)
Too Drunk to Fuck, 12'' single
release date: May 1981
format: vinyl (12 CHERRY 24)
[single rate: 4 / 5] [3,75]
producer: Dead Kennedys, Geza X
label: Cherry Red Records - nationality: USA
Tracklist: A) 1. "Too Drunk to Fuck" (5 / 5) - - B) 1. "The Prey" (2,5 / 5)
Single release by Dead Kennedys the band and Geza Gedeon. This was actually the very first song I ever heard with DK, and I was sooo overwhelmed, fascinated, and bedazzled, as I was introduced to it by a schoolmate. The odd thing was that my friends at school thought it was naughty and cool because of the title and the subject of the lyrics, whereas I just loved it for the musical energy. And when my class mates a few weeks later were disappointed with and rejected the band when they played the debut album, I just really loved the band, because I found in it more of the same energy and music, and that spurred me on to seek out other punk rock bands.
release date: May 1981
format: vinyl (12 CHERRY 24)
[single rate: 4 / 5] [3,75]
producer: Dead Kennedys, Geza X
label: Cherry Red Records - nationality: USA
Tracklist: A) 1. "Too Drunk to Fuck" (5 / 5) - - B) 1. "The Prey" (2,5 / 5)
![]() |
7'' cover |
01 September 2013
Imperiet "Rasera" (1983)
![]() |
org. vinyl cover |
release date: Sep. 1983
format: vinyl (MLR 35) / cd (1997)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
pro. by Stefan Glaumann & Imperiet
label: Mistlur (vinyl) / MNW (CD) - nationality: Sweden
Track highlights: 1. "Rasera" (live) - 2. "Tusentals händer" - 4. "Sjung inte falskt" (4 / 5) - 6. "Kom ihåg! (Den fria världen?)" - 10. "Höghus, låghus, dårhus"
Full-length studio debut by Imperiet - the band already released the 4 track ep Rumdimperiet in Jun. 1982 as Rumdimperiet. While being part of Ebba Grön, Joakim Thåström, Stry Terrarie and Gunnar "Gurra" Ljungstedt initiated their side-project, Rymdimperiet with bassist Christian Falk. On "Rasera" Imperiet has been expanded with saxophonist Per Hägglund, who also played sax on both Kärlek & upprör (1981) as well as on the final album by Ebba Grön. Basically, Imperiet is the continued story of Ebba Grön having only replaced a bassist and expanded the band with a musician who already used to play with the band.
Also, the style is really just the style of Ebba Grön continued, which is just nice. On this, one will find many similarities with the last album by Ebba Grön, which means a combo of post-punk and more traditional pop / rock and a blend with especially blues rock traces.
The album was reissued on Mistlur in 1992 in an expanded edition titled Rasera + Mini-LP, which starts with the 1984 release Imperiet and continues (from track #7) with Rasera. The album was then reissued by MNW in 1997 where it's simply titled Rasera with 6 bonus tracks... , though the playing order remains the same. In either case the cd combo issue is a rather fine release, only I wish they had kept the chronological order intact, and even better: issued the combo album as a 2 discs-release.
![]() | ![]() | |
1992 reissue | 1997 reissue |
Tyrannosaurus Rex / T. Rex / Marc Bolan
~ ~ ~
![]() |
Steve Peregrine Took & Marc Bolan |
![]() |
Marc Bolan & Mickey Finn |
The personnel on the last album released by Tyrannosaurus Rex is in fact the very same as the first album released as T. Rex, which only proves the band is one and the same regardless the spelling. Also, it's difficult to talk of two bands. In fact it makes more sense to talk of Marc Bolan projects, as he's not only the founder but the only lasting member of the two 'bands'. Mickey Finn is the only other member who played in both bands.
Marc Bolan: aka Marc Feld [birthname], born Sep. 30, 1947 in Hackney, London, UK; died Sep. 16, 1977.
From time to time I meet someone who has a fixed view on early 1970s popular music as something entirely restricted to the results of psychedelic experimentation with artists such as Procol Harum, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, The Doors, The Beatles, The Band, The Kinks, The Who, Pink Floyd, Deep Purple, Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie, Velvet Underground and all of their followers. Of course they all played a major role in shaping a general idea of the new decade, although there's also a somewhat large distance from the output by Hendrix compared to that of the Beatles - they all had their own and very special trademark. Some artists flourished just in the outskirts of the biggest stars, and some would later become 'majors', like The Moody Blues, Elton John, Jethro Tull, Electric Light Orchestra, Otis Reading, Earth Wind and Fire, MC5, Alice Cooper, Leonard Cohen, Van Morrison, Frank Zappa (and the Mothers of Invention) etc. And then a few have only become "major artists" in retrospect, like Etta James, Nick Drake, Culpeper's Orchard, and Townes van Zandt. However, some artists who even came to play a major role and shone very brightly, have yet somehow escaped a public view on that period, it seems. They have almost vanished. People today simply have forgotten the magic and genius of i.e. Marc Bolan, I think. Had he died at the peak of his career, he may very likely have been tributed alongside Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison.
The story of the British glam rocker Marc Bolan is a strange one, indeed. He died in a car crash in 1977 at the age of 29 (thus not putting him in The 27 Club), when he along the way with years out of the spotlight had transformed into a tv-host, presenting new musical styles (i.e. The Jam, '77), and trying hard to regain his popularity as a songwriter with no luck at all. Rumors has it that he 'suffered' from megalomania, was a cocaine addict, as well as a heavy drinker, but what is truly striking is his impact on the whole music industry. He formed the band Tyrannosaurus Rex - and from 1970 shortened to T. Rex - single-handedly as the initial members were soon replaced by others, and from 1970-74 only Mickey Finn (congas, vocals, 1970-75), Steve Currie (bass, 1970-76), Bill Legend (drums, 1970-74) were the most stable members. T. Rex existed from 1967 - 1977 with M. Bolan as THE driving force and only emblematic member. As Tyrannosaurus Rex, Bolan and basically Steve Peregrin Took (drums, bongos, percussion) wrote psychedelic folk, folk rock with a fascination for baroque music without any big success in that huge pot of bands playing experimental psychedelic music - and perhaps overshadowed by American protest singer / songwriters and strong rock composers as Jefferson Airplane, Hendrix, Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Also the strong Britishness of the baroque elements / inspiration may have limited the expansions of their music at this point. As I understand, Bolan played British psychedelic non-political yet far from indifferent music, as he commented on typical hippie issues - sex debate, generation aspects, fundamentals in ways of life etc. Maybe his music was the link between The Beatles' experiments and an interest in baroque folk music, which resembles what one finds in Jethro Tull and early Moody Blues, and was in a way gentle flower-power hippie music. The debut album by Tyrannosaurus Rex (Bolan and Steve Peregrin Took) was given the name My People Were Fair and Had Sky in Their Hair... But Now They're Content to Wear Stars on Their Brows..., which kind of says a lot about where we are, time-wise and generation-wise.
The albums A Beard of Stars (Mar. '70), the last album as Tyrannosaurus Rex (Bolan and now accompanied by Mickey Finn) and T. Rex (Dec. '70), the first album with the shortened band name (apparently given by producer Tony Visconti, who produced both albums), but still with Bolan and Finn, although Bolan was always credited as the only composer. Some argue that they were two different bands by simply suggesting that the music by the former was not the glam rock that one will hear on Electric Warrior, however these two titles simply proves otherwise. They also signal a major change that would eventually influence a whole new genre. With A Beard of Stars, Bolan had discovered that his shorter and more electrified pop / rock songs distinguished him from 'all the others'. He basically (if not) invented / (then) influenced glam rock as a genre (Bowie released The Man Who Sold the World, Nov. '70, and Hunky Dory, Dec. '71, which was made up with many of the same experimenting glam rock elements), and with the two releases Electric Warrior (Oct. '71) and The Slider (Jul. '72) he established T. Rex as one of the brightest comets and second to maybe only Bowie in Europe at that time.
The extraordinary velocity that kicked him right up at the very front of pop / rock in Britain may have been the major factor to a drinking and drug problem and a presumed suffering from megalomania. From that point on he vanished again, initially slowly as the album Tanx (Mar. 1973) was no big success but had him feature on other stars' releases. He may also have been overtaken by all the new stars of glam rock like Slade and Sweet competing with the same audience across the Atlantic but especially put into the shadows by the 'battle' between David Bowie and Lou Reed, who took the genre in new directions and just kept on releasing new grand works.
Bolan's role and place in modern popular music history is not forgotten as his legacy brought us glam rock, which is 'not just' a genre but for one thing include artists like Bowie and Reed (you can't really put these two in any boxes), Alice Cooper (heavy metal hard rock opera), The Damned (punk rock glam punk), Suede (britpop glam rock) and lots of others, as well as being a major influence on the emergence of gothic rock, new romantic, and post-punk. Marc Bolan in a way kick-started glam rock with Electric Warrior and The Slider but compared to David Bowie and Lou Reed, whose careers had only just begun, he didn't succeed in keeping the high level of artistic production and vanished in a way as rapidly as he emerged. Ridiculous attitudes, the make-up and the evident phony star behavior - it all sucked big time but the music and songs were... fabulous... even today.
[ BBC documentary 'Marc Bolan - The Final Word', 2007 ]
~ ~ ~
The Teardrop Explodes "Kilimanjaro" (1980)
Kilimanjaro [debut]
release date: Oct. 1980
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: The Chameleons
label: Mercury Records - nationality: England, UK
release date: Oct. 1980
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: The Chameleons
label: Mercury Records - nationality: England, UK
Studio debut album by British band The Teardrop Explodes, initially consisting of lead vocalist and bassist Julian Cope, guitarist Mick Finkler, keyboardist David Balfe and drummer Gary Dwyer. Up until the foundation of the band, Cope had shortly played in the trio Crucial Three together with Ian McCulloch and guitarist Peter Wylie, who should go on to establish the two successful bands Echo & The Bunnymen and The Mighty Wah!, respectively. During the recording sessions Finkler was sacked by the band (Cope) and substituted by Alan Gill, which means that Finkler is credited as guitarist on eight and Gill on three of the first issue's eleven songs. The album was issued in at least two original versions: the first with the UK cover (see below) and a second issue featuring the small hit song "Reward" and five songs featuring Gill and six with Finkler. Two songs are substituted with new compositions for the second issue, which has a rather different running order.
I only came across the album some four years after its release, and long after the great Wilder album. I don't think Kilimanjaro has the same greatness as the follow-up, but it still contains some fine compositions. The style is more new wave-shaped on this one, although horns are ever-present, and the general impression is a style that is too mixed up and pointing in all directions. For some reason the album is enlisted in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die".
New guitarist Alan Gill left the band by the end of the year and was replaced by Troy Tate.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5 stars ]
![]() |
UK cover |
Peter Sommer "Til rotterne, til kragerne, til hundene" (2008)
Til rotterne, til kragerne, til hundene
release date: Oct. 6, 2008
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5]
Tracklist: 1. "Til rotterne, til kragerne, til hundene" (3,5 / 5) - 2. "Rødt Kort" (3,5 / 5) (studio session) - 3. "Hærværk" (3,5 / 5) - 4. "Vi falder først den dag vi kigger ned" (3 / 5) - 5. "Hvad sker der i dit hoved?" - 6. "Himmelflugt" - 7. " 7.777.777" - 8. "To bække små" (3 / 5) - 9. "Sandhed nr. 502" - 10. "Jalousi (igen)" - 11. "Chancetur" (3 / 5)
3rd solo release by Peter Sommer is a new direction of style. This is his first actual rock album. He's still a singer / songwriter with focus on narration and lyrics, and his trademark of playing with words, but it's electrified music with synths and drum machines, which seems very welcome and makes it more enjoyable, more complex, although, I can't help thinking that he may have listened a bit too much to Henrik Hall's Chok, suk og koma, released half a year prior to this. Compared to his 2006 release, the music is better on this one but some of the songs lack substance.
release date: Oct. 6, 2008
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5]
Tracklist: 1. "Til rotterne, til kragerne, til hundene" (3,5 / 5) - 2. "Rødt Kort" (3,5 / 5) (studio session) - 3. "Hærværk" (3,5 / 5) - 4. "Vi falder først den dag vi kigger ned" (3 / 5) - 5. "Hvad sker der i dit hoved?" - 6. "Himmelflugt" - 7. " 7.777.777" - 8. "To bække små" (3 / 5) - 9. "Sandhed nr. 502" - 10. "Jalousi (igen)" - 11. "Chancetur" (3 / 5)
3rd solo release by Peter Sommer is a new direction of style. This is his first actual rock album. He's still a singer / songwriter with focus on narration and lyrics, and his trademark of playing with words, but it's electrified music with synths and drum machines, which seems very welcome and makes it more enjoyable, more complex, although, I can't help thinking that he may have listened a bit too much to Henrik Hall's Chok, suk og koma, released half a year prior to this. Compared to his 2006 release, the music is better on this one but some of the songs lack substance.
Erik Grip "De levendes land" (1983)
De levendes land
release date: 1983
format: vinyl (EXL 30.019)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: Peter Abrahamsen
label: Exlibris - nationality: Denmark
6th studio album by Danish troubadur and singer / songwriter Erik Grip - an album exclusively with texts by (Nicolaj Frederik Severin) Grundtvig in arrangements and music made by Grip to celebrate Grundtvig's 200th's birthday (Sep. 8, 1983).
release date: 1983
format: vinyl (EXL 30.019)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: Peter Abrahamsen
label: Exlibris - nationality: Denmark
6th studio album by Danish troubadur and singer / songwriter Erik Grip - an album exclusively with texts by (Nicolaj Frederik Severin) Grundtvig in arrangements and music made by Grip to celebrate Grundtvig's 200th's birthday (Sep. 8, 1983).
Tom Waits "Swordfishtrombones" (1983)
Swordfishtrombones
release date: Sep. 1983
format: vinyl / cd (1990 reissue) / cd (2008 reissue)
[album rate: 4,5 / 5] [4,58]
producer: Tom Waits
label: Island Records - nationality: USA
Track highlights: 1. "Underground" (4 / 5) - 2. "Shore Leave" (4 / 5) - 4. "Johnsburg, Illinois" - 5. "16 Shells From a Thirty-Ought Six" (5 / 5) - 7. "In the Neighborhood" (5 / 5) - 8. "Just Another Sucker on the Vine" - 9. "Frank's Wild Years" (4 / 5) - 10. "Swordfishtrombone" - 11. "Down, Down, Down" (4 / 5) - 12. "Soldier's Things" (4 / 5) - 13. "Gin Soaked Boy" - 15. "Rainbirds"
release date: Sep. 1983
format: vinyl / cd (1990 reissue) / cd (2008 reissue)
[album rate: 4,5 / 5] [4,58]
producer: Tom Waits
label: Island Records - nationality: USA
Track highlights: 1. "Underground" (4 / 5) - 2. "Shore Leave" (4 / 5) - 4. "Johnsburg, Illinois" - 5. "16 Shells From a Thirty-Ought Six" (5 / 5) - 7. "In the Neighborhood" (5 / 5) - 8. "Just Another Sucker on the Vine" - 9. "Frank's Wild Years" (4 / 5) - 10. "Swordfishtrombone" - 11. "Down, Down, Down" (4 / 5) - 12. "Soldier's Things" (4 / 5) - 13. "Gin Soaked Boy" - 15. "Rainbirds"
8th studio album by Tom Waits following his fine Heartattack and Vine (1980) with an unusually long break of three years in between releases. With his first six albums, Waits had lived what seems to be a fixed write/compose-record-tour-life on repeat - booking studios for new recordings, recording new tracks, releasing new albums and embarking on a long tour with new material, after which he would start all over and repeat the process in a one-year cycle.
The writing process with the soundtrack for (the Francis Ford Coppola film) "One From the Heart" (1982) had occupied his time for more than six months. It had prevented him from touring after the release of Heartattack... and it wasn't until '81 that he was finally free to tour again with the songs from his most recent album - a tour which also brought him to Europe. It was during this period that he attempted to break free from his old persona, even though everyone everywhere expected to hear "The Heart of Saturday Night" tracks over and over again. But Waits had grown tired of his image and tired of singing the same (old) songs, and much in a similar way as he had found change in his private life, he had sought change in his music. He had released his first seven albums on Asylum, but upon listening to recordings from his upcoming release, the 'money men' at the label saw no interest in funding a new Waits album of - what they thought was - another non-commercial album. Instead, Waits and wife Kathleen Brennan secured the recordings to be released on Island Records. Swordfishtrombones is the first since his debut not to be produced by Bones Howe. As replacement, Waits installed himself in that role for the first time.
Stylistically, the album is a modern masterpiece where Waits experiments with different styles and where he tries out new ways of creating music. The end result is mainly a singer / songwriter album with ties to blues, rhythm & blues, and vocal jazz AND all that with a touch of experimental rock and art rock lending from Captain Beefheart, world music, Kurt Weill, and with ingredients from non-tonal music to produce a completely new mix of contemporary popular music.
The album is one of my first acquisitions with Tom Waits. Around 1987 / '88 I stumpled upon the album in the local music store and there I noted that it featured "In the Neighborhood", "16 Shells From a Thirty-Ought-Six" - both of which where great songs that I knew of, and then it had "Soldier's Things" on the track list. It was a song I knew in a fine interpretation by Paul Young found on his fine The Secret of Association (1985), and all of these were songs that for me literally opened a door to a new world of music. This music was new and completely different from what I normally found myself listening to, and it was this very album that really opened the door into his earlier material. I still listen to this one from time to time and it has never ceased to sound fresh.
Swordfishtrombones is the second album in a row and the third so far from Waits to make its way to "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die".
A must.
[ allmusic.com, Q Magazine, Mojo, Uncut 5 / 5, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]
1983 Favourite releases: 1. New Order Power, Corruption & Lies - 2. Tom Waits Swordfishtrombones - 3. Big Country The Crossing
28 August 2013
Van Morrison "Inarticulate Speech of the Heart" (1983)
Inarticulate Speech of the Heart
release date: Mar. 1983
format: cd (2008 remaster)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,06]
producer: Van Morrison
label: Polydor Records - nationality: Northern Ireland, UK
Track highlights: 1. "Higher Than the World" - 5. "Rave on John Donne" - 7. "The Street Only Knew Your Name" - 10. "Inarticulate Speech of the Heart No. 2"
14th studio album by Van Morrison originally released on Mercury Records follows one year after Beautiful Vision, and it takes him further down the road in search of spirituality. Where the predecessor had many songs focusing on narratives this one comes with four instrumentals, and the album seems like an outlet for his belief that music have healing powers regardless the lyrical matter. Stylistically, he makes strong use of synths, keyboards and saxophones to create a sensation of new age style on top it all.
In the credit list Morrison explicitly thanks Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, a gesture, which in many ways points to his long-lasting spiritual search but also places this very release on a shelf among few others by Morrison that so openly speaks of his strong religious foundation. From Wavelength (1978) to Beautiful Vision (1982) he often sang about childhood memories with a mother devoted to Jehovas Witnesses, and this theme has continued with a more undefinable presence of spiritual divinity, although, an explicit addressing to the founder of Scientology says something about his viewpoint at this stage of his constant search. There are no evident proclamations to be found here, but the lasting impression sort of lifts the music here to serve as a foundation to a state of meditation. The album is almost without really great songs - just an echoing of other characteristic songs of his and much blow of hot air. The album was met by lukewarm to positive reviews, and peaked at number #24 on the UK albums chart list. The highlighted tracks doesn't really represent the nature of the album as they are... better and all more uptempo compositions than the remainders. Just listen to "Connswater", "Celtic Swing", or "Inarticulate Speech of the Heart No. 1", which help define the nature of the album. To me, it's one of the contenders to his least interesting albums.
The 2008 remaster contains two bonus tracks which are alternate takes of songs #9 and #10.
[ allmusic.com, Rooling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]
release date: Mar. 1983
format: cd (2008 remaster)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,06]
producer: Van Morrison
label: Polydor Records - nationality: Northern Ireland, UK
Track highlights: 1. "Higher Than the World" - 5. "Rave on John Donne" - 7. "The Street Only Knew Your Name" - 10. "Inarticulate Speech of the Heart No. 2"
14th studio album by Van Morrison originally released on Mercury Records follows one year after Beautiful Vision, and it takes him further down the road in search of spirituality. Where the predecessor had many songs focusing on narratives this one comes with four instrumentals, and the album seems like an outlet for his belief that music have healing powers regardless the lyrical matter. Stylistically, he makes strong use of synths, keyboards and saxophones to create a sensation of new age style on top it all.
In the credit list Morrison explicitly thanks Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, a gesture, which in many ways points to his long-lasting spiritual search but also places this very release on a shelf among few others by Morrison that so openly speaks of his strong religious foundation. From Wavelength (1978) to Beautiful Vision (1982) he often sang about childhood memories with a mother devoted to Jehovas Witnesses, and this theme has continued with a more undefinable presence of spiritual divinity, although, an explicit addressing to the founder of Scientology says something about his viewpoint at this stage of his constant search. There are no evident proclamations to be found here, but the lasting impression sort of lifts the music here to serve as a foundation to a state of meditation. The album is almost without really great songs - just an echoing of other characteristic songs of his and much blow of hot air. The album was met by lukewarm to positive reviews, and peaked at number #24 on the UK albums chart list. The highlighted tracks doesn't really represent the nature of the album as they are... better and all more uptempo compositions than the remainders. Just listen to "Connswater", "Celtic Swing", or "Inarticulate Speech of the Heart No. 1", which help define the nature of the album. To me, it's one of the contenders to his least interesting albums.
The 2008 remaster contains two bonus tracks which are alternate takes of songs #9 and #10.
[ allmusic.com, Rooling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]
BEST OF 1986:
The Smiths "The Queen Is Dead" (1986)
release date: Jun. 16, 1986
format: vinyl (gatefold - ROUGH 96) / cd
[album rate: 5 / 5] [4,85]
producer: Morrissey, Marr
label: Rough Trade Records - nationality: England, UK
Tracklist: A) 1. "The Queen Is Dead / Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty (Medley)" (5 / 5) - 2. "Frankly, Mr. Shankly" (5 / 5) - 3. "I Know It's Over" (5 / 5) - 4. "Never Had No One Ever" (5 / 5) - 5. "Cemetry Gates" (5 / 5) - - B) 1. "Bigmouth Strikes Again" (4,5 / 5) - 2. "The Boy With the Thorn in His Side" (5 / 5) - 3. "Vicar in a Tutu" (4 / 5) - 4. "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out" (5 / 5) - 5. "Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others" (5 / 5)
3rd studio album by The Smiths produced by the songwriter duo Stephen Morrissey / Johnny Marr. The album is another step into new territories. The music is sharper and more punk rock-inspired with faster, shorter, and more energetic tracks. The lyrics are both a continuing of the introvert texts on sex and moral, political issues, but also a new sarcastic sneer at personal critics and the music industry in general. The album cover features Alain Delon in a 1964 film "L'Insoumis" ("The Unvanquished") by Alain Cavalier. Not long after the purchase, I soon realised that this album was now my favourite Smiths album, and I simply loved and heard "Cemetry Gates", "The Boy With the Thorn in His Side", "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out", and "Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others" over and over again. The album is great and is by many considered not only the band's best but also one of the best albums ever to be recorded. I still can't single one out as the best - they all have their strengths. The album was ranked the greatest record of all time on NME's The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list, and it's naturally enlisted in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die".
Highly recommendable.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone, Q Magazine, Sputnik Music, Select 5 / 5 stars ]
[ collectors' item 'near mint' - from ~ 50€ ]
1986 Favourite releases: 1. The Smiths The Queen Is Dead - 2. Talk Talk The Colour of Spring - 3. R.E.M. Lifes Rich Pageant
format: vinyl (gatefold - ROUGH 96) / cd
[album rate: 5 / 5] [4,85]
producer: Morrissey, Marr
label: Rough Trade Records - nationality: England, UK
Tracklist: A) 1. "The Queen Is Dead / Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty (Medley)" (5 / 5) - 2. "Frankly, Mr. Shankly" (5 / 5) - 3. "I Know It's Over" (5 / 5) - 4. "Never Had No One Ever" (5 / 5) - 5. "Cemetry Gates" (5 / 5) - - B) 1. "Bigmouth Strikes Again" (4,5 / 5) - 2. "The Boy With the Thorn in His Side" (5 / 5) - 3. "Vicar in a Tutu" (4 / 5) - 4. "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out" (5 / 5) - 5. "Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others" (5 / 5)
3rd studio album by The Smiths produced by the songwriter duo Stephen Morrissey / Johnny Marr. The album is another step into new territories. The music is sharper and more punk rock-inspired with faster, shorter, and more energetic tracks. The lyrics are both a continuing of the introvert texts on sex and moral, political issues, but also a new sarcastic sneer at personal critics and the music industry in general. The album cover features Alain Delon in a 1964 film "L'Insoumis" ("The Unvanquished") by Alain Cavalier. Not long after the purchase, I soon realised that this album was now my favourite Smiths album, and I simply loved and heard "Cemetry Gates", "The Boy With the Thorn in His Side", "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out", and "Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others" over and over again. The album is great and is by many considered not only the band's best but also one of the best albums ever to be recorded. I still can't single one out as the best - they all have their strengths. The album was ranked the greatest record of all time on NME's The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list, and it's naturally enlisted in "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die".
Highly recommendable.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone, Q Magazine, Sputnik Music, Select 5 / 5 stars ]
[ collectors' item 'near mint' - from ~ 50€ ]
1986 Favourite releases: 1. The Smiths The Queen Is Dead - 2. Talk Talk The Colour of Spring - 3. R.E.M. Lifes Rich Pageant
26 August 2013
Veronica Maggio "Och vinnaren är..." (2008)
Och vinnaren är...
release date: Mar. 26, 2008
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,22]
producer: Oskar Linnros
label: Universal Music - nationality: Sweden
release date: Mar. 26, 2008
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,22]
producer: Oskar Linnros
label: Universal Music - nationality: Sweden
Track highlights: 2. "Gammal sång" - 3. "Ingen kommer undan (Inte ens i Sverige)" - 4. "Stopp" - 7. "V för vendetta" - 8. "Måndagsbarn" (4 / 5)
2nd studio album by Veronica Maggio released on Universal and produced by Oscar Linnross is a fine Swedish pop soul album. The music is sweet, blue-eyed happy-go-lucky music with nothing but joy and fresh air. I bought the album some time after acquiring Satan i gatan (2011) as it was on sale. She hasn't got the most fantastic vocal range but she certainly has charm and an undefineable lightness, which makes me think of her as a clone of Lisa Ekdahl (the tiny light voice), Nina Persson of The Cardigans, and a more energetic Lisa Nilsson. Very much like Persson, she has a certain star quality of fragile lightness to her voice without being a brilliant singer. The best tracks are when she makes fun of everyday-life, i.e. "Ingen kommer undan (Inte ens i Sverige)" and "Stopp" - a track that almost forecasts her Scandinavian hit single "Jag kommer" (Satan i gatan, 2011).
Overall, it's a good attempt but generally the album lacks great songs.
24 August 2013
Ryuichi Sakamoto "BTTB" (1998)
BTTB
release date: Nov. 26, 1998
format: cd (1999 international issue)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Ryuichi Sakamoto
label: Sony Classical - nationality: Japan
Tracklist: 1. "Energy Flow" - 2. "Put Your Hands Up - Piano Version" - 3. "Railroad Man - Piano Version" - 4. "Opus" (4 / 5) - 5. "Sonatine" (4 / 5) - 6. "Intermezzo" (live) - 7. "Lorenz and Watson" (4 / 5) - 8. "Choral No. 1" - 9. "Choral No. 2" - 10. "Bachata" - 11. "Chanson" - 12. "Prelude" - 13. "Uetax" - 14. "Aqua" - 15. "Tong Poo" (live) - 16. "Reversing"
Studio album by Ryuichi Sakamoto released in 1998, originally in Japan only. An international release was issued in 1999, however the tracklist is not the same on these, in fact they nearly appear as two different releases sharing the same title, which btw. is shortened for 'Back To The Basics'. The two releases share 12 tracks and have four tracks that differ.
Anyway, this the international version is truly fine. Sakamoto has often played with a clear classical touch but on this he goes all the way, releasing a pure solo piano album with Satie-inspired prolonged music which makes it near impressionist classical compositions.
I'm quite fond of this one.
[ allmusic.com 3 / 5 stars ]
release date: Nov. 26, 1998
format: cd (1999 international issue)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Ryuichi Sakamoto
label: Sony Classical - nationality: Japan
Tracklist: 1. "Energy Flow" - 2. "Put Your Hands Up - Piano Version" - 3. "Railroad Man - Piano Version" - 4. "Opus" (4 / 5) - 5. "Sonatine" (4 / 5) - 6. "Intermezzo" (live) - 7. "Lorenz and Watson" (4 / 5) - 8. "Choral No. 1" - 9. "Choral No. 2" - 10. "Bachata" - 11. "Chanson" - 12. "Prelude" - 13. "Uetax" - 14. "Aqua" - 15. "Tong Poo" (live) - 16. "Reversing"
Studio album by Ryuichi Sakamoto released in 1998, originally in Japan only. An international release was issued in 1999, however the tracklist is not the same on these, in fact they nearly appear as two different releases sharing the same title, which btw. is shortened for 'Back To The Basics'. The two releases share 12 tracks and have four tracks that differ.
Anyway, this the international version is truly fine. Sakamoto has often played with a clear classical touch but on this he goes all the way, releasing a pure solo piano album with Satie-inspired prolonged music which makes it near impressionist classical compositions.
I'm quite fond of this one.
[ allmusic.com 3 / 5 stars ]
23 August 2013
Zaz "Recto verso" (2013)
Recto verso
release date: May 10, 2013
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,14]
Track highlights: 1. "On ira" (3,5 / 5) - 2. "Comme ci, comme ça" - 3. "Gamine" - 8. "Toujours" - 11. "Oublie Loulou" (3,5 / 5) - 13. "Nous debout" (4 / 5)
I think this is an improvement from her debut. In 2011 she released the live album Live Tour: Sans tsu tsou, and without hearing it, I think, her music is well-suited for live performances. It sort of goes hand in hand with the jazz ingredient, which is ever-present in her music. I think, this her second studio album is better because it generally contains stronger and more original tracks. Some tracks are more pop-styled, like the fine closing track "Nous debout", with a chorus-based up-tempo song, and other fine tracks are much more traditional chanson and vocal jazz tracks with less orchestration. I think this is a pretty nice release.
release date: May 10, 2013
format: cd
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,14]
Track highlights: 1. "On ira" (3,5 / 5) - 2. "Comme ci, comme ça" - 3. "Gamine" - 8. "Toujours" - 11. "Oublie Loulou" (3,5 / 5) - 13. "Nous debout" (4 / 5)
I think this is an improvement from her debut. In 2011 she released the live album Live Tour: Sans tsu tsou, and without hearing it, I think, her music is well-suited for live performances. It sort of goes hand in hand with the jazz ingredient, which is ever-present in her music. I think, this her second studio album is better because it generally contains stronger and more original tracks. Some tracks are more pop-styled, like the fine closing track "Nous debout", with a chorus-based up-tempo song, and other fine tracks are much more traditional chanson and vocal jazz tracks with less orchestration. I think this is a pretty nice release.
Zaz "Zaz" (2010)
Zaz
release date: May 10, 2010
format: digital
[album rate: 2,5 / 5]
Highlight: 11. "Eblouie par la nuit"
Studio debut album by Zaz, this interesting new French gypsy jazz and chanson singer / songwriter. The music is light and refreshing but I miss interesting tracks from Zaz.
release date: May 10, 2010
format: digital
[album rate: 2,5 / 5]
Highlight: 11. "Eblouie par la nuit"
Studio debut album by Zaz, this interesting new French gypsy jazz and chanson singer / songwriter. The music is light and refreshing but I miss interesting tracks from Zaz.
Zaz
~ ~ ~
Zaz: born (May 1, 1980) in Tours, France; aka: Isabelle Geffro [birth name], is a French singer who mixes vocal jazz and chanson and French pop. Before initiating her solo career, she sang in a blues band, Fifty Fingers, and in Izar-Adatz, a band playing French variety music, and in a jazz quintet, which explains some of her mixed musical background.
~ ~ ~
22 August 2013
De Må Være Belgiere "Er det tirsdag må det være Belgien" (1983) (single)
Er det tirsdag må det være Belgien, 7'' single
release date: 1983
format: vinyl (REP 4)
[single rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Troels Møller and De Må Være Belgiere
label: Replik Muzick - nationality: Denmark
Tracklist: A) "Cirkler" - - B) 1. "Ingentid" - 2. "Synsforstyrrelse"
Single and only original release by Danish post-punk band De Må Være Belgiere consisting of Jesper Hede on vocals and guitar, Nils Skovbjerg on guitar, Jacob Leth on bass, and with Majka Bjørnager on drums. The quartet existed from '82 to '86.
Bassist Jacob Leth later joined the band The Grind.
[ collectors' item - only pressing - from €80,- ]
release date: 1983
format: vinyl (REP 4)
[single rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Troels Møller and De Må Være Belgiere
label: Replik Muzick - nationality: Denmark
Tracklist: A) "Cirkler" - - B) 1. "Ingentid" - 2. "Synsforstyrrelse"
Single and only original release by Danish post-punk band De Må Være Belgiere consisting of Jesper Hede on vocals and guitar, Nils Skovbjerg on guitar, Jacob Leth on bass, and with Majka Bjørnager on drums. The quartet existed from '82 to '86.
Bassist Jacob Leth later joined the band The Grind.
[ collectors' item - only pressing - from €80,- ]
Kitchens of Distinction "Strange Free World" (1991)
Strange Free World
release date: 1991 (Jan.?)
format: cd (US issue - 75021 5340 2)
[album rate: 4,5 / 5] [4,54]
producer: Hugh Jones
label: One Little Indian / A&M Records - nationality: England, UK
Tracklist: 1. "Railwayed" (5 / 5) - 2. "Quick as Rainbows" (4,5 / 5) - 3. "Hypnogogic" (4,5 / 5) - 4. "He Holds Her, He Needs Her" - 5. "Polaroids" (4,5 / 5) - 6. "Gorgeous Love" - 7. "Aspray" - 8. "Drive That Fast" (5 / 5) - 9. "Within the Daze of Passion" (4,5 / 5) - 10. "Under the Sky, Inside the Sea"
2nd studio album by Kitchens of Distinction released on One Little Indian at some point in January 1991 (some sources claim a promo was released in Mar. '90, some that the first actual release took place in Jun. '90, others point to Nov./Dec. '90, though most sources file it as from 1991. It appears more certain that the US cd issue on A&M was issued in March '91). Like the debut, it's one of the absolute best releases of the year. When a band like KOD at some points betters its fantastic debut, and even in my mind also produces something that equals the best in a year, it means that it's better than most. I have rated their first two albums equally high but they're not alike. The debut album was a revelation of stylistic innovation and sheer energy. This one is the sound of a matured orchestra with a sophisticated soundscape. I love the sound of this album - it's deeper, more spacious, and the guitar work by Julian Swales is just breathtaking. Patrick Fitzgerald has a distinct melancholic way of phrasing that I think people either like or not. Needless say, I'm with the pros. "No surpiiii-iise"... ["Railwayed"] I just love the way he bends that line accompanied by Swales' gorgeous guitar. The album has no weak tracks, no fillers but several great compositions. The opening track is one of my all-time favourite KOD songs together with "Drive That Fast" (which I also own has a 12''). They're both up-tempo songs and I have played the latter a million times at maximum volume jumping around the house singing along: "Take me... - awaaay from these simple feeli-ings - I know... - there's a place on the other side of hee-ere - Take me... awaaay from these simple feeli-ings - I know... - I'll take that car and drive there faster --- I-would-never-want-to-do-that-to-you - I-would-never-want-to drive that fa-a-ast". The songs are not all up-tempo compositions like these, as one of their other great tracks on the album "Within the Daze of Passion" is a quite different composition. It's implementing progressive shoegaze and has that special trademark of theirs built on tension. The song is like a journey, or a Bolero-like dance evolving, investigating down a path into new territory and ending in a burst of (noisy) sound, like sheer bright light. The end track is the most quiet and monotone track with little focus on lyrics on account of a composition utilising horns, strings / synths and where the chorus-line is made up of a repetitious horn-section.
release date: 1991 (Jan.?)
format: cd (US issue - 75021 5340 2)
[album rate: 4,5 / 5] [4,54]
producer: Hugh Jones
label: One Little Indian / A&M Records - nationality: England, UK
Tracklist: 1. "Railwayed" (5 / 5) - 2. "Quick as Rainbows" (4,5 / 5) - 3. "Hypnogogic" (4,5 / 5) - 4. "He Holds Her, He Needs Her" - 5. "Polaroids" (4,5 / 5) - 6. "Gorgeous Love" - 7. "Aspray" - 8. "Drive That Fast" (5 / 5) - 9. "Within the Daze of Passion" (4,5 / 5) - 10. "Under the Sky, Inside the Sea"
2nd studio album by Kitchens of Distinction released on One Little Indian at some point in January 1991 (some sources claim a promo was released in Mar. '90, some that the first actual release took place in Jun. '90, others point to Nov./Dec. '90, though most sources file it as from 1991. It appears more certain that the US cd issue on A&M was issued in March '91). Like the debut, it's one of the absolute best releases of the year. When a band like KOD at some points betters its fantastic debut, and even in my mind also produces something that equals the best in a year, it means that it's better than most. I have rated their first two albums equally high but they're not alike. The debut album was a revelation of stylistic innovation and sheer energy. This one is the sound of a matured orchestra with a sophisticated soundscape. I love the sound of this album - it's deeper, more spacious, and the guitar work by Julian Swales is just breathtaking. Patrick Fitzgerald has a distinct melancholic way of phrasing that I think people either like or not. Needless say, I'm with the pros. "No surpiiii-iise"... ["Railwayed"] I just love the way he bends that line accompanied by Swales' gorgeous guitar. The album has no weak tracks, no fillers but several great compositions. The opening track is one of my all-time favourite KOD songs together with "Drive That Fast" (which I also own has a 12''). They're both up-tempo songs and I have played the latter a million times at maximum volume jumping around the house singing along: "Take me... - awaaay from these simple feeli-ings - I know... - there's a place on the other side of hee-ere - Take me... awaaay from these simple feeli-ings - I know... - I'll take that car and drive there faster --- I-would-never-want-to-do-that-to-you - I-would-never-want-to drive that fa-a-ast". The songs are not all up-tempo compositions like these, as one of their other great tracks on the album "Within the Daze of Passion" is a quite different composition. It's implementing progressive shoegaze and has that special trademark of theirs built on tension. The song is like a journey, or a Bolero-like dance evolving, investigating down a path into new territory and ending in a burst of (noisy) sound, like sheer bright light. The end track is the most quiet and monotone track with little focus on lyrics on account of a composition utilising horns, strings / synths and where the chorus-line is made up of a repetitious horn-section.
An all-time favourite.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]
1991 Favourite releases: 1. Talk Talk Laughing Stock - 2. Van Morrison Hymns to the Silence - 3. Kitchens of Distinction Strange Free World
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]
1991 Favourite releases: 1. Talk Talk Laughing Stock - 2. Van Morrison Hymns to the Silence - 3. Kitchens of Distinction Strange Free World
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)