måndag, mars 12, 2007

dag 1133: Where do baby beams go when they die?

I have been buying music lately and in some sort of real breakthrough for me it isn't Swedish music.

Månen hänger lågt


Bill Nelson - Getting the Holy Ghost Accross ****:

I originally bought this on prerecorded cassette and it quickly became one of my favourite albums. I tended to only listen to tapes in the car and this was without doubt the tape I played the most. Since I got my first CD player I have been on the lookout for this on CD but no shops ever seemed to stock it. Some years ago I found out it had never been released on CD and that there was a group of fans trying to get people to sent requests to the record company to try and get them to do the right thing and release it on CD. I sent them an email and kind of forgot about it until a few weeks ago when I spotted it in HMV in Leeds. I had been considerring getting a Ramstein CD (because the bass player plays a Sandberg bass), but when I saw this I felt duty bound to buy it as I had sent the record company that email some years back. I hadn't heard it for many years and although it did sound somewhat dated I had heard the songs so many times first time round that it seemed instantly familier to me. It reminds me very much of the Simple MInds album Sons and Fascination. If you liked that album you will definately like this.

Nine Inch Nails - Downward Spiral **:

I was busy trying to think of a good name for my new musical project and each time I wrote one down I googled it to see if anyone had already used it. One of the names I came up with was Downward Spiral. It turned out that it is the name of a Nine Inch Nails album so I looked it up on Wikipedia and read a few reviews on amazon where in general people were saying it was one of the all time best albums of al time. I saw that there were 2 version of the album available at the moment. One was the standard one and the other was a 2 disk special edition. The special edition was quite a bit more expensive and I knew that if I ended up really liking this I would kick myself if I didn't get the special edition. The album was recorded in the house where Sharon Tate was murdered by Charles Manson and that kind of made me feel that this album might actually just be someone trying to be controversial. I opted for the lower cost version and after a couple of plays it was the right choice. There are a few good moment on it but mainly it comes accross as someone trying to break a few bounderies. I was looking forward to hearing Hurt (the last track) as I realy like the cover of it that Johnny Cash did and that is saying something as I have never liked anything else I have heard by him. Unfortunately the NIN version just isn't a patch on the Johnny Cash version. I may play it again occaissionaly but on the whole it was a bit of a let down, whcih is a shame as I liked the Quake music that Trent Reznor did.

Muse - Absolution ***:

Since getting my new bass I have joined the bassworld forum and really enjoyed reading a lot of the threads. One thread had a few people discussing how good Muse were so I thought I would take their word for it and give them a try. They both said how good they thought the album Absolution was and as it had a song called Stockholm Syndrome on it this seemed the best one to give a try.

The openning track was amazing and I had to play it over a few times before moving on. I got as far as Stockholm syndrome and thought it was all great. It was one of those albums where I keep getting to the end of Stockholme Syndrome and then having to start again from the beginning. I have to admit that the first 5 songs are so good that I haven't actually played th whole thing through yet. The music seemd to me to be pretty unique, but then I realised that it did remind me of another group - one that I didn't know particularly well, and then it came to me, it was Queen. They remind me of Queen, only they are heaps better than Queen were - in my opinion anyway. So well worth checking out if you don't yet know them.

Emmerhoff and the Melancholy Babies - Electric Reverie *****:

I spotted this CD when I was browsing through Virgin Records in Leeds last week. I was looking at the ELP CDS and this was next to it. I liked the cover picture and I liked the fact that the name had the word Melancholy in it as I seem to be really into melancholic music at the moment. I was sensible and didn't buy it there and then - I went back to work and looked for reviews. The reviews were all good so I bought it the next day and was not at all disappointed. The album features a cover version of the song Cowboys by Portishead and it has to be on the best songs I have heard. I feel that it surpases the original. It is worth buynig the album just for this track, but the rest is really good too and it gets better with more plays. I decided that I just had to send them a myspace friend request and not only did they accept, but they put a message up on my myspace page which I think is pretty decent of them. I should also add that I felt that the trees on the cover looked like Scandinavian trees and I was right as they are from Norway.

Robin Guthrie - Continental *****:

I first heard one of the songs from this album when I spotted Robin Guthries myspace page. It sounded just like the Cocteau Twins but minus the exquiset voice of Elizabeth Fraser. I new it was only a metter of time before I bought this and I ended up downloading it from iTunes after failing to find it in Leeds. It is great music to listen to while working so that what I have been doing. In fact it is possible that I have listened to this album more than all the others reviewed in this post. I should also add that Mr Guthrie has a jolly enjoyable blog.

Big Star - Third***:

This Mortal Coil covered a couple of songs from this CD on their first album (It'll End in Tears) so I thought it would be good to hear the originals. There are 2 tracks from this album on the "It'll end in tears" TMC album and as the TMC covers are usualy pretty different from the originals I had no idea what to expect of the originals. It turned out thet the originals were pretty similar to the ocvers and wher I thought Howard Devoto was probably being pretty left field in his singing on Holocaust - it seemed to me that he was just trying to be as close to the singing on the original as he could. All in all I liked both the songs that TMC covered and I quite liekd a few others, but this is not an album I have felt compelled to return to much. I prefer listening to It'll end in tears as the other songs on it are beter than the others songs on Third.

There are a few more new bands I have spotted and may be making a few more purchases pretty soon. Reviews will no doubt follow at some point.

4 kommentarer:

ab sa...

Ah there you are...... I enjoyed that even though I am no muso, thank you fo rthe Simple Minds reference though, most helpful.

ab sa...

And nice photo....

Dominic sa...

Thankyou.

It was taken on my mobile phone next to the bottle banks in Asda carpark Livingston one evening last year.

ab sa...

I wondered.