Showing posts with label Dead Can Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dead Can Dance. Show all posts

25 April, 2014

The Desert Island Post or Life Affected Albums - Part Three

It's getting a bit harder to pinpoint these. New one's keep creeping into my thoughts, and then I feel guilty because my intention was to keep this to a list of 10. I don't feel like I can keep this to a list of 15 at this point. I've been revisiting a lot of the albums I have on my hand-written list, and I don't know if I can simply say that I love them anymore, I think a few of these changed something, or introduced something for me. Let's just see what happens...


R.L. BURNSIDE: FIRST RECORDINGS
The world of blues, Chicago Blues, Delta Blues, wasn't foreign to me, I'd exposed myself to a variety of artists over the years that I'd appreciated. It was hearing, "Like A Bird Without A Feather" on WMNF late one night that shifted curiosity into passion. As painful or sad as all predecessors had been, nothing struck me like the lyrics and playing of R.L. Burnside. I was lucky enough to catch a documentary one afternoon, in which a young, white guy made it his passion to track down delta blues legends and record them. R.L. Burnside was prominently featured, and his captivity over me swelled into full blown infatuation. Stripped down, or electrified, his humble approach to a life most would consider not worth living, translates musically into a beautiful, rhythmic tragedy. It seethes and pulses, and probably made the ladies hungry. Maybe not a pioneer in the genre, but an inspiration to all that followed. His visceral retelling of pain via Son House, Bukka White and Robert Johnson is as if a man possessed by their wrecked ghosts.


PORTISHEAD: DUMMY
Yes, it was "Sour Times" that urged me to buy this disc. I was captivated by the atmospheric, film noir, haunted approach to the song. I really had no idea I was going to be treated to an entire album that essentially came from no recognizable direction. There was an element familiar to me, but that had been years earlier - and no part of me was ready to equate Portishead with Neneh Cherry's, "Homebrew". The only way I could describe Portishead to anyone, was to paint a picture of an immense space station floating through the nether regions of the galaxy, and Portishead as the lounge act that has performed every night for the past 20 years, playing the same songs, tired and withdrawn. I had no idea the achievement I unlocked was my own self-discovery of trip-hop. It was the moment I pieced it together, Geoff Barrow was the common denominator, producing many of the tracks for Neneh Cherry, and responsible for the inescapably beautiful and haunting, "Dummy". It wasn't just that the music was an alien lifeform to me, Beth Gibbons' vocals cut straight to the heart and stirred the phantoms of sorrow, loss, and love. I forgive the exhaustive brainwashing of "Sour Times", it gave foundation for the albums that followed, and without it, my path through the world of trip hop may never have been ventured.


THE BREEDERS: POD
This was a purchase on a whim. I had no idea the band was fronted by Kim Deal, or that the $19 I paid for it would translate into roughly 75 Cents per minute of listening time. What I immediately realized was that "Pod" was the most beautiful, cohesive collection of music I'd ever heard to that point. Every song was infectious, and the lyrics were a mysterious, innocent swathe that at times bore talons. I'm embarrassed to admit it, but I was so enamored with this release, that I shared it as my own music to friends and family. It's a devastatingly short album that tugs and tugs at you for more, and sadly, the band never came close to achieving such delicate brilliance again. I want there to be no other Breeders than what offered such intoxication as "Pod". It serves me as a beacon to which nothing could follow. Nothing else in my collection parallels what I discovered on "Pod", it stands alone in it's brilliant beauty.



DEAD CAN DANCE: AION
I used to work with Mike Ness at a wind-chime factory. Well, not really, but he looked like him, and drove a '67 Falcon, and a Harley, and he loved music. And he was Scottish - which really was the only indicator that he may not be Mike Ness. We developed a report and began sharing music with one another. One Monday, he presented me with a stack of Caster U.S.M., Candyflip, a bunch of other horrid crap, and DCD's, "Aion". Until that moment, I'd had zero exposure to Neo-Classical, so needless to say, I was floored. I sat in my tiny bedroom playing the disc over and over. I couldn't figure out how I'd lived 20 years on the planet and didn't know about Dead Can Dance. It was a beautiful mélange of traditional (and not in the folk sense - but the medieval sense), dance, tribal, and the most powerful, chill-inducing voice my ears had ever heard. If Lisa Gerard isn't an immaculate conception of a choir of angels - then such a thing simply can't exist. Never before had such a procession of history and culture passed before me, leaving me to seriously question my love of music. If something so stunning existed without my ever knowing, then certainly my grasp of music was far too narrow and jaded. To this day, hearing Lisa Gerard sing ushers back the flood of emotion and wonder from my first listen to "Aion". This is a band that has it's mimics, some of them finding success, but no one presents history and culture with an authenticity that Dead Can Dance does. And more importantly - no one else can play with the same authenticity that Dead Can Dance does.


OPAL: HAPPY NIGHTMARE, BABY
Paisley Underground: I was a fan. Redd Kross, Jellyfish, Rain Parade... it was a scene full of talent and influence. But it wasn't paisley I was seeking when I picked up this album, I was looking for something brooding and dark and I believed from the title and the cover photos, I might be on to something. Like many of the albums on this list, I was completely unprepared for what happened next. Opal was perfection at psychedelic and the elements that made up the paisley scene, but there were no rainbows or fields of marigolds here. "Happy Nightmare, Baby" was a black & white pictorial of loss, vices, and simply existing. If Opal were a mood ring, they'd be black and cracked. Fuck your incense, your body paint, your wanting to be naked in public - this is naked in a fetal position with a bottle of wine and the curtains drawn. Broadening your mind here means seeing the horrid reality by which we barely exist, withdrawn and unimpressed, which is exactly what solidified this album as a part of my self-awareness within the world around me.


Part four??

14 August, 2012

Dead Can Dance - "Anastasis"

I was 24, I think, the last time I bought something new from Dead Can Dance, I was probably barely 20 when I bought something from Dead Can Dance that I loved from Track One to Track End. I am guilty of being utterly in love with Lisa Gerrard's voice, and cynical of nearly everything Brendan Perry does. I admit, that disdain has diminished over the years and I have found myself beckoned helplessly by his inviting, warm tone. I guess I could expect one of two things, more Dead Can Dance; or try passionately to meld the directions Lisa and Brendan have gone individually in the last two decades into what I'd imagine the new album to be. I'm pleased to say -it's both and it's neither.

"Anastasis" is comprised of eight epic-length tracks comprising a nearly hour-long journey through history; through diverged paths; and familiarity. Not that any of that is a complaint, because in all honesty, my fear was to purchase an album so foreign to the concept of DCD that it would ruin a dream. However, there is a part of me that hoped in some small way, that influeces of the past two decades might somehow breathe a vague and ghostly kiss upon these recordings. Sadly though... no. Is that a bad thing, not if you really just wanted a new Dead Can Dance record and that 14-year gap is utterly invisible to you.

Children Of The Sun is easily recognizable as a danceable, neo-classical, Dead Can Dance song that fits on "Aion", "Spiritchaser" - seriously, take your pick. You know that track from each album that dj's lust over to remix, and if it really were the 90's, there would be techno, rave, and house mixes well in the works.

Haunting and speall-weaving is Anabasis, our first treatment on the disc to the powerful vocals of Lisa Gerrard. She truly is the voice of the earth and all it's elements. Simple metallic percussion rhythmically drives the track. This is another example of DCD and what you've come to expect, but the musical tone is more reminiscent of the wordly influence the band tackled on "Spiritchaser". If the entire album had been 60 minutes of this song, I'd have nothing but total love and admiration for it.

Agape is another danceable, neo-classical beauty with Western Asian elements. Another track accenting the vocal range of Lisa Gerrard, and is more familiar as her solo efforts, and recalls Yulunga. Again, relying on simple percussion, and a eerie collage of strings and dulcimer.

Midway thru "Anastasis" it begins to shake it's warm coat of familiarity. Brendan Perry makes a sleepy and melodic vocal effort on Amnesia and it's utterly inviting. Heavy on orchestra, the only criticism I can offer is that the hign-end percussion is off-putting. It's forgivable because the wash of Perry's voice and the strings is so evocative and comforting that it's hard to be dismissive of anything musically or otherwise.

Kiko offers more Western Asian influence. Though a lush track, this is the least inviting. Each aspect; Gerrard's vocals, guitar, percussion, piano are beautiful, however they only have the depth and feel of a new age track. It's rather unflattering and flat. I don't feel transported, invoked, or even enpassioned. Not forgivable this time.

Sadly, Opium barely offers a respite from the heavy bass and drums. Brendan's undulating vocal assault is intoxicating, and the string arrangements are breathtaking. This is a Brendan Perry track beginning to end, and it could literally have been lifted straight from his recent solo works. In that context it's lost, but on this release it's another exhibition of his amazing talents and it's enough candy to make a return for more.

Return Of The She-King is a song much too long overdue in embracing Celtic, Irish, Scottish roots. Lisa's vocals are part of the mystery, soul-stealing really. Her voice is layered; part of the instrumentation, as well as above the journey. It evokes images of lush, green hillsides and faerie circles. The percussive bells has me excited to put this song on at Christmas. It's beautiful and utterly calming. Two-thirds into the song, a military snare invites the vocals of Brendan Perry and finally you have an element of Dead Can Dance that has gone missing for too long. Lisa and Brendan sharing vocals. They accompany each other so well, and perhaps because both have such powerful voices, it's a measure of avoidance, but this is so captivating to hear, but all too brief. It's almost as if it's presented to you the listener as a gift, a thank you for years of supporting them and embracing them again.

All In Good Time highlights Brendan Perry's vocal talents, and this is a nice blending of where he is now musically, with what he offered to Dead Can Dance. This is a stunning track, music is the soundscape beneath the liquor of his voice. Cresting strings, synthesizers and subdued percussion. You expect it, but this is his strength, and he carries it here as well as he ever has.

Yes, absolutely go buy, "Anastasis". There is nothing here that will disappoint you, and if you can afford to go do so, go see them. Sadly, I will not be able to go, though I fully intended to. I will have to settle on Austin City Limits, and just be happy with that. This album is rich and lush, and renews my passion for DCD that had been shattered by their final releases. There's rebirth throughout and it doesn't at all sound forced or compromised, it's truly terrifc muscianship to it's core and it feels utterly natural. I was full of apprehension, but I am happy to say I was taken on a journey and it was amazing.