Skeleton crew the country of blinds rar




















Hot Field The Birds Of Japan You May Find A Bed. No, no es el libro de Stephen King Moebius8 27 de enero de , De ArtieC febrero 16, Orbitando 2. Le Caine 5.

Un disparo de luz 6. Planeta agua Villegas De Moebius8 noviembre 11, Speak To Me 2. Breathe 3. On The Run 4. Money 7. Us And Them 8. Any Colour You Like 9. Brain Damage Sylvan - Posthumous Silence De Moebius8 diciembre 22, Eternity Ends I Bequest Of Tears In Chains II Bitter Symphony Pane Of Truth Forgotten Virtue The Colors Changed IV A Sad Sympathy Questions Answer To Life V Message From The Past The Last Embrace Fred Frith's guitar is less prominent, but this album contains his best violin work since Art Bears' debut album.

Zeena Parkins adds some superb Sun Ra style organ to the proceedings, and her electric harp is played off against the strings to superb effect. Tom Cora is as inventive as ever on cello and bass, and also adds some demented accordion to the mix. The drumming is as powerful and unpredictable as previously - on Man Or Monkey they manage to sound like a RIO version of King Crimson's double trio line up with only half the number of musicians.

Other stand out tracks are The Border, an almost normal song structure subverted by some impossible drumming and a brilliant call and response vocal arrangement, and the comparatively lengthy You May Find A Bed, where Fred Frith finally cuts loose with some lead guitar.

The latter track also boasts some wonderful lyrics with echoes of Robert Wyatt's Dada inspired ramblings - 'There is no convenient time to break your leg' observes Fred Frith, and makes the same comment about among other things , starving, having a flat tyre and having a child. Both Skeleton Crew albums contain some superb lyrics, but it is on Country Of The Blinds that lyrics and music really complement each other to near perfection.

The instrumental interludes are also spellbinding; at times it seems impossible that three human beings are producing this noise in real time, but live recordings show that they could and did. Skeleton Crew broke up after this album, Fred Frith remarking that they were starting to sound like a normal rock and roll band.

This remark should be taken with a pinch of salt, unless your defintion of normal rock and roll is The Magic Band and Pere Ubu, but there is a grain of truth in it. While in many ways stronger than the debut album, Country of the Blinds doesn't have quite the same manic energy and inventiveness as Learn To Talk.

The second album of Skeleton Crew, Country Of Blinds also recorded in Switzerland produced by another Henry Cow alumni Hodgkinson is certainly even less accessible than its predecessor and it announces it right from the bat with the opening title track and later Man Or Monkey that is purposely sabotaged by tampering with the tapes.

Parkins' presence does not calm Frith and Cora either, but this album is slightly easier on the ears sometimes because it is less sung but when it is it still sounds like Damo-Belew and gets more often into grooves Border, Hand That Bites , giving you the chance to get used to the general weirdness. However Parkins' accordion does get on my nerves all accordions do , and with the strangeitude of the songwriting, the whole thing is a little too much for me.

There is also a fairly evident feel of 80's "funk feel" into the music as it reminds me a bit of Talking Heads and Belew-era Crimson, mostly through Frith's guitar parts. Both albums got released as a 2 on 1 Cd, with a few tracks missing, which is probably a rather good deal if you're into this stuff.

Please read the separate album entry's reviews just in case I am not convincing enough into avoiding this band.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000