Rock - what are you listening to?

Rock/Blues/Jazz/World/Folk/Country etc.
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DaveF
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by DaveF »

Metallica time until the witch comes home....... ;-)

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"I may skip. I may even warp a little.... But I will never, ever crash. I am your friend for life. " -Vinyl.
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by fergus »

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mcq
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by mcq »

DaveF wrote:Metallica time until the witch comes home....... ;-)

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It's been a while since I listened to Metallica, Dave, but once upon a time I was obsessed with their first four albums (and the excellent Cliff 'Em All video that was issued as a tribute to Cliff Burton) and I have very happy memories of the concert they played in Dun Laoghaire in 1988 in support of the Justice album (which also happened to be my very first concert). I think the venue was the Top Hat, a small club with a maximum capacity of 500 or so, and it was a veritable sweatbox that night. I particularly remember wonderful versions of Welcome Home (Sanitarium) , One and the title track from Justice. A relatively short set - 85 minutes or so - but the band played like they meant every moment, unlike the bloated 2.5 hour concert that they played a few years later at the Point in support of the Black album. Despite the critical adulation the Black album received, it felt like a serious disappointment to me after Justice (as did every subsequent album, but the documentary, Some Kind of Monster, was hilarious).
Last edited by mcq on Sat Apr 16, 2011 12:06 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Diapason
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by Diapason »

mcq, I'll admit you've surprised me here. I wish I'd been at that gig, but my Metallica fandom would come later. Master of Puppets remains their greatest album IMO.
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mcq
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by mcq »

Diapason wrote:mcq, I'll admit you've surprised me here. I wish I'd been at that gig, but my Metallica fandom would come later. Master of Puppets remains their greatest album IMO.
Yes, it was a great gig, but I also remember other fans raving about the show Metallica played in support of the Master of Puppets album at the SFX and grumbling that Jason Newsted was a poor replacement for the late lamented Cliff Burton. My favourite album was the Justice album, but Master of Puppets comes a very close second. My favourite song, though, was Fade to Black.
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cybot
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by cybot »

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DaveF
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by DaveF »

mcq wrote:
Diapason wrote:mcq, I'll admit you've surprised me here. I wish I'd been at that gig, but my Metallica fandom would come later. Master of Puppets remains their greatest album IMO.
Yes, it was a great gig, but I also remember other fans raving about the show Metallica played in support of the Master of Puppets album at the SFX and grumbling that Jason Newsted was a poor replacement for the late lamented Cliff Burton. My favourite album was the Justice album, but Master of Puppets comes a very close second. My favourite song, though, was Fade to Black.
I was a late comer to Metallica. I never really gave them a chance when I was younger but it was the S&M album and the Cunning Stunts DVD that opened them up to me. I went back then and bought all the albums on CD. I'm in the process of picking them up on vinyl too. I got Puppets today on LP. I find it difficult to choose between Puppets and Justice but if pushed I'd go for Puppets. I wouldnt be too fond of Reload and St Anger at all.
"I may skip. I may even warp a little.... But I will never, ever crash. I am your friend for life. " -Vinyl.
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cybot
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by cybot »

A long lost and unfairly forgotten classic...


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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMZZ1XeO ... ata_player
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cybot
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by cybot »

Was dragged kicking and screaming to a performance of Chess in the local theatre. A tiny piece of this when I got home made me feel at ease again :-) An unjustly ignored classic...the first minimalistic version, I mean.


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Not the original cover. Apparently this is the re-recorded version with guitars....



A review:

This is a wonderful monstrosity of an album. Edgar Allen Poe's story is given exactly the right treatment within this musical genre - akin to a darker and electronic Sondheim or Lloyd-Webber - and it is a crime that this is now a rare recording, when it should be being celebrated worldwide by all those with a love of the theatrically dramatic and the musically gothic.

Reviewers were initially unfair to this album - no doubt comparing it to more immediate and fashionable pop and rock in their pile - and this combination of dissappointing reviews (though few actually bothered at all)and low marketing exposure (if any) meant that few - other than already established Hammill fans - would be aware of this. However, it it still not too late for this record to get the recognition it truly deserves.

The album tells the story of Poe's Usher family in a very direct way, with Chris Judge-Smith (the writer of the libretto) even lifting exact passages from Poe at times, giving an astonishing lyrical intensity throughout. It begins fairly sedately - prettily even - but soon an overwhelming sense of dread emerges as we are introduced to the madness of the Brother Roderick and the desperately bleak situation he shares with his sister Madeline. However, despite the gathering gloom that (rightly) pervades this story, Hammill injects fantastic multi-layered melodies - that resemble rock songs more than classical opera most of the time, despite the lack of guitars here - and after several plays, these become fascinating and addictive and stand up individually even without the context of the whole album. On first hearing, I thought the album to be too long, but with repeated listens, I realised nothing could be ommitted.

All the players here are on top form - and the juxtapositions of voices such as Andy bell (of Erasure) and Lene Lovich really work - but the real master here is undoubtedly Hammill himself, who has given himself a platform to really go over the top with his vocal range, pushing it to the limit, and immersing himself in the insanity of the character that is Roderick Usher. In particular, there is one acappella track (the voices of the house) that is almost beyond belief in its power and ambition. There is little room for subtlety here, but it isn't needed amidst this delerious and ecstatic performance, that actually benefits from its wilful abandonment - and without any crude rock schtick that plagues some 'rock' opera - and is, in its own way, remarkably sincere.

So, all in all a major achievement in my opinion and a great tribute to it's source material. If you genuinely like the dark and the gothic, and are open-minded enough to listen to songs that tell stories and are bereft of straightforward rock structures - then this is for you. If you like the idea of a story about friendship and love that is also about inbreeding and incest, insanity, decay, destruction,comas, burial alive and death - shot through with cobwebs and candles, organ music and the breathing of bats in the walls - then you will love this.

Every Poe cliche is there, as you would expect, but Hammill renders them all afresh with his vivid musical imagination, casting a mischievous and blinding light on the gloom. Backgound music it is not - and no, not one guitar solo. Genius nevertheless - and for the moment, absurdly under-rated.
mcq
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Re: Rock - what are you listening to?

Post by mcq »

cybot wrote:Was dragged kicking and screaming to a performance of Chess in the local theatre. A tiny piece of this when I got home made me feel at ease again :-) An unjustly ignored classic...the first minimalistic version, I mean.


Image

Not the original cover. Apparently this is the re-recorded version with guitars....



A review:

This is a wonderful monstrosity of an album. Edgar Allen Poe's story is given exactly the right treatment within this musical genre - akin to a darker and electronic Sondheim or Lloyd-Webber - and it is a crime that this is now a rare recording, when it should be being celebrated worldwide by all those with a love of the theatrically dramatic and the musically gothic.

Reviewers were initially unfair to this album - no doubt comparing it to more immediate and fashionable pop and rock in their pile - and this combination of dissappointing reviews (though few actually bothered at all)and low marketing exposure (if any) meant that few - other than already established Hammill fans - would be aware of this. However, it it still not too late for this record to get the recognition it truly deserves.

The album tells the story of Poe's Usher family in a very direct way, with Chris Judge-Smith (the writer of the libretto) even lifting exact passages from Poe at times, giving an astonishing lyrical intensity throughout. It begins fairly sedately - prettily even - but soon an overwhelming sense of dread emerges as we are introduced to the madness of the Brother Roderick and the desperately bleak situation he shares with his sister Madeline. However, despite the gathering gloom that (rightly) pervades this story, Hammill injects fantastic multi-layered melodies - that resemble rock songs more than classical opera most of the time, despite the lack of guitars here - and after several plays, these become fascinating and addictive and stand up individually even without the context of the whole album. On first hearing, I thought the album to be too long, but with repeated listens, I realised nothing could be ommitted.

All the players here are on top form - and the juxtapositions of voices such as Andy bell (of Erasure) and Lene Lovich really work - but the real master here is undoubtedly Hammill himself, who has given himself a platform to really go over the top with his vocal range, pushing it to the limit, and immersing himself in the insanity of the character that is Roderick Usher. In particular, there is one acappella track (the voices of the house) that is almost beyond belief in its power and ambition. There is little room for subtlety here, but it isn't needed amidst this delerious and ecstatic performance, that actually benefits from its wilful abandonment - and without any crude rock schtick that plagues some 'rock' opera - and is, in its own way, remarkably sincere.

So, all in all a major achievement in my opinion and a great tribute to it's source material. If you genuinely like the dark and the gothic, and are open-minded enough to listen to songs that tell stories and are bereft of straightforward rock structures - then this is for you. If you like the idea of a story about friendship and love that is also about inbreeding and incest, insanity, decay, destruction,comas, burial alive and death - shot through with cobwebs and candles, organ music and the breathing of bats in the walls - then you will love this.

Every Poe cliche is there, as you would expect, but Hammill renders them all afresh with his vivid musical imagination, casting a mischievous and blinding light on the gloom. Backgound music it is not - and no, not one guitar solo. Genius nevertheless - and for the moment, absurdly under-rated.
Yes, Dermot, Usher is seriously underrated. I'd love to hear the re-recorded version sometime (there are some excerpts on YouTube) but both versions are unfortunately out of print at the moment.
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