Showing posts with label space rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label space rock. Show all posts

Secrets of the Lost Satellite (Dig) Review

Secrets of the Lost Satellite (Dig)
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I have been a fan of Ken Andrews since I heard Fantastic Planet for the first time. From Failure to Year Of The Rabbit and now solo, his skill and talent conitnue to shine through.
In a nutshell, this album is simply beautiful. Driven, relaxed, simple and richly textured, it brings everything together resulting in a well rounded audio adventure.
I would itemize the songs for quality but I honestly could not find a stinker on the entire album.
If you liked Ken's previous projects, you will love this album in that it is a good blend of them all with a solid dash of new tricks.

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"Write Your Story", a track Ken co-wrote with JordonZadorozny, strays from what is heard on past Failure, ON, and Rabbitreleases.Somewhere in the musical vein of Air and The Doves, the dreamyundertones of the song echo alongside luxuriant vocals."Jordon and I have worked together a lot in the past, except with theunderlying roles reversed (I was producing him in the past). We both, play,sing, engineer, and produce, so we tend to get into the nitty-gritty ofthings real quick. Jordon is one of the very few people I'm completelycomfortable writing with for my own album. He and I share a writingsensibility that we don't talk about, it just happens. Plus, he completelyunderstands my musical history and what I was trying to achieve on thisalbum. His role was primarily co-producer, but he played quite a fewinstruments on various songs, and he co-wrote probably my favorite song onthe album, "Write Your Story.""Secret Things", one of the album's standout tracks, combines tripped-outstrings with a synth-bass groove creating a demanding, viscerally appeal. Live instruments (drums, piano, and guitar) mingle with electronicelements. Strong, hooky vocals keep the song on course. "In Your Way",another stylistically dynamic track pulls the listener into an eerie,enticing space/dream world.

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Not Without Sorcery Review

Not Without Sorcery
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Helios Creed, the acid-punk, space rock genius, has been recording albums/music constantly and consistently since he first joined up with Damon Edge to make CHROME what it was, back in 1977. And of course has since carried on the CHROME legacy and as well has gone on to record his own solo material with a bevy of absolutely incredible albums- many of which are, sadly, out of print.
These tracks on "Not Without Sorcery" are what Helios recorded, for lack of better words, during an "interim" period; meaning these are recordings that lie between the recordings of his last full length album "Deep Blue Love Vacuum", and his forthcoming albums (CHROME and Helios Creed solo), which will hopefully be released sooner than later.
For anyone who isn't already a Helios/Chrome fan- this may not be the best example of what Helios is all about, as it definitely isn't produced or configured the way most of his other albums are. Nonetheless, it's Helios all the way, and a great little EP that- for those who know, love and "get" Helios- is an absolute MUST have. All of the tracks are great, and definitely showcase his knack for coming up with super catchy, and trippy riffs- along with his dark goofiness, which comes shining through in "Win you over Again" where he's definitely not hiding the fact that he truly enjoys, and has a blast making music. The fun is pretty damn contagious! In my opinion, the highlight of this EP is the track "Lion's Gate" which is spacey, catchy, and outright beautiful with a captivating intensity but, as I stated before- ALL the tracks are great. And may or may not end up appearing on any future release(s) so my final recommendation- PICK THIS UP! While you still can. There were limited copies produced, and the price seems to spike up and down depending on demand but I have yet to see this go for less than $7-8. Definitely a collector's item and one to enjoy and play as well as hold on to. :-)

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A limited 5-track EP to support his upcoming (Sept/Oct) 30-city "Dual Forces" tour. Contains two songs exclusive to this release and three songs from his forthcoming Transparency CD/2LP. Helios plays guitar, bass and synth as well as vocals; Paul Della Pella plays drums.

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Marilyn Manson - God Is in the T.V. (1999) Review

Marilyn Manson - God Is in the T.V.  (1999)
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This features all of Mr. Manson's music videos from Portrait of An American Family (1994), Antichrist Superstar (1996), Mechanical Animals (1998) and then it features live footage from the Rock is Dead tour with the band Hole (1999). All of the music videos included are played from the most recent to the earliest recorded. The videos are Coma White, Rock is Dead, I Don't like the Drugs, Dope Show, Man That You Fear, Cryptorchid, Tourniquet, Beautiful People, Sweet Dreams, Lunchbox and Get Your Gun. Coma White features Manson being the President, and tragically being shot in a JFK reenactment. Rock is Dead is just of a live performance of the band. I Don't like the Drugs is a comical with several Jerry Springerish parodies. Dope Show has Manson in his suit with breasts, and a live performance of the band. Man That You Fear has Manson as a condemned man who is going to be stoned to death. Cryptorchid features footage of death and decrepit things, hence why it was not on MTV. Tourniquet is just odd having several rotten things and insects. The video for Beautiful People has Manson on stilts dressed in all white. Sweet Dreams is more artistic than anything else. Lunchbox features a roller rink and a kid holding a lunchbox wanting to be a rock star. Get Your Guy is very dark and menacing with a live performance from the band. As for the live footage, it's the same old stuff, concert footage with behind the scenes shenanigans.

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f#a# (infinity symbol) Review

f#a# (infinity symbol)
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"The car's on fire and there's no driver at the wheel, and the sewers are all muddied with a thousand lonely suicides, and a dark wind blows. The government is corrupt, and we're on so many drugs, with the radio on and the curtains drawn. We're trapped in the belly of this horrible machine, and the machine is bleeding to death. The sun has fallen down, and the billboards are all leering, and the flags are all dead at the top of their polls."
With this harrowing, deep-voiced monologue begins _f#a#00_ (I can't make the infinity symbol so I'm improvising), a cinematic masterpiece lacking pictures but telling a lucid tale. Long, dusty, lonely elegies of smotheringly morose music illustrate a world on the brink of apocalypse. This is Godspeed You Black Emperor!'s first readily available album (forget trying to find their debut...only 33 copies were ever made ::sigh::), and to many it was their first experience to this band's stunning power. Calm but eerie silences can be extremely disarming as crescendos and loud dynamics can creep up unexpectedly, then retreat with equal abruptness. The band has seemingly concretized into a nonet, but here I'm not sure how many musicians actually worked on this record (I've heard numbers from nine to seventeen). Needless to say this is not a conventional rock band at all. I'm not sure I'd call this rock music anyway -- the writing is so structurally unusual, stylistically diverse, and instrumentally the band works more like a mini-orchestra. Each instrument, from violins to guitars to percussion, is an integral part of an organic collective rather than different musicians working together. Erm, those might sound like the same thing but they really aren't.
Each track is a lengthy suite (16-minutes, 18-minutes, and 28-minutes long) languidly flowing through several movements. Taken individually, each section is remarkable in its own right but the full power of the music is the meshing of different passages to splash different undertows of emotion over a general mood. One could easily say the individual passages have nothing to do with each other and feel randomly spliced together, but I couldn't disagree more. Each movement carries on from the last with coterminous emotions, establishing a congruous whole encapsulated within each track. Perhaps the different movements don't make cohering musical sense (though I don't know who would be actually qualified to say such a thing), but they _do_ make emotional sense.
"The preacher-man says it's the end of time...so says the preacher-man, but I don't go on what he says."
For all of GYBE!'s anguished dirges for apocalyptic endings, there is a faint sparkle of hope sluiced somewhere inside that doomed, lonely shell. This dichotomy of tone -- faint-but-defiant hope and crushing despair -- is emotionally twisting, uniquely powerful, and has resonated through me ever since I've started listening to this band. I'm not sure how long the feeling will last, but this stuff cuts deep. The crescendos this band peaks at are nothing less than utterly overpowering -- 11 minutes into track 2, "East Hastings", I come dangerously close to crawling into a dark corner, clutching myself in the fetal position, and whimpering , "mommy..."
"...hungover it's awful, the sound of trains collapsing back behind of here; outside there are distant birds circling in front of 7 miles of heavy cloud falling down, &from where you're lying one of those clouds looks like a hanged man leading a blind, indifferent horse...THIS IS MILE END MY FRIEND, the hollowed out ruins here &a train runs straight thru them... we made a record here in mile End..."
Those familiar with the band's mythic anonymity and vehement artistic credo may call them pretentious, but I'll be damned if they don't write some of the greatest music I've ever heard. Turn off the lights, crank the volume (this needs to be heard LOUD), and become lost in Mile End. It's a despairing, forlorn place, but you may never want to leave.

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Debut album from this stellar group. Not available for Japan/UK/Europe

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Drama Review

Drama
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The "Drama" album will always be somewhat of an oddity in the Yes catalogue, for no other reason that it is the only album in Yes' 35 years that does not feature leadsinger Jon Anderson. If, however, you can get beyond this, you will discover that "Drama", much like its predecessor "Tormato" is actually a lot better than belies its reputation.
The "Expanded and Remastered" version of Drama (16 tracks; 79 min.) starts of with the original 6 tracks of the album. Among the best tracks: "Machine Massiah" is a return to the 10 min. epic tracks of earlier in their career, albeit with the guitars much more upfront. "Into the Lens" is an 8. min. romper (and later was redone as "I Am a Camera" by the Buggles). "Run Through the Light", a minor hit, is a super-catchy power-ballad.
The bonus tracks go from the unnecessary (single versions of "Into the Lens" and "Run Through the Light") to the mildy interesting (instrumentals "Have We Really Got to Go Trough With This" and "Song No.4 (Satellite)", to the fascinating last 4 tracks. Those tracks are from the Roy Thomas Baker (famed for producing Queen era-"Bohemian Rhapsody") sessions with Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman from the Fall of 1979 that eventually were abandoned. It gives a nice insight to what might have been the "logical" successor to "Tormato", but assuming that these tracks in fact were the best from those sessions, it's easy to see why the band didn't pursue them. "Golden Age" is the standout song of the four.
In all, I cannot give enough compliments to Rhino, which has done an absolute outstanding job not only with the "Drama" reissue, but with the reissue of the Yes catalogue in general. Lines notes, remastering, bonus tracks, it's all here. Even if "Drama" isn't on your top wish list of Yes albums, you'll nevertheless enjoy this particular reissue.

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Japanese SHM paper sleeve pressing. The SHM-CD [Super High Material CD] format features enhanced audio quality through the use of a special polycarbonate plastic. Using a process developed by JVC and Universal Music Japan discovered through the joint companies' research into LCD display manufacturing* SHM-CDs feature improved transparency on the data side of the disc* allowing for more accurate reading of CD data by the CD player laser head. SHM-CD format CDs are fully compatible with standard CD players. 2009.--This text refers to an alternate Audio CD edition.

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Space Ritual Review

Space Ritual
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The speil I usually give to people who turn their nose up at me when I announce my rabid Hawkwind fandom (people, by the way, who've usually never even heard any of their music) is that Neil from "The Young Ones" TV show ruined Hawkwind for an entire generation. By lumping them in with lily-livered lightweights like Genesis and by tainting them with strong hippie associations, everyone assumes they're either horrendously indulgent prog-rock, or embarrassingly dated peace-&-love musings. Hawkwind never were either.
Hawkwind, at their peak, as on '73's live "Space Ritual" double LP, were an air-tight rock'n'roll demolition unit who combined the best of trancey psychedelia and buttocks-scorching rock'n'roll. If you have the remotist interest in Krautrock or the pre-Punk school of high-energy rock a la MC5/Stooges/Pink Fairies/Deviants, then you need this in your collection.
From Dik's crazy synth whoops and bleeps thru to the sublime sci-fi spoken-word babble right up to the apocalyptic "Orgone Accumulator" (almost 10 minutes of pure sonic fist-shaking bliss), this is an album for both rock'n'roll purists and avant-prog geeks alike (I fall somewhere between the two).
Whilst nothing can compare to the original vinyl version with its fancy fold-out cover, this CD version is almost as good as it contains bonus tracks and a very well put together booklet with new photos, graphics and liner notes. Unlike many other reissues, it's nice to know that someone at the label actually put some care into it.
If you must know, everyone from Jello Biafra to John Lydon has sung the praises of this set, so do the done thing and get on it.

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UK remastered & repackaged reissue of the Britishprogressive rock act's 1973 album with 3 added bonus tracks 'You Shouldn't Do That', 'Master Of The Universe' & 'BornTo Go'. 2001.

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Hawkwind: USA Tour 1989-1990 (1989) Review

Hawkwind: USA Tour 1989-1990 (1989)
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w/ Brock-gtr/synth/vcl, Bridget Wishart (guest)-vcl, Bainbridge-kybrd/vcl, Alan Davey-bass/vcl, & Richard Chadwick-drm
According to the Amazon description this is a 1 DVD set. I purchased this some months ago when it was a 2 CD set with Disc 1 mislabeled Disc 2 and Disc 2 mislabeled Disc 1. On both discs track breaks happen in the middle of songs as much as in between them seemingly at random! I will refrain from posting the track listing as who knows which disc(s) will actually show up.
DVD 1 and some of 2 features a live concert filmed with a hand-held video cam which is probably also the source of the sound - muddy with a little hiss and noise in the background but better than most bootlegs. Video footage is primarily of the band and stage from pretty far away. Bass is a little low in the mix but the guitar sounds crisp and vocals are so-so.


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Filmed in America during the band\'s 1989-90 tour, this film finds Hawkwind in fantastic live form. The line up of Brock, Bainbridge, Davey and Chadwick power their way through a number of classics including, "Down Through The Night," "Hassan I Sabha," "Needle Gun" and "Reefer Madness." This set also includes bonus interviews and rehearsal footage.

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