Spleen and Ideal [PA]Dead Can Dance
Release Date: 11/18/2008
Original Release:
1985
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1046519_CD
UPC # 652637270723
Label: 4AD (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Dead Can Dance
Engineer: John A. Rivers; Jonathan Dee Producer: Dead Can Dance; John A. Rivers Distributor: Alternative Dis. Alliance Notes: Personnel: Lisa Gerrard, Brendan Perry (vocals); Martin McCarrick, Gus Ferguson (cello); Simon Hogg, Richard Avison (trombone); James Pinker, Tony Ayres (timpani). Audio Remasterer: John A. Rivers. SPLEEN AND IDEAL is a profoundly different sounding record than its self-titled predecessor. It seems to have been recorded in a completely different time, perhaps by the 14th century ancestors of Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard, if they had access to electric guitars and synthesizers. The tracks are all stately, muted affairs that actually managed to evoke the images that their titles suggest--the best example of this is the brittle, gorgeous "Circumradiant Dawn," which sounds like a hymn written to accompany Earth's very first sunrise. Among the standouts here are "De Profundis (Out of the Depths of Sorrow)," where Lisa Gerrard's voice soars above the haunting, sustained chords of the music; "Ascension," with its moody trombones and a cavernous echo so deep you can feel the space around you expanding and contracting; and "Avatar," which makes traditional rock & roll instrumentation sound astonishingly alien. SPLEEN AND IDEAL really hits its peak, however, with "Enigma of the Absolute." Brendan Perry's soft, deep voice resonates around each syllable, accompanied by sawed violins, a muted bass drum thumping in the background, and an exceptionally bright-sounding hurdy-gurdy. If you buy only one Dead Can Dance record, it ought to be this one.
Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard formed Dead Can Dance in the early 1980s in Australia, moving to London before the release of their self-titled debut in '84. Their unique sound bore a dark, gothic feel, but was far more idiosyncratic than that of the goth-rock hordes. Over the years they incorporated Early Music, electronics, Celtic flavors, and various World Music touches, all held together by the pair's trademark vocal blend. Dead Can Dance split up on a high note following their 1996 album SPIRITCHASER, with Perry and Gerrard both going on to solo work, and the latter singing on numerous film soundtracks.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Alio Die Astley, Virginia Bel Canto Blackgirls Blake, Perry Blue Nile (The) Cave, Nick Chandra, Sheila Cocteau Twins Coil Flying Saucer Attack His Name Is Alive Hope Blister (The) Hugo Largo I Am Ghost Jarboe Love Spirals Downwards Lush Lycia McKennitt, Loreena Opal Portishead Shelleyan Orphan Snakefarm Tarnation Thanatos This Mortal Coil
Influences:
Bauhaus (UK) Brecht, Bertolt Buckley, Tim Bush, Kate Clannad Cohen, Leonard Cure (The) Drake, Nick Eno, Brian Fairport Convention Joy Division Nico Pink Floyd Planxty Tangerine Dream
Similar Genres:
Alternative |