SMC: Adorable - Against Perfection

2

Comments

  • transplant
    transplant Posts: 1,088
    Sorry for the not-so-great interpretation, I have to throw these thoughts out quick as I will not be around for most of the remaining year.

    Strange (well maybe not really) my favorite tracks on here are the ones you mentioned in your first post. Homeboy, Favourite Fallen Idol, Sistine Chapel Ceiling, Sunshine Smile. So it is the more fiercely guitar driven tracks I enjoy the most.

    I thoroughly enjoyed the music that came out of the early 90's, makes me wish I watched 120 minutes back then, I just didn't catch on to it until later in life.

    I would be interested in a Where are they Now type of story here. I mean this is a great CD with a ton of promise. Where did they go? It makes you think that perhaps these guys are producers, still mingling around the music scene, cranking out a guitar or 2 on a Bloc Party single or perhaps the new Rob Dickenson soon to be released disc (which would be sweet).

    Thanks for the selection, another band that slipped through the cracks unfortunately. I can almost guarantee Homeboy will get placed on a mix of mine in the near future.

    Cheers!
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    transplant wrote:
    Sorry for the not-so-great interpretation, I have to throw these thoughts out quick as I will not be around for most of the remaining year.

    Strange (well maybe not really) my favorite tracks on here are the ones you mentioned in your first post. Homeboy, Favourite Fallen Idol, Sistine Chapel Ceiling, Sunshine Smile. So it is the more fiercely guitar driven tracks I enjoy the most.

    I thoroughly enjoyed the music that came out of the early 90's, makes me wish I watched 120 minutes back then, I just didn't catch on to it until later in life.

    I would be interested in a Where are they Now type of story here. I mean this is a great CD with a ton of promise. Where did they go? It makes you think that perhaps these guys are producers, still mingling around the music scene, cranking out a guitar or 2 on a Bloc Party single or perhaps the new Rob Dickenson soon to be released disc (which would be sweet).

    Thanks for the selection, another band that slipped through the cracks unfortunately. I can almost guarantee Homeboy will get placed on a mix of mine in the near future.

    Cheers!


    Yeah, transplant, glad you enjoyed it... Adorable certainly deserved such a better luck, I mean I've been listening to this albums obsessively in the last 3 months, and it still sounds better and more clever than most new bands getting all the hype. I think they remained an obscure band mainly because the indifference of their record company (Creation) to give them good promotion on both sides of the Atlantic. All I know, as I told, is after this album they released a second that I've never seen anywhere and an EP. Then they split and the singer, Pete Fijalowski, with his brother formed a band called Polak, that according to rumors I've heard followed on the steps of Adorable's sound but with not so good tunes. I'm just grateful I discovered them on time, as I told you this album grew on me with time, just to find after many years I was coming back to my old tape too often to not grab the cd, but then I also remember every time I went to my local record store I saw this album on the bargain bin, so I thought "will get it sometime soon, none's gonna grab it", and when I finally wanted to get it, it was gone... until this year that I finally decided to order the cd because this was an important 90's album for me. Since I have it not a day has gone without blasting at least one track from it, specially Homeboy, but also I'll Be Your Saint, Favourite Fallen Idol, A To Fade In... I think is great from beginning to end.

    A final note on the 120 minutes thing... I just looooooved that show back in the day, when Henry Rollins and other "indie" artists used to be the VJ's. I think my whole teenage years could be defined by the music played at that show back then, I remember sundays sleeping late just to catch the show and take note of all the bands I discovered there. I just love that time of my life because it's exactly the same time when I realized music was my salvation, and it wasn't only a "teenager thing", as I remembered my father put it, but that this addiction, this love for music would remain with me forever, because my life would be lacking something. The later versions of the show sucked pretty much, and now you see MTV... do they even play music now? But that time... that time was beautiful, and wild and naive... I really miss having a show like that. But well, everything gets old, I guess.
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"
  • transplant
    transplant Posts: 1,088
    barcoach wrote:
    A final note on the 120 minutes thing... I just looooooved that show back in the day, when Henry Rollins and other "indie" artists used to be the VJ's.
    you had 120 minutes, I had Headbangers Ball :) I still have an '87 episode with Metal Church VJ'ing. lol.
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    transplant wrote:
    you had 120 minutes, I had Headbangers Ball :) I still have an '87 episode with Metal Church VJ'ing. lol.

    I was also a metal freak, thing is that was at a younger age and didn't have cable tv at home... when I was like 17-18 I started to change my music orientation to a more "alternative" (hate that definition) scope, and that's when they got cable at my house and got hooked with 120... I still had heart for Headbanger's though. Today... man, so many memories from the past, just a few seconds ago I was watching this photo we're gonna publish of an 80's "robot" that I had as gift on some Xmas. Is almost scarry how time goes by... but you still can call me a "young dude", ok?
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    Come on, don't tell me only 3 persons are interested on the poster... or should I consider all the members of the SMC without asking?
    Anyway, I can wait 'til next week to do this. Please if there's more people interested send me the PM.
    take care.
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"
  • VEDHEAD27
    VEDHEAD27 Posts: 3,091
    Well I am definitely interested in that poster barcoach. ;) If more people aren't then hey, it's all good...less competition. :D

    Anyways, onto a review of your selection. I've listened to it about 3 times through now and each time I'm liking it more and more. I will tell you one thing...I'm definitely gonna be passing this onto a few friends that I KNOW will absolutely LOOOVE it. This sound so takes me back. It really does capture a certain feeling from the past but it also has a fresh, modern sound that fits with the current times as well. It's familiar and fresh all at once. I did find myself loving the lyrics and the emotion behind the songs the most...words & music alike. It's poppy & sincere. The songs are definitely well written.

    I think this was very nicely summed up...
    barcoach wrote:

    Now, this is a record that really makes me think of its music in terms of colour, I don't know but those guitars building a tender melody to finally blast passionate distorsion just make me think of some impresssionist painters or remind me the work of Jackson Pollock and other abstract expresionism artist


    I completely agree with this! This is music drenched in color for sure. These sounds just twirl around you and paint you into the picture it seems. I can't stop hearing it in the background of a movie ya know? Images go along with this without a doubt. It creates quite the mood. I actually really enjoyed the way it mixed with these cloudy, beautiful, rainy days over here. The passion behind the disorted guitar is perfectly in sync with the passion behind these emotionally driven vocals & lyrics. It's such a great match. The 2 feed off each other in a beautiful way.


    Part of me kinda feels like this isn't really the type of music I listen to...yet everytime I'm exposed to it I do enjoy it. A very close friend of mine on the board here has exposed me more to bands like New Order, Joy Divison, Echo and The Bunnymen & it does sink in. I always kind of end up feeling like "why don't I listen to this more?" Adorable is no different. The more I listen to it the more I'm reminded that I want to listen to it and should more often.



    Tracks I especially enjoyed....

    A TO FADE IN ~ Loooove the lyrics, loove these sounds. Such a pretty song. :o This is the first one that really, really grabbed me. Definitely a stand out track & the one I find myself craving the most. I can't seem to get it outta my head.


    HOMEBOY ~ BASS in your FACE! Wooo! What a hook! Love it. This one is veeery catchy! I love the way it picks up and kinda explodes at the chorus there. I also love the way he belts out "you're so beautiful" towards the end with extreme intensity...like he's not just saying it, he's trying to really convince & make it known, perhaps even to himself as the rest of the words are quite tortured. As gorgeous as his voice sounds, regardless that the music picks up and regardless of the actual "sweet" words he's singing in that part, there is definitely that despair. It's a mixture of emotions and you can really feel that confusion. He really lets loose at the end, waaay passionate & painful. The words also struck me here, especially this part....


    I want to drown beneath the waves
    I want to dig myself a shallow grave
    And hold you up for all to see
    I want to cut you up, I want to watch you bleed, ever so slowly


    Wow!


    I KNOW YOU TOO WELL ~ Another very powerful, emotion song. Amazing guitar work. I loved the sound and feel to this one. I really felt it. Love the ending!


    STILL LIFE ~ This is a top fav. Everything about it just tugged at my heart. Looooved this one. So different from the rest of the album too. It just really, really stood out.


    He was buried without a name
    She buried love very much the same
    This is not love, it's just the way things are


    Gorgeous!


    I'LL BE YOUR SAINT ~ What a perfect way to close the album! Mmmm more great bass times, and the layers of guitars that ooze in are awesome! This feels gooood. It sounds like a classic song, one I've heard many times before...guess it's just an instant classic like that. It definitely stuck with me and had me singing along. I always think it's great when an album ends with a very memorable track.




    Thank you for exposing me to this barcoach. And thank you in advance from my dear friend that is gonna looooooooove this to pieces. :D




    P.s.I'm gonna send you the link for Esthero right now...finally. ;)
    ¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤

    "Lo√e, you know the word
    ...YOU invented it!" ~ E√

    ¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤
    ...::STONE--YOU--OWN!::...
    ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
  • thanks again, barcoach...
    i think i need some more time to write a full on review but here are some random thoughts...
    what's so great about this album is that it could well be a current hit... funny how everybody seems to like the same songs... Homeboy, Favourite Fallen Idol, Still Life, etc... my absolute favourite is A To Fade In... i didn't know it before, yet it sounds so familiar... if this song was released today by editors or bloc party it would top the alternative charts everywhere, that's for sure...
    i like the angular guitars, the walls of sound... i stand by it, at its most shoegazing moments the album sounds like my bloody valentine with audible lyrics - and great lyrics these are!
    i could start to compare the sound to lots of other 80's indie artists but i won't go there... this album is definitely a gem and i have no idea why it's not more well known... some of the popular current indie bands should name-check them as an influence more often to expose them to a wider audience, that's for sure...
    i will stick with this record for a while...
    ~~~
    Some days you wake up and sit on a park bench next to an eighty year old Russian architect, and some days you don't. I think this is my new life philosophy.

    http://epplehausradio.blogspot.com/

    pearl jam @ the astoria, london, 20/04/06
  • psycosmic wrote:
    i could start to compare the sound to lots of other 80's indie artists

    yeah, i totally agree on that one.
    I'll dig a tunnel
    from my window to yours
  • viggs20
    viggs20 Posts: 1,296
    I've had this playing in the background while I disassembled the furniture and and its closer to Pablo Honey and the brit-pop sound than My Bloody Valentine or Lush. The guitars are ringing and hooks driven rather than drenched in feedback. There isn't a single bad song on the album but the ones I like the most are Glorious, I know you too well, Sistine Chapel Ceiling and Still life.
    "Reality continues to ruin my life." - Calvin & Hobbes.

    www.stopglobalaids.com www.indymedia.org www.ecologyfund.com www.thehungersite.com www.amnesty.org www.pratham.org www.icbl.org www.care2.com/click2donate
  • wolfbear
    wolfbear Posts: 3,965
    Ok, stupid question. Where do I download this? Everywhere I've tried says it's not available. Amazon had one for sale for $45.00. Help! Thanks in advance. Sorry if I missed something. :)
    "I'd rather be with an animal." "Those that can be trusted can change their mind." "The in between is mine." "If I don't lose control, explore and not explode, a preternatural other plane with the power to maintain." "Yeh this is living." "Life is what you make it."
  • AndySlash
    AndySlash Posts: 3,287
    I have two qualms with this record-

    -it sounds as if I am listening to them standing at the back of an empty club. The recording is distant, I don't feel immersed by the music, rather it's being directed at me from one area. This really bothers me for some reason.

    - The singer largely has one voice- slow, talky, and a minimum range. It doesn't vary. This works for some bands, but here I think the songs would benefit with a bit more variance in the singing. Seeing you folks' comments about shoegazers kind of put this into perspective- I hadn't heard that term before, but it makes sense- but to me the music doesn't fit his singing that well. If the songs were more sullen, then sure, it'd work, but with the upbeat tempo and driving guitar present in the majority of the songs, it's a contrast in styles that just doesn't work for me.

    Otherwise it's a fairly decent album. The songs catch on to you after awhile and it rewards with repeated listens. That said, this album just isn't for me. I can definitely grasp why a lot of you are digging it, but it's just not my thing. It'll probably get a play every now and then for variety's sake, but I don't foresee it coming into regular rotation.

    Thanks for sharing.
  • the more i listen to it the more it is growing on me... every time there's a different song i love...

    too bad i didn't find their second album, "fake", anywhere yet... but here's a quick history of the band by singer pete fijalkowski (http://www.fijski.fsnet.co.uk/)

    Uh-oh - my head is going fuzzy now... too many memories.

    It's an uneasy cocktail of very happy and very sad....here goes...

    Within two pints of Adorable meeting Alan Mcghee for the first time in a pub in the centre of Coventry in January 1992, the conversation got quite heated when we asked him about the droppping of My Bloody Valentine from the label. Mcghee likened his relationship with MBV as that of a girlfriend and boyfriend, but said that he couldn't tell Kevin Shields face to face that his services were no longer required at Creation. I made Mcghee promise that if and when he came to drop Adorable from Creation he would have the guts to do so to my face.

    So was born an uneasy relationship between Adorable and Creation records, that was never really to thaw over the next two and a half years. Things started promisingly enough, our first single 'Sunshine Smile' got NME single of the week, lots of evening session play on National Radio One, number one in the indie charts and three weeks in the national top 100 charts, but had we had the advantage of a crystal ball we would have seen that this was to be our UK high point, and that it would be downhill all the way from thereon. Perhaps it's just as well you can't see into the future.

    "I'm going to come back soon in another life" (Vendetta)

    Inspired by The Smiths, and by our own insatiable appetite for buying 7"s on a Saturday morning, we were eager to release lots of singles, and we set about releasing tracks as quickly as we could. 'I'll be your saint' was perhaps a mistake as a second single, and helped to seal our fate in the eyes of the music press as 'arrogant bastards' (coupled with our own cak-handed attempts in interviews at distancing ourselves from the anti-image shoegazing movement), but Mcghee, who saw us as a punky Echo & the Bunnymen loved the idea of it ("It's rock n' roll Pete, it's rock n' roll - pure Iggy"). Whilst we could never understand why our third release 'Homeboy' (probably my favourite Adorable song) was overlooked, 'Sistine Chapel Ceiling' got us on the road back with another NME single of the week and a high Indie chart placing, in turn helping our debut LP 'Against Perfection' to a Top 75 spot in April 1993.

    A 5 week US tour promised lots and won us many friends and fans, but we found ourselves caught in the middle of an argument between Creation and our US label SBK that had nothing to do with us, and any hopes of American success were dashed on the chess board of label politics, with us playing the role of pawn extremely convincingly.

    We had other great times in Australia, Japan and across Europe, but on returning from promoting 'Against Perfection' we were a bit down, feeling that we had made as good an album as we could that we were really proud of, but that seemingly wasn't enough; the English press were at best indifferent (we hadn't been able to get an interview in the NME or Melody Maker since our debut single, though everyone seemed to think we were in every week!), and our relationship with Creation (at best described as 'lukewarm') took a turn for the worst with the Sony takeover and Mcghee's subsequent breakdown, which left us without an ally at the label. What we had to do was produce an album that would grab everyone by the proverbials, drag them into a darkened alleyway and either give them a kicking that would last a lifetime, or a damn good shag, or maybe both. Instead we recorded 'Fake'.

    Whereas 'Against Perfection' (originally titled 'Against Creation', though dropped 24 hours before we had to submit the artwork as we were worried about pushing our relationship with the label) was the sound of 21 year olds who felt that life was there ahead of them, ready to be inhaled and enjoyed ('Glorious', 'Breathless'), 'Fake' is a frail, insular, insecure album, made by four guys who felt like the world was against them ('Kangaroo Court', 'Go Easy on Her', 'Vendetta'). The song 'Radiodays' (though not especially a favourite of mine) pretty much sums up how i felt about the whole thing, with a poetic appearance of Mcghee in it to boot. ("A father figure put a gun in my hand and said, 'aim high, but don't aim for the sun son'. Blinded by my own beauty of course I did, but then that's my perogative... If it's all the same to you I want to crash my car my way."). I only listen to my records when I'm feeling particularly drunk and particularly nostalgic (funny how the two seem to go hand in hand), but through alcohol influenced ears, it isn't a bad album, it's just it isn't a great one either.

    Creation needed the figures to add up, and Adorable's didn't. Quite simply we didn't sell enough records for them, and the fact that there wasn't exactly a warm glow inside them when they thought about us as people made the decision easier. The 'dear John' phonecall came through to us in the glamorous setting of Colchester as we loaded in for a gig in late 1994. As poetic luck would have it our support band that day were The 60 Foot Dolls who had just that afternoon signed a lucrative publishing deal, and came into the venue clutching bottles of champagne, as we moped around in the suitably mournful setting of the converted church that is Colchester Arts Centre. Needless to say the call to say we were dropped didn't come from Alan Mcghee, or anyone from the label, but our long-suffering manager Eddie, so I never even got a phonecall from Alan, let alone the face to face as promised. Kevin Shields got one more phonecall than we ever got. Lucky Kevin Shields. Feeling as if we had taken a battering in the boxing ring, we called it a day after completing our European dates in late 1994 culminating in a glorious drunken night out in Brussels.

    Creation weren't a bad label, they just probably weren't the label for us - we sat slightly uncomfortably on their roster, and a lot of the people who worked there weren't really into what we were doing - whilst the sprawling bunker-like entrails of the labels offices were full of photos of bands from the label, cut out of magazines like some love-struck music-mad teenager's bedroom, we noted that there wasn't one single picture of Adorable. Creation's track record is impressive but for every Ride, Oasis and Primal Scream, there's an Adorable, a Telescopes and a Something Pretty Beautiful, lying by the wayside. To their credit, the label pretty much left us to do what we wanted, and in the early days when there was a disagrement over which track to release as a single, we could often win over Mcghee. Perhaps Adorable just existed at the wrong time; about 2-3 years before, and we would have been in with the likes of The House of Love and the whole shoegazing malarky. 3 years later and maybe we would have been on the coat-tails of Britpop. Perhaps all this sounds like I'm bitter, but believe me I'm not. Wil, Kevin, Robert and myself all had the experience of a lifetime, that has shaped who we are as people, and I think we are all better for it. Better to have loved and lost they say, than to have never loved at all.

    We never did get to set the world alight, but we got as far as striking the match.
    ~~~
    Some days you wake up and sit on a park bench next to an eighty year old Russian architect, and some days you don't. I think this is my new life philosophy.

    http://epplehausradio.blogspot.com/

    pearl jam @ the astoria, london, 20/04/06
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    psycosmic wrote:
    the more i listen to it the more it is growing on me... every time there's a different song i love...

    too bad i didn't find their second album, "fake", anywhere yet... but here's a quick history of the band by singer pete fijalkowski (http://www.fijski.fsnet.co.uk/)

    Hey, psy, that thing you found about pete fijalowski is pretty cool... and if you find that second album of theirs, don't forget to tell me!!

    A great 2006 for all the SMC members, and don't forget to contact me with your PM's if you're interested in having a chance to get that poster... only 4 people have showed interest so far.
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"
  • oh man, sorry for being late on this barcoach. I've had a hectic week with a lot of things happening at once.

    Anyway, I've listened to this quite a few times, and it definitely has that UK taste to it, if you know what I mean. ;) It rocks, but there's that real sense of melancholic pain, loss (whatever) hovering around. I didn't really find it close to shoegazer stuff, but I can understand the influences here. I can't add much to the wonderful reviews that have gone up, but I can say that I really enjoyed it. I don't really listen to this kinda music nowadays, but it certainly gave me a good jolt up the ass to rediscover such music.

    Thanks barcoach. I think I'll go back and try to find forgotten great bands myself.

    And a very happy new year to everyone at SMC!!! I hope you all have a wonderful year!!! And may we all discover great music. :)

    Cheers.
    "If hope can grow from dirt like me, it can be done"

    If you can't get high on purely music and the sounds that you hear, you're missing out on something.
  • swede
    swede Posts: 558
    ok well - i agree with sunshine smile being a really good song - i think its a good opener making u want to listen to the rest of the album... and that i did do. i dont listen to much music that has this kind of sound to it, i think its cause i generally can only take so much of it, i get bored cause i feel that the sounds across songs are somewhat similar. this album is a bit dif though.

    another song i think is cool is favourite fallen idol. pretty easy to get into i feel. anyhow for me to really get into the intricacies that guys mention about the album im going to have to listen to this for a couple weeks to see if i really enjoy it. one thing is that i agree with andyslash when he talks about the singers voice, that may be one draw back from me truely getting into this album. from this first listen the music has potentional, i found the singer to be average... but yeh i thought it was pretty good and i like that its different to most things im generally into, hence the beauty of SMC

    cheers mate :)
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    Well, first of all hope this 2006 brings lots of joy and wonderful things to everyone in the SMC, we all deserve it, I think.

    Now, about the poster give away, I'm still waiting for PM's of people interested, so far I have 5 people in to take part on it, if they were 10, that would be ideadl. I'd really like to do it in this week or the next, so if any of you's interested send me a PM. Anyway I'll try to PM all of those who haven't contact me yet to confirm if I should count them in or not.
    cheers everyone.
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"
  • psycosmic
    psycosmic Posts: 504
    happy new year everybody!

    so people are not interested in a free poster? spoiled bastards :D
    but since i missed the mystery poster sale (or is it called misery poster sale now?) i don't mind if there's less competition for this one...

    back to topic...
    i'm hooked, adorable has been soundtracking my world between christmas and new year's eve - "between the years" as we say around here...
    i even played two of their songs on the radio this week (see sig for link)...
    barcoach wrote:
    l... and if you find that second album of theirs, don't forget to tell me!!

    i didn't find "fake" yet... but i got my hands on a compilation called "rare tracks 1992 - 1994" which consists of all their b-sides and non-album tracks... it's pretty good... i'll keep an eye out for "fake" to complete adorable's back catalogue but in the mean time you can check out those tracks as well if you're interested... i'm currently uploading the files to gmail but it's going to take a while...
    here's a nice fanpage with some info and all of their lyrics http://www.musicsaves.org/adorable/

    as for people who don't like the singers voice... it reminds me of how i started to listen to the smiths... at first, couldn't stand morrissey's voice but fell in love with the lyrics - and all of a sudden i started to like his singing as well, don't know what caused it...
    it probably has to do with the kind of music you're mainly listening to at the moment you hear a new band for the first time... if it fits in with your current flavour it's easy but if not give it more time...
    when barcoach posted the album i was listening to lots of current indie bands like editors or bloc party but also the smiths, MBV and other "winter" albums...
    if you're hooked on metal or country at the moment it will be more difficult to get into this music... but i'm glad i did!
    ~~~
    Some days you wake up and sit on a park bench next to an eighty year old Russian architect, and some days you don't. I think this is my new life philosophy.

    http://epplehausradio.blogspot.com/

    pearl jam @ the astoria, london, 20/04/06
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    Hey, psy, I'm really glad you enjoyed this record so much, I honestly think is beautiful, and you should certainly let me listen that rarities cd you got!!! ok?

    Concerning the singer voice, I actually can understand AndySlash's complaints, but what he dislikes is what I see as one of Adorable's qualities, some of us grew used to great voices, powerful voices, voices with a lot of range on high and lows... but for me on certain times that just becomes too obvious, and I prefer these kind of indifferent voices put against a big sonic attack, it just gives a whole different perspective to a song, and I think that's why I also love the Velvet Underground, Lou Reed's voice maybe limited, but the emotions he manages within those boundaries are awesome... And that's the case with Adorable, in Homeboy, for example, maybe if he wouldn't sing the whole song as if he didn't care about, maybe the last shock, whe he finally yells "You're so beaaaauuuutifuuuul", it wouldn't affect me that much. For me it's kind of tender, "I'm singin' about all these things that wretched my soul, but I don't care, I'm a tough boy... even when I'm breaking apart on my inside." And I think behind that supposed indifference you can perceive an entire layer of mixed strong emotions governed by some sort of sadness that wants to reach deliverance... or something like that.

    OK. I'm sending PM's to everyone to see how's really interested in taking part on the poster thing... will keep you informed on the SMC threads... will be downloading the new pick soon, sounds like a great one.
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"
  • psycosmic
    psycosmic Posts: 504
    barcoach wrote:
    Hey, psy, I'm really glad you enjoyed this record so much, I honestly think is beautiful, and you should certainly let me listen that rarities cd you got!!! ok?

    it's up on YSI now!
    ~~~
    Some days you wake up and sit on a park bench next to an eighty year old Russian architect, and some days you don't. I think this is my new life philosophy.

    http://epplehausradio.blogspot.com/

    pearl jam @ the astoria, london, 20/04/06
  • barcoach
    barcoach Posts: 413
    psycosmic wrote:
    it's up on YSI now!

    You rock!! dying to listen!!
    Stone: Thanks for the pick and the night of complicity, you rock!
    -The crazy guy with the Ramones t-shirt.
    Mexico C. 12/10/05.

    "There is a rose that I want to live for
    although, God knows, I may not have met her"
    -J. Strummer

    "And you'll never know just how dark this screen could be"