I'd have sworn / that with time / thoughts of you / would leave my head / I was wrong / and I find / just one thing / makes me forget....
Lloyd Robinson - Cuss Cuss (Mp3)
Gregory Isaacs - Don't Let Me Suffer (Mp3)
Desmond Dekker & The Aces - It Miek (Mp3)
The Maytals - It's You (Mp3)
Harry J Allstars - Liquidator (Mp3)
The Pioneers - Longshot Kick De Bucket (Mp3)
Tony Tribe - Red Red Wine (Mp3)
The Tennors - Ride Your Donkey (Mp3)
The Melodians - Rivers Of Babylon (Mp3)
The Untouchables - Tighten Up (Mp3)
All thanks and praises to LP Cover Lover for the LP Cover Love...
Friday, August 1, 2008
TVD's Daily Wax | The Blue Nile "Hats"
It's all gone horribly awry, this experiment of mine this week. If there's one release that single-handedly absolves the latter half of the '80's, it's 'Hats'.
Trouser Press gushes, "'Hats' was five years in the making, but the band's relentless perfectionism paid off: the seven songs are as dense and moving as a midnight sky. With sweeping synths and the pristine click of electronic percussion, "The Downtown Lights" and "Over the Hillside" are moody like film music, while "From a Late Night Train" and "Saturday Night" are impressionistic vignettes that creep along in slow motion. There's hardly a guitar or live drum to be heard, but seldom has studio technology been used to such warm and personal results."
On Saturday, July 14th, 1990 I was third in the General Admission line at Georgetown University to see The Blue Nile on tour for 'Hats'. The heavy wooden doors swung open to what seemed like a chapel at the time--the smell of old books mixed with the light streaming through the stained glass windows as I took my seat...front row and center. Even in this context, Trouser Press was correct--seldom in a live setting have I been witness to a show with such warm and personal results. They performed the entirety of 'A Walk Across The Rooftops' and 'Hats' but the audience was relentless in applauding for MORE. Buchanan stepped to the mike and shrugged, "that's all we know...!"
Yes, it's all gone horribly awry, this experiment of mine.
The Blue Nile - Over The Hillside (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - The Downtown Lights (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - From A Late Night Train (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - Let's Go Out Tonight (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - Saturday Night (Mp3)
Trouser Press gushes, "'Hats' was five years in the making, but the band's relentless perfectionism paid off: the seven songs are as dense and moving as a midnight sky. With sweeping synths and the pristine click of electronic percussion, "The Downtown Lights" and "Over the Hillside" are moody like film music, while "From a Late Night Train" and "Saturday Night" are impressionistic vignettes that creep along in slow motion. There's hardly a guitar or live drum to be heard, but seldom has studio technology been used to such warm and personal results."
On Saturday, July 14th, 1990 I was third in the General Admission line at Georgetown University to see The Blue Nile on tour for 'Hats'. The heavy wooden doors swung open to what seemed like a chapel at the time--the smell of old books mixed with the light streaming through the stained glass windows as I took my seat...front row and center. Even in this context, Trouser Press was correct--seldom in a live setting have I been witness to a show with such warm and personal results. They performed the entirety of 'A Walk Across The Rooftops' and 'Hats' but the audience was relentless in applauding for MORE. Buchanan stepped to the mike and shrugged, "that's all we know...!"
Yes, it's all gone horribly awry, this experiment of mine.
The Blue Nile - Over The Hillside (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - The Downtown Lights (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - From A Late Night Train (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - Let's Go Out Tonight (Mp3)
The Blue Nile - Saturday Night (Mp3)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)