Endless Wire (The Who album) - Factbites
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Topic: Endless Wire (The Who album)


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In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
 DJ Martian's Page
This, their second album, is more ambitious than its predecessor, complex yet accessible thanks to its melodic effectiveness, as heard in the super-powerful "America" and the dreamlike "Beauties Can Die", with its virtual chorale sounding an endless final note.
As with every album he's made previously, the downtempo, almost hip hop moments often serve as the most surprising and "Wire To Wire" is full of these widescreen compositions.
Critics emphasised the album's graceful and nuanced melodies and the cinematographic quality of the dialogues, as well as the band's ability to make synthesizers sound like guitars.
www.djmartian.blogspot.com /archives/2003_09_01_djmartian_archive.html   (5038 words)

  
 DJ Martian's Page
This, their second album, is more ambitious than its predecessor, complex yet accessible thanks to its melodic effectiveness, as heard in the super-powerful "America" and the dreamlike "Beauties Can Die", with its virtual chorale sounding an endless final note.
As with every album he's made previously, the downtempo, almost hip hop moments often serve as the most surprising and "Wire To Wire" is full of these widescreen compositions.
Critics emphasised the album's graceful and nuanced melodies and the cinematographic quality of the dialogues, as well as the band's ability to make synthesizers sound like guitars.
www.djmartian.blogspot.com /archives/2003_09_01_djmartian_archive.html   (5038 words)

  
 Rolling Stone : The Unforgettable Fire : Review
The Unforgettable Fire seems to drone on and on, an endless flurry of chinkety guitar scratchings, state-of-the-art sound processing and the most mundane sort of lyrical imagery (barbed wire is a big concept).
Let's just say it: The Unforgettable Fire is an underrated album.
Altough Pride (In The Name Of Love) is the only clear hit, the rest of the album has a shimmering beauty that it takes a few listens to appreciate.
www.rollingstone.com /reviews/album/_/id/87234   (1038 words)

  
 Manic Street Preachers on 'Lifeblood'
Hear 'Lifeblood' in full here, or hit the links below to hear James Dean Bradfield and Nicky Wire talk us through the album, track-by-track.
The Manic Street Preachers continue their seemingly endless re-invention with the darkly sublime, uplifting 'Lifeblood'.
Their seventh studio album, 'Lifeblood', is no exception.
www.xfm.co.uk /Article.asp?b=multimedia&id=45901   (598 words)

  
 Atheist Discography at CD Universe
The Wire (p.53) - "[A] more complex and Progressive album, every song rocketing through multiple tricky time signatures and endless variations on already baffling riffs.
The Wire (p.53) - "The fury of the first two releases is tempered by a new introspection and an unwillingness to compromise...
Atheist: Kelly Schaefer (guitar, vocals); Rand Burkey, Frank Emmi (guitar); Tony Choy (bass); Marcell Dissantos (drums).
www.cduniverse.com /search/xx/music/artist/Atheist/a/Atheist.htm   (108 words)

  
 Manic Street Preachers on 'Lifeblood'
Hear the new album plus track-by-track commentary from Nicky Wire and James Dean Bradfield only with Xfm.
The Manic Street Preachers continue their seemingly endless re-invention with the darkly sublime, uplifting 'Lifeblood'.
Evolving from the scratchy, bratty punk of their 'Generation Terrorists' to the polished Arena rock of 2001's 'Know Your Enemy' via the bleak, industrial 'The Holy Bible' and the stridently melodic 'Everything Must Go', the Manics have consistently confounded expectations.
www.xfm.co.uk /Article.asp?b=multimedia&id=45901   (598 words)

  
 TWAS 24: Future Sound of London, Penguin Cafe Orchestra, Aube, Endless 1
Aube is Kyoto composer Akifumi Nakajima, who made this album, and I quote from the liner, "Using Only The Sounds Of The Steel Wire Which Made By Yuri Shibata as Material".
There is some occasional periodicity to the noise, but that's as close as Aube gets to rhythm.
It's like you're inside a machine as big as the universe, composed entirely of aluminum sheets, and every single part is being simultaneously torn into ribbons by invisible steel-clawed monsters.
www.furia.com /twas/twas0024.html   (598 words)

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