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Melies

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Mogger Since:
November 02, 2007
Age:
21
About me:
Lazy student, incurable slacker, everlasting optimist, movie buff, musical snob, picky book-worm, professional castle builder with a diploma and a finger traveling on a map. All in one cute package!

Posts

Artist: Album: "A Divina Comédia Ou Ando Meio Desligado" Track:
Other Tags: Arnaldo Baptista, Sérgio Dias Baptista, Rita Lee, tropicalia, brazil

   _“Polished diamonds can be found also in the settled sludge on bottom of the river; just turn up your sleeves, reach out and grab one for yourself. And then share it with others.”_

   Os MutantesA Divina Comédia ou Ando Meio Desligado (1970) ● Nevertheless the widely fixed notion, hallucinogenic haze of the sixties didn’t hit only the new continent - on the wings of secretly imported vinyl tapes, radio waves and subtropical monsoons it reached also the sultry streets of São Paulo where it was transformed into a group that really justified its name. A Divina Comédia ou Ando Meio Desligado, in translation The Divine Comedy or I Walk a Bit Disconnected, was already the third album of these eccentric colour-bearers of the tropicalia movement; album on which they took their characteristic sound brew-up of the decade to an absolute perfection. Of course, echoes of the for-the-likes-of-us outlandish Brazil pop can still be found here, thank god, as well as other musical arsenal typical for Os Mutantes, but now everything is bubbling below the surface of the pure rock psychedelia. Right away the first tune, Ando Meio Desligado, with a bouncing piano and joplinish climax, shows us that nowadays classical line-up – brothers Arnaldo and Sérgio Dias Baptista and legendary Rita Lee - were at their very best when working on this gem. Mind-bending ride Quem Tem Medo de Brincar de Amor just confirms the previous statement so the rest of the record can flow without distractions: whether as a sweet pop (Desculpe, Babe), at the first sight seriously meant Janet-like song with a talkative title (Meu Refrigerador Não Funciona), fair return to the roots in five words (Preciso Urgentemente Encontrar Um Amigo), or ultimate show-down with local musical scene (Chão de Estrelas). All of it without a slightest faltering and with an unseen concentration of great ideas on a square meter. Quien a buen árbol se arrima buena sombra le cobija :-) ● 10 / 10

Comments
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Melies says:

I hope you enjoyed the first part of my newly planned series, where I will try to uncover the deepest secrets of the musical world :o) Alas, there are far too many hidden treasures out there, but I will do my best to share as much of them with you, my fellow moggers, as humanly possible. See you later, alligator!

PS: Don’t be afraid to send me a mogmail, if you think you know about a group or interpret of unusual quality but slim fan base - I will try to give it a try, though I don’t promise anything ;-)

Posted 8 months ago
Artist: Album: Track:
Other Tags: chill out
   "Oh MOG, why?!", "No, please, no! Make it stop!", "What the F-Word?!", "Aaargh!", "Urgghh?!", "Grrrrr!!", "I want to die!", "I want YOU to die!"... Well, this post had many names before the fury passed on and I regained my conscience and clear thinking. It took me three days.

   To make the long story short, publishing my first article here on MOG (When even the dead dance) was a royal pain in the ass.

   Of course, it wasn’t just fault of the site alone - blame my sick preciseness (that’s not something you should envy) forcing me to re-make the whole text again and again (and again and again…) just because all gaps between the lines (or lines and pictures/players) were not the same size. Nevertheless, I really don’t thing writing the whole text right and solely in HTML code is the best solution. Temporary, maybe. Certainly not for everyone.

   And that’s not because HTML is difficult or chaotic - in my humble opinion it’s the most elegant and accurate way to write texts over the internet and I use it in a daily routine. The problem is that almost every goddam site understands it in a different way! Naturally, the differences are not abysmal, but that’s sometimes the biggest problem – when I found out that the only thing I had to do was to write the whole code in one line (at least in the troublesome parts) I thought I would jump out of the closed window, crying a song (© Jethro Tull).

   Anyway, enough of this sodding technical rubbish – let the soft rhythms caress our skin and mind :-) Here is a piece of music that saved my life during the bad times (after deleting and rewriting the whole post for the fourteenth time). Ooh, such a beautiful way to break my heart, pa pá páám…

Comments
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Dzendvokh says:

I have never really gotten into Beck like I know others have, but I still appreciate his songwriting. I might just have to check out Midnight Vultures, cause he's sounding pretty good tonight.

And a tip on the posting thing, If you only have one song, or even if you have a list of songs you want to post, you should still upload at least one through the regular way (rather than through the embed code which I think you are doing here) that way it will be counted. There can only be one song that is officially in the post.

Mog is frustrating at times for sure.

Thanks for the post.

Posted 8 months ago
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Melies says:

Yes, you are right, I used embed code because otherwise (using the classic ~ something ~ formula) the whole text became ten times smaller (?!). Why? I really don't know :-( Although in the end I made some changes that could return it to normal but I wasn't in the mood to edit it for thousandth time... I hope my next post will be finally normal :-D PS: Talking about Midnight Vultures - Beautiful Way is TOTALLY different from the rest of the album so don't be surprised. Personally I think that better way to Beck's world is through Odelay, Mutations or Guero - Midnight Vultures is more suitable for dance floor and what's more, it contains possibly the worst song he ever created - Hollywood Freaks. Brrr.

Posted 8 months ago
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Bartleby says:

I couldn't agree more with you on HTML and MOG. I'm still trying to figure out how force a proper text alignment for my posts.

The frustrating part is how a post will display on your MOG and how it'll appear on the general "READ" section of MOG.

I've given up all hopes of ever having it right. So I'll sit back and relax to your beautiful choice of a tune. It's true that Midnite Vultures is a more of a bouncy collection of electric tracks and your digging this up reminds that I need revisit it soon.

(I've got a special fondness for this "Sea Change")

Posted 8 months ago
Artist:
Other Tags: lisa gerrard, brendan perry, 4AD, World Fusion
   With a nostalgic tear in my eye I offer you a complete (and hopefully accurate) translation of one of my older blogs. Yes, nowadays many of its thoughts make me shake my head in disillusion and just wonder how I could let the form beat the content with such an ease, but it's my personal favourite, moreover, written with the greatest passion - and that's a good way to start my MOG life I think :-)

   Dead Can Dance is from the very beginning defying any sort of categorization and enjoying a bumpy ride throughout an untouched territory full of sound variations and rhythmical turnabouts. In all their works, traditional musical principles and modern approaches are coexisting together in such a flashy and original way that an unprepared listener will be certainly astonished – to dive into their boundless sea of melodies means to jump in a train rushing it across various cultures and time periods with a speed at which all the logical boundaries are slowly wearing off.

   The group came into being in 1981 in Australian city Melbourne and even though its line-up has changed many times, two names are sprawling through its history like a golden thread – Brendan Michael Perry, former singer and bassist of the punk band The Scavengers, and vocalist Lisa Gerrard. Hearth and soul of the group.

   “The first piece we improvised together was called 'Frontier'. Something really magical happened that day,” Lisa recalls. “We realised that what we had done separately was nothing like what took place in that piece. It unlocked something that neither of us were aware of. And we had to do it again, so we started to write together.”

   But as it often goes, beginnings were especially difficult. While earning some money in front of a sink in local restaurant Lebanese, Brendan and Lisa were hoping that one day they will save enough money to leave narrow-minded Melbourne musical scene and move to more permissive city of London. First complications appeared right away – that is, this risky move discouraged remaining members of a band (Paul Erikson and Simon Monroe) and so the original formation crumbled to pieces with a flight heading to England.

   However, arrival to a rainy metropolis by the river Thames was by far not the end of all the troubles.

   Couple found an accommodation in a ratty urban area Isle of Dogs, which was at the turn of the decades full of warehouses, workshops and cheap housing units, and first four years lived on social benefits. And there was still no real interest over their music, too individual and non-commercial. Initial enthusiasm turned to harsh reality.

   Change of luck finally came in form of nowadays world-famous independent record studio 4AD. During its existence it produced groups like Cocteau Twins, Pixies or Throwing Muses and gained cult status.

   “My strongest impression from the demo tape was of something really original, ” recalls Watts-Russell, founder of 4AD. “'Frontier' in particular, with Lisa's incredible voice.”

   Dead Can Dance published their eponymous album at the 28th of February 1984.

   The first record, called simply Dead Can Dance, provides a fleeting notion of their before unimagined and so far not completely developed potential. Songs are wobbling somewhere between at the time popular gothic punk and distinctive mix of exotic instruments and traditional melodies wrapped in up-to-date package. The group is not afraid to experiment, but is moving in a cutoff area without too much space to flight – in context of a development of a band it's one of their weaker albums, but the final impression is still superb.

   Formal sequel to their debut is Spleen and Ideal recorded in 1985. Although attentive listener will be still able to catch an aftermaths of classical rock techniques and methods, all objections are immediately flushed away by an unchained flow of originality bursting forth whole album. Trombones, kettle-drums and delicate piano parts are walking hand in hand with constantly developing Lisa's and Brendan's singing and songs are flowing in slow, calm tempo. Dead Can Dance made a radical step forward, but the best is yet to come.

   Within the Realm of a Dying Sun was a definitive good-bye to all unwritten laws and boundaries of the music scene. First half belongs to Brendan and his murky and dark, but still perfectly listenable music with poetic lyrics, whereas Lisa has stolen the second side and prepared us a fascinating mix of antique rhythms and oriental mystique. One of the highlights is without doubt Xavier, song with beautiful chorals and earthy Perry's performance, and ultimately Cantara, presstisimo in Indic style.

   “I think that the relationship between them and producer John Rivers was at its peak with that record. It is probably my favourite record of theirs,” reveals Ivo. “It pushed everything to a new world - it doesn't sound like anything else at all.”

   With their next record Dead Can Dance went even further and did it with ease and grace of their own - no lumpy attempt to be different, just authentic and clear sounds. And so whether you are listening to an opening track The Host of Seraphim, which could be heard in captivating document Baraka, bittersweet Severance or an ornamental odyssey Mother Tongue, you never have a feeling of being a victim of purposeless spoiling the individual genres. The Serpent's Egg record is truly a masterpiece.

   Year 1990 brought us Aion, a collection of songs with the strongest medieval influence so far – listening to them is like travelling in time, back to colourful fairs and church services, back to the period where magic was as close in human mind as the Death herself. It is a mesmerizing musical experience, one which gets a very intense flavour of melancholy in our busy times.

   Compilation A Passage In Time with two new bonus songs popularized the group also outside Europe - it was their first record set forth right in American market.

   Early and middle phase is just behind us, last three albums to follow.

   Into the Labyrinth suddenly sounds quite different. “It was a journey into a year of writing, very much focused on living in the countryside with rural people,” says Perry, who at the time moved back to his homeland, county Cavan in Ireland, bought a local church Quivvy and turned it into a recording studio. It was this place where the new album was produced and thanks to it and its isolation from the rest of the world Into the Labyrinth has such an inimitable, reflective character - songs are refined to perfection and their lyrics are captivating, charming and bearing a lucid message.

   The success of a previous record culminated in a huge concert tour across the whole United States and gave us a music collection consisting solely of live recordings. Not only is the listener able to hear some older pieces in attractive stage-display, but will be also introduced to brand new (and great) songs. Add a bunch of guest artists skilfully complementing Lisa playing on a chinese cymbal and Brendan on an acoustic guitar and you have another mind-blowing experience, this time called Toward the Within. Many fans actually consider this album as the peak of their career.

   Spiritchaser recorded in 1996 is another twist and arouses various reactions throughout the world. Its eight songs grazed to the bone and cleared of all spare elements show us what is musical minimalism in practice. However, album is far away from being boring - it's a nourishing portion of traditional north american and african rhythms and also a grand farewell to all their fans.

   Dead Can Dance broke up after two years while working on a next project.

   Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry influenced the music as few. Their vision made us look back in the past with respect and realize who we really are – grains of sand in hourglass, drops in endless sea, equal and fleeting.

Comments
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Sturgell says:

I've been an on and off again Dead Can Dance Fan, but this post has sparked something. This weekend, it appears I have a date to listen to their music and space out.

Very cool post, thanks Melies.

Posted 8 months ago
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Melies says:

Thank you too, Sturgell, for support ;o) I began to think it will pass along MOG community totally without noticing... it isn't even in Dead Can Dance profile (why? don't know), and that's something that really upsets me :o(

Posted 8 months ago
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Dzendvokh says:

Thanks for the extensive write up. I have a couple of DCD disks but was not aware of their history at all. It was nice to follow through the albums.

Posted 8 months ago
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