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Dead Can Dance

Into the Labyrinth

  • AMG Review of Into the Labyrinth

    Amg
    Ned Raggett
    All Music Guide

    With a regular American deal in place for the first time ever, thanks to 4AD's linkup with the WEA conglomerate, Dead Can Dance made a splash on commercial alternative radio with "The Ubiquitous Mr. Lovegrove," the first single from Into the Labyrinth. Raga drones, a strange clattering beat, a haunting wind instrument, orchestral shading, and Perry's ever-grand voice make it one of the more unlikely things to be heard on the airwaves in a while. It all begins with yet another jaw-dropper from Gerrard, "Yulunga (Spirit Dance)," with keyboards and her octave-defying voice at such a deep, rich level that it sweeps all before it. Wordless as always but never without emotional heft, the song slowly slides into a slow but heavy percussion piece that sounds a bit like "Bird" from A Passage in Time, but with greater impact and memorability. As the album slowly unwinds over an hour's length, the two again create a series of often astounding numbers that sound like they should be millennia old, mixing and matching styles to create new fusions. Perhaps even more impressive is that everything was performed solely by Perry and Gerrard -- no outside guests here, and yet everything is as detailed, lush, and multifaceted as many of their past albums. New classics from the band appear almost track for track: Gerrard's a cappella work on "The Wind That Shakes the Barley," the gentle beauty of "Ariadne," the rhythmic drive and chants of the title song. The conclusion is a slightly surprising but quite successful cover -- "How Fortunate the Man With None," an adaptation of a classic Bertolt Brecht tune about the turn of fortune's wheel. Given a restrained arrangement and Perry's singing, it brings Labyrinth to a satisfying end.

I’ll Show You Mine, if You Show Me Yours…
about 1 year ago

We all have at least one… that's another beautiful thing about MOGgers. In fact, I am sure in many cases - as in mine, we have more than one. But for me, my second was my most precious & the laundry list of what he gave me is the standard by which all others are compared. Jeff Bevan. He was the second music junkie I met & it was in college where that fateful meeting took place. This kid .

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Sunday Covers: Dead Can Dance sings Robert Joyce
over 2 years ago

In 1994, Dead Can Dance released Toward the Within, and I knew their popularity was sealed because mainstream bookstores like mine at Rizzoli in downtown Chicago were selling it to people who had never twisted a dial to college radio. On the record, DCD did a recording of one of the most famous Irish folk ballads of all time: The Wind That Shakes the Barley.Robert Joyce is one of Ireland's best...

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Dead Can Dance
about 1 year ago

This is just some dead can dance i got off skreemr.com Sincerely, CJ Snow

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