Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Clipart/ Funeral/ Cross

Oxbow - Song for the French (2009)

we needed, a live album of the Oxbow.
descriptions are needed more or less accurate to describe them? I can not find much, except to argue that this is a band original, inimitable, creativity and talent overflowing. And extraordinarily long without losing an ounce of its energy, but not too productive. A
live to tell the truth was clearly present visually on DVD Love that's last in 2006, but this does nothing more than food my hope to see you live one day essendomeli lost a couple of years ago. Meanwhile this limited edition tour-only fools at least wait for a new chapter that I hope will not wait too long after the show Narcotic Story .
A 12 "split into two parts: the first consisting of three unpublished, two on stage and in one study, in collaboration with the French cited in the title, the guitarist Heliogabale (to listen) Thiphaine, one used to handle even the jazz-improv. 2 PM and Coalking stories are unhealthy, shows the absurd, usually Cpt Robinson. Beefheart grew up in the ghetto, angry, troubled guitarist intent Wenner to dissect every detail of the remnant left alive-core blues, rhythm section with a confusing test of virtue (Davis will remain an amazing drummer).
The episode in the studio is a beautiful hike in the territories for classical acoustic, piano and percussion poor. It could also be a future direction, although reflecting some 'trends and Wenner Robinson when they performed in two. Alienating.
The B side instead pulls out a pokerissimo of Oxbow classics on stage, so: devastating power, intelligence and sarcasm savage excesses and elasticity. The extremely compact Frankly Frank, the lock without truce The Moon, the sprawled organized collective The Duke, and the grand finale with the recovery (from the first album of 1991) of Yoke , pure madness to the state animal.
After the applause of a few people, the inevitable destiny for a group so unique and solitary in its path.

Oxbow - Song for the French (2009)

0 comments:

Post a Comment