Monday, April 07, 2008

A good spoken word album is well balanced. The music is like a deck chair for the voices. It must hold you comfortably and make you want to close your eyes, without nodding off. It's a tough assignment.

Recitement by Dutch composer and musician Stephen Emmer is one of those rare albums where music and vocals mix beautifully. With short stories and poems in English, French, Portugese, Spanish and Dutch it is easy to dismiss this collection as a highbrow ragbag album, especially when Emmer brings out the dead (Richard Burton and Allen Ginsberg) to deliver some of the stories. However, he steers clear of the pitfalls and all tracks can hold their own. Highlights are the Charles Baudelaire poem La Beauté narrated by Sylvia Kristel and Lou Reed in his distinctive deadpan for the Paul Theroux snippet Passengers. In hindsight the inclusion of the poem Soms bidden om een kwieke dood (to pray for a quick death sometimes) by the recently deceased Hugo Claus was a prophetic choice.

Stephen Emmer - Recitement

Emmer is a well-versed composer who has earned his chops. He can come up with seventies Bowie Disconnected, jazz (Gaan) and African rhythms (Soweto Sonata). The list of contributing musicians to Recitement is a long as your arm, with Tony Visconti as the mixing guru. Buy this for that condescending friend who is always bragging about having heard it all. It will make him listen and listen again (and shut up him as well).

Vocal performers on Recitement are Lou Reed, Allen Ginsberg, Sylvia Kristel, Kurt Schwitters, Jorge Luis Borges, Carlos Drummond de Andrade, Michael Lonsdale, Sacha de Boer, Ken Nordine and Richard Burton.
Literary source texts are from Charles Baudelaire, Yoko Ono, Samuel Beckett, Alessandro Baricco, Christopher Fry, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Paul Theroux, Victoria Ocampo, Remco Campert, Hugo Claus and Thomas Hardy.

Watch the video for Passengers featuring Lou Reed.

Recitement is released in the UK April 7th on Supertracks Records.

MP3: Stephen Emmer - Allen Ginsberg / Disconnected

» UK Press Release
» myspace.com/stephenrogeremmer
» recitement.com

posted @ 4:50 PM | Feedback (0)

Kris Morris

Aussie singer/songwriter Kris Morris releases his new single Someone Sometimes on May 5th as a high resolution download and an extra bonus mix as well, but you can get it in pretty good quality for free as of ... now.

MP3: Kris Morris: Someone Sometimes

» krismorris.com
» myspace.com/krismorrismusic

Read my review of Little Light.

posted @ 9:29 AM | Feedback (0)

The Sword

What is with with those metal guys that they sing about swarthy guys with big weapons and pissed off gods? The Sword from Austin, Texas, conjure up a dark world on their new album Gods of the Earth and yes, they bring you damsels in distress, journeys through wasteland, blood and death. Bored kids in the suburbs will love them, their parents will have serious talks about what junior is into these days.

The Sword: Gods of the Earth

The Sword can obviously play and if you can get past their childish lyrics, you have an album that makes a nice addition to your "turn it up and bang your head" collection.

Gods of the Earth is released on Kemado Records.

Tracks:
  1. The Sundering
  2. The Frost-Giant's Daughter
  3. How Heavy This Axe
  4. Lords
  5. Fire Lances of the Ancient Hyperzephyrians
  6. To Take the Black
  7. Maiden, Mother, & Crone
  8. Under the Boughs
  9. Black River
  10. White Sea

MP3: The Sword - Fire Lances of the Ancient Hyperzephyrians
MP3: The Sword - The Black River

» swordofdoom.com
» myspace.com/thesword

posted @ 9:04 AM | Feedback (2)