Password: sharedmp3.net Comments, Reviews, Requests and Thanks at the Bottom... Easy to trim off if you want to keep the technical info but dispense with any of my self opinionated rambling and bullshit ;-)
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Artist : The Divine Comedy Title : Fanfare For The Comic Muse Year : 1990 Label : Setanta Genre : Indie Ripped By : dogbowl on 09/12/2006 Post Date : dogbowl on 09/12/2006
Groups : alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.1990s alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.indie
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Technical:
Source : CD Encoder : Exact Audio Copy 0.95b4 (Secure mode) Codec : LAME 3.97b2 ACLO : -V 2 --vbr-new Bitrate : VBR ~200K/s 44100Hz Joint Stereo ID3-Tag : ID3v2.3
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Track Listing:
1. Ignorance Is Bliss (3:42) 2. Indian Rain (3:24) 3. Bleak Landscape (3:39) 4. Tailspin (2:44) 5. The Rise And Fall (4:21) 6. Logic Vs Emotion (4:33) 7. Secret Garden (4:08)
Total Playing Time: 26:34 (min:sec) Total Size : 36.9 MB (38,666,336 bytes)
As Standard : .nfo / .sfv / .m3u Extras (if any):
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Reposts:
Requesting a segment? - I'll see what I can do right away Requesting a repost? - I'll see what I can do in a couple of days For either of the above you should reply to this .nfo file...
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Comments (if any):
Now then... I've not done a series of posts for a while so I thought... why not. So here's the first in a series of The Divine Comedy albums which will include all 10 studio albums released by Neil Hannon aka The Divine Comedy.
In my opinion Neil Hannon is one of the most talented singer/songwriters ever. His songwriting has wit and charm and is full of surprises, twists and turns. I've seen him live on a number of occasions and have never been disappointed. The most time before the time before last he stripped down all of the songs for just piano, cello and acoustic guitar and they lost none of their sparkle.
Fanfare For The Comic Muse was released in 1990 and is quite "indie" compared to later, more orchestrated offerings but no less enjoyable. The CD is quite rare and this was ripped from a "recognized" re-pressed bootleg version.
Coming up in chronological order now and over the next week are:
Fanfare For The Comic Muse Liberation Promenade Casanova A Short Album About Love Fin De Siècle A Secret History Regeneration Absent Friends Victory For The Comic Muse
Standout Track/s (if any):
Ignorance Is Bliss, Tailspin
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Review / Notes (if any):
It would seem that Neil Hannon and Setanta Records want Fanfare for the Comic Muse buried as an afterthought in the scheme of all things Divine Comedy, and that's a shame, because it's a rather delightful early peek into Hannon's gifted abilities. Hannon has been known to refer to the Fanfare for the Comic Muse incarnation of the band as being of sub-R.E.M. quality, and while there are certainly early R.E.M. indie jangle tendencies on display, there's a great deal to like about the album, as perhaps only one track out of seven is anywhere near approaching throwaway status. Who cares if the album is lyrically more naïve than later releases and if the band was limited musically by the number of chords Hannon was capable of playing at the time? Who cares about the rather weak production that confuses emotion with rock flare-ups? This is the Divine Comedy in an embryonic state, and it's a fascinating thing to behold. Though Hannon later returned to a majority of the songs after he partnered with Jobi Talbot, releasing many of them as B-sides, hearing the songs in this early context is a true thrill for Divine Comedy fans. "Ignorance Is Bliss" is the first standout, as Hannon and company affect a pleasant shuffle, tackle earnest subject matter, and rock out with reckless abandon. "Tailspin" and "Logic Vs. Emotion" are just as endearing; the former merging My Bloody Valentine's Isn't Anything-era dynamics with Hannon's energetic, angry shouts of "I hate unhappy endings," and the latter coming across like the Smiths in their early days miming the Kinks, with Hannon displaying his amazing vocal range and rather accomplished vocal inflections. "Bleak Landscape" and "Logic Vs. Emotion" would easily work on Liberation with just a few minor tweaks. The song titles alone should compel Divine Comedy fans to track down Fanfare for the Comic Muse, as they correctly summarize the literary and poetic leanings of the lyrics. Neil Hannon was a dreamer from the get-go. Even the weaker songs have their moments, and a couple of them are brought down only by momentary atonal passages where the band goes off key. And even then, the flaws are rather charming. Fanfare for the Comic Muse is a necessary addition to die-hard fans' collections, but since it works more like early demos and because its music differs stylistically from later releases, passing fans looking only for the band's peak material need not dig in earlier than Liberation.
Links (if any):
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Requests:
Hot Hands compilation (Throwing Muses and Kristin Covers...) Jóhann Jóhannsson - Dis Anthony Burr & Skuli Sverrisson - A Thousand Incidents Arise Skuli Sverrisson - Seremonie HI-FI SKY - Music for Synchronized Swimming in Space Delaney And Bonnie - Home Justice For Jimbob - My Fathers Handbag Tattoo Bitch Sniffer - Take Off Your Suicide Shorts Acetone High - A Fascination With Elbow Licking (My Own) Various Artists - Like A Daydream (The Story Of Shoegazing) Various Artists - They'll Have To Catch Us First (Domino records Compilation) The Men They Couldn't Hang - Majestic Grill The Men They Couldn't Hang - The Mud, The Blood & The Beer The Men They Couldn't Hang - Cherry Red Jukebox
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Thanks To:
Never Lose That Feeling - cheers elboweyes and thenovelty +/- - cheers mineral The usual suspects posting good stuff and being nice.... and people with beards... and Father Christmas... and Kristin Hersh...
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