Описание
Nick Cave, Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds – Good Son [New Vinyl LP] UK – Import
Artist: Nick Cave, Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
Title: Good Son
Format: Vinyl
Attributes: UK – Import
Genre: Rock
UPC: 5414939710612
Condition: New
Release Date: 2015
Record Label: Mute/Bmg
Album Tracks
DISC 1:
1. Foi Na Cruz
2. the Good Son
3. Sorrow’s Child
4. the Weeping Song
5. the Ship Song
6. the Hammer Song
7. Lament
8. the Witness Song
9. Lucy
DISC 2:
1. Do You Love Me Like I Love You (Part 6: The Good Son)
2. the Weeping Song
3. Sorrow’s Child
4. Do You Love Me Like I Love You (Part 6: The Good Son)
5. the Weeping Song
6. the Ship Song
7. Lament
8. the Witness Song
9. Lucy
10. the Train Song
11. Cocks ‘N’ Asses
12. Helpless
13. Foi Na Cruz
14. the Good Son
15. Sorrow’s Child
16. the Weeping Song
17. the Ship Song
18. the Hammer Song
19. Lament
20. the Witness Song
21. Lucy
22. the Train Song
23. Cocks ‘N’ Asses
24. Helpless
The Seeds followed up Tender Prey with the equally brilliant but generally calmer Good Son. At the time of it’s release there were more than a few comments that Cave had somehow softened or sold out, given how he was more intent on exploring his dark, cabaret pop stylings than his thrashy, explosive side. This not only ignored the constant examples of such quieter material all the way back to from Her to Eternity, but Cave’s own constant threads of lyrical darkness, whether in terms of romance or something all the more distressing. This said, the softly crooning group vocals and sweet strings on the opening Foi Na Cruz” certainly would catch some off guard. The title track itself captured the overall mood of the album, a retelling of the Bible’s prodigal son story from the other son, the one who stayed at home and did what he was meant to do. The elegant, reflective “Lucy” and the staccato then sweeping “Lament” are two further high points, but the flat-out winners come dead center. “The Weeping Song,” a magnificent duet between Cave and Bargeld, starts out sounding a bit like Gene Pitney’s “Something’s Gotta Hold of My Heart,” which the Seeds covered on Pricks, before shading into it’s own powerful, blasted drama. “The Ship Song,” meanwhile, equals if not overtakes the Scott Walker ballads Cave so clearly is inspired by, a soaring, tearjerking declaration of intense love that’s simply amazing.
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