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Thread started 08/28/04 2:06pm

gooeythehamste
r

PORTISHEAD PROPS

These three albums still rock me whenever I hear them...









If you like Beth Gibbons' voice try this one too;





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Reply #1 posted 08/28/04 2:11pm

endorphin74

sigh

I lost my copy of Dummy three times. At that point I decided I wasn't meant to own it.

maybe I should try again cos that album is AMAZING.
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Reply #2 posted 08/28/04 2:47pm

todd305

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The only Portishead album I have is Dummy, and it's phenomenal -- definitely a good buy. Beth's voice is amazing.
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Reply #3 posted 08/28/04 3:10pm

AnckSuNamun

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I love them. Esp. Beth's voice. They have a "Rare Trax" cd too. It's mostly remixes and live songs. Some of their fans were turned off by the second cd.....but at times I actually like it better than "Dummy".

add-on edit.
[This message was edited Sat Aug 28 15:13:56 2004 by AnckSuNamun]
rose looking for you in the woods tonight rose Switch FC SW-2874-2863-4789 (Rum&Coke)
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Reply #4 posted 08/28/04 3:11pm

AnckSuNamun

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Beth's solo cd doesn't really move me like Portishead's stuff. Somethin' about her voice with the beats that works perfectly together.
rose looking for you in the woods tonight rose Switch FC SW-2874-2863-4789 (Rum&Coke)
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Reply #5 posted 08/28/04 3:25pm

PANDURITO

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music










bed
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Reply #6 posted 08/28/04 5:36pm

endorphin74

PANDURITO said:

music










bed


nod

when I saw them live, they actually lulled me to sleep for a moment. Course, it was the day after my mum's wedding, so I was hungover as hell. Still the music was just so gorgeous and soothing that I drifted off for a minute. Thank god my friend woke me up right away!


...edit...
[This message was edited Sat Aug 28 17:36:27 2004 by endorphin74]
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Reply #7 posted 08/28/04 5:46pm

PANDURITO

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endorphin74 said:

when I saw them live, they actually lulled me to sleep for a moment. Thank god my friend woke me up right away!


omfg Oh my, tell me you weren't snoring!

Maybe you're the reason they split!

Beth is still under psychological treatment disbelief
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Reply #8 posted 08/28/04 6:00pm

endorphin74

PANDURITO said:

endorphin74 said:

when I saw them live, they actually lulled me to sleep for a moment. Thank god my friend woke me up right away!


omfg Oh my, tell me you weren't snoring!

Maybe you're the reason they split!

Beth is still under psychological treatment disbelief


redface

shhh

don't tell anyone!!!!!
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Reply #9 posted 08/28/04 8:34pm

Anxiety

oooh, i love me some "dummy" - i got really burnt out on that album, i listened to it so much...then it seemed like you couldn't walk down the street without that album blaring out of every cafe or boutique in town and i got even MORE burnt out on it...maybe it's safe to give it another spin now.
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Reply #10 posted 08/28/04 8:54pm

flipwilson

Anxiety said:

oooh, i love me some "dummy" - i got really burnt out on that album, i listened to it so much...then it seemed like you couldn't walk down the street without that album blaring out of every cafe or boutique in town and i got even MORE burnt out on it...maybe it's safe to give it another spin now.


Oh yeah, between that album and Maxinquaye, that narcotic trip-hop sound (yeesh to that genre name, by the way) was inescapable in 94/95. You couldn't walk into a coffee shop or haircutters without hearing one of those albums. As good as they were, that sound really didn't have anywhere to go. I think Portishead was pretty much painted into a corner stylistically from the moment their debut was released.

The performance on the live video is terrific, though...
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Reply #11 posted 08/28/04 10:03pm

AnckSuNamun

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Anxiety said:

oooh, i love me some "dummy" - i got really burnt out on that album, i listened to it so much...then it seemed like you couldn't walk down the street without that album blaring out of every cafe or boutique in town and i got even MORE burnt out on it...maybe it's safe to give it another spin now.


I wish we had "those" cafes and boutiques here. sad
rose looking for you in the woods tonight rose Switch FC SW-2874-2863-4789 (Rum&Coke)
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Reply #12 posted 08/28/04 10:19pm

todd305

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AnckSuNamun said:

Anxiety said:

oooh, i love me some "dummy" - i got really burnt out on that album, i listened to it so much...then it seemed like you couldn't walk down the street without that album blaring out of every cafe or boutique in town and i got even MORE burnt out on it...maybe it's safe to give it another spin now.


I wish we had "those" cafes and boutiques here. sad


Same here. If I never played Dummy or Maxinquaye (which I also have), I would never hear anything from them.
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Reply #13 posted 08/29/04 5:28am

minneapolisgen
ius

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Anxiety said:

oooh, i love me some "dummy" - i got really burnt out on that album, i listened to it so much...then it seemed like you couldn't walk down the street without that album blaring out of every cafe or boutique in town and i got even MORE burnt out on it...maybe it's safe to give it another spin now.

lol Very true. I played that album out one winter. I used to listen to it on my headphones while I went running in the snow every day. Perfect for a cold and dreary winter. I just pulled it out again two weeks ago for the first time in years.


And like the orger above me mentions, "Maxinquaye" was also on heavy rotation that winter. biggrin
[This message was edited Sun Aug 29 5:29:05 2004 by minneapolisgenius]
"I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven
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Reply #14 posted 08/29/04 6:09am

JDINTERACTIVE

I have to agree with Flipwilson to some extent in that as much as I admire the body of work Portishead have created, It's place is very much continental café, boutique and laundromat/juice bar. As such, it was very difficult to see where the hell they could go next with their sound. This was not help by the fact that by creating a new genre of music as along with fellow peers Massive Attack and Tricky did, there was the somewhat inevitable number of other artists who would move in to fill it out, such the Sneaker Pimps, Olive, Morcheeba and Hooverphonic had already stepped up and sampled more early soul breakbeats and Isaac Hayes strings than you can shake your booty at. They were creating OKish music but to me by that time the whole 'trip hop', 'Bristolian sound' call it what you will all sounded a bit stale. So much so that it would be difficult for them to create more music without it being too pretentious.

Yet the music aside, it's Beth Gibbons' vocals which I guess distinguish Portishead from the other so called 'trip hop' groups and was they key to their success. Her compressed voice sounds like an angry and bitter Billie Holiday to the extreme. Gooey rightly lists her collaboration with Rustin Man on the Out of Season album. If you haven't heard it, I seriously recommend it.
[This message was edited Sun Aug 29 6:09:52 2004 by JDINTERACTIVE]
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Reply #15 posted 08/29/04 9:14am

VinaBlue

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I LOVE Glory Box. worship I first heard that song in the movie The Craft, and I was like "Who is that?" I was sooo bummed that that song wasn't on the soundtrack. pout

Anywho, I got their second cd first and it was almost tooo depressing for me. Then I got Dummy because I heard it was better and it was. biggrin

I'm gonna put it in the player right now.

music
[This message was edited Sun Aug 29 9:16:15 2004 by VinaBlue]
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Reply #16 posted 08/29/04 9:20am

VinaBlue

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JDINTERACTIVE said:

I have to agree with Flipwilson to some extent in that as much as I admire the body of work Portishead have created, It's place is very much continental café, boutique and laundromat/juice bar. As such, it was very difficult to see where the hell they could go next with their sound. This was not help by the fact that by creating a new genre of music as along with fellow peers Massive Attack and Tricky did, there was the somewhat inevitable number of other artists who would move in to fill it out, such the Sneaker Pimps, Olive, Morcheeba and Hooverphonic had already stepped up and sampled more early soul breakbeats and Isaac Hayes strings than you can shake your booty at. They were creating OKish music but to me by that time the whole 'trip hop', 'Bristolian sound' call it what you will all sounded a bit stale. So much so that it would be difficult for them to create more music without it being too pretentious.

Yet the music aside, it's Beth Gibbons' vocals which I guess distinguish Portishead from the other so called 'trip hop' groups and was they key to their success. Her compressed voice sounds like an angry and bitter Billie Holiday to the extreme. Gooey rightly lists her collaboration with Rustin Man on the Out of Season album. If you haven't heard it, I seriously recommend it.
[This message was edited Sun Aug 29 6:09:52 2004 by JDINTERACTIVE]


GREAT post, JD. biggrin I've not heard Olive or Hooverphonic... maybe I should check them out? I dig Massive Attack's Protection... and I'm emabarrassed to say I never bought Mezzanine. doh! Always loved that single with the baby in the video though... Back to Portishead, I have the live cd, but still haven't seen the video. err I've got some catching up to do, lol.
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Reply #17 posted 08/29/04 2:42pm

gooeythehamste
r

VinaBlue said:

I LOVE Glory Box. I'm gonna put it in the player right now.

music



Is what spawned this post...
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Reply #18 posted 08/29/04 2:43pm

gooeythehamste
r

JDINTERACTIVE said:

Gooey rightly lists her collaboration with Rustin Man on the Out of Season album. If you haven't heard it, I seriously recommend it.


Made me think of Nick Drake...
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Reply #19 posted 08/29/04 3:58pm

abierman

Gooey, did you see the documentary on Nick Drake on dutch television a couple of nights ago?? Never knew much about him apart of the fact that he's dead for a long time, but that 'Nothern Sky' song is very pretty!

gozer, hoe staat 't?
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Reply #20 posted 08/29/04 4:04pm

abierman

VinaBlue said:

JDINTERACTIVE said:

I have to agree with Flipwilson to some extent in that as much as I admire the body of work Portishead have created, It's place is very much continental café, boutique and laundromat/juice bar. As such, it was very difficult to see where the hell they could go next with their sound. This was not help by the fact that by creating a new genre of music as along with fellow peers Massive Attack and Tricky did, there was the somewhat inevitable number of other artists who would move in to fill it out, such the Sneaker Pimps, Olive, Morcheeba and Hooverphonic had already stepped up and sampled more early soul breakbeats and Isaac Hayes strings than you can shake your booty at. They were creating OKish music but to me by that time the whole 'trip hop', 'Bristolian sound' call it what you will all sounded a bit stale. So much so that it would be difficult for them to create more music without it being too pretentious.

Yet the music aside, it's Beth Gibbons' vocals which I guess distinguish Portishead from the other so called 'trip hop' groups and was they key to their success. Her compressed voice sounds like an angry and bitter Billie Holiday to the extreme. Gooey rightly lists her collaboration with Rustin Man on the Out of Season album. If you haven't heard it, I seriously recommend it.
[This message was edited Sun Aug 29 6:09:52 2004 by JDINTERACTIVE]



forget about Hooverphonic (except for the Thievery Corporation remix of ' The Strange Effect', on Abductions & Reconstructions), their sound is a bit poor.
GREAT post, JD. biggrin I've not heard Olive or Hooverphonic... maybe I should check them out? I dig Massive Attack's Protection... and I'm emabarrassed to say I never bought Mezzanine. doh! Always loved that single with the baby in the video though... Back to Portishead, I have the live cd, but still haven't seen the video. err I've got some catching up to do, lol.
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Reply #21 posted 08/29/04 4:38pm

sinisterpentat
onic

I loved Portishead's first release, but I just couldn't get into their second effort. I did put Out of Season into my Rhapsody library after scrolling through this thread, sounds good! Though it doesn't compare to the soundtrack for Herion addicts Dummy.
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Reply #22 posted 08/29/04 7:47pm

gooeythehamste
r

abierman said:

Gooey, did you see the documentary on Nick Drake on dutch television a couple of nights ago?? Never knew much about him apart of the fact that he's dead for a long time, but that 'Nothern Sky' song is very pretty!

gozer, hoe staat 't?


Erm havent seen it, damnit.

Ever since the new job I hardly watch tele...




And eh 15 november, Utrecht Vredenburg. You there?
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Reply #23 posted 08/29/04 8:23pm

subhuman09

I love Portishead-especially Dummy like most people, but "All Mine" (from Portishead) has to be my favorite track, very closely followed by "Roads".

Great mood music-for relaxing or other activities.

biggrin music
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Reply #24 posted 08/29/04 10:09pm

jamaulredmond

Both Albums are great / Both are in my top ten favorite list.

And Roads is a close second to if I was your Girlfriend as my alltime favorite minimalistic tracks.

BUT Portishead is really pissing me off with the delayed releases. If they are broken up,,go ahead and tell the fans they are broken up. If you're going into the studio, wait until you actually do to tell people.

I've been on their website since it's started and they have change their story five times.

It's 2005 soon and it will be almost 8 years since new material. I don't count the live c.d.

That's ridiculous.

Even Sade releases quicker than that,,,lol.
[Edited 8/29/04 22:12pm]
[Edited 8/29/04 22:14pm]
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Reply #25 posted 08/30/04 12:11am

IstenSzek

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Beth Gibbons' solo album with Rustin Man was pretty damn nice. It's an autumn album
if I ever heard one. Love to listen to it bubbling away in the background as I sit by the
window looking at the dark clouds filling the sky, waiting for the rain to start falling.

Portishead better release an album soon because, well, because I just want one biggrin
The first two albums are both great. "Mysterons" and "Undenied" are two of my favs,
but they're all little dark shadows in their own right.
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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