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Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Much as these annoying cash-ins get squarely right on my breast area and are clearly some conniving little record label executive's mean way of ripping us all off; why don't you just come around my house and steal my credit-crunch cornflakes you mean-spirited cock! Anyway I'm getting way-laid with my argument here. What I was trying to say is much as these tie-ins bug me I have this urge to hear anything Glasvegas release and as such I dipped my hand into my ever emptying pocket and forked out for 'A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss)' which instantly outstrips Coldplay's little rip-off mini-album as all six tracks featured here are new to the Glasvegas canon. So what does 'A Snowflake Fell...' tell us? Well for starters much as this is a Christmas album it's not the sort you'll be playing to Granny on Christmas morning well not if 'Fuck You, It's Over' is anything to go by. However, this is a continuation of Glasvegas self-titled debut album albeit with the Christmas theme running through it. Much like their album dwelt on themes of knife crime, bullying & single-parenting; here we get relationship breakdowns, homelessness, & of course Christmas. Opener 'Careful What You Wish For' begins with the lyrics Quote:
set to melodic piano and slow building atmospherics that arrive at a Romanian choir harmonising. It's short and sharp and really leads the way to the essence of this album. 'Fuck You, It's Over' has to be one of the best names for a Christmas song. It's no Slade anthem that's for sure. Telling the tale of a girl's love being ripped open and discarded like wrapping paper by her boy with the lines Quote:
Something we maybe can't identify with is the theme of the next song but it's something that maybe we should think about. 'Cruel Moon' sees James Allan singing about being homeless at Christmas out on the cold streets watching the world pass-by and being ignored. Quote:
'Please Come Back Home' is almost like a sequel to debut album opener 'Flowers And Football Tops' with it's theme of loss and the need to have those lost or no longer around for whatever reason back by your side at this time of year; though, you can also see elements of 'Fuck You, It's Over' in this track whereby a love is lost and the realisation you shouldn't have let it go. Title track 'A Snowflake Fell...' is again all melodic piano and understated vocals that conjure up a rather beautiful soundtrack and is very much the most uplifting thing to be found amongst the six tracks with lyrics such as Quote:
To finish we get a mournful very un-Christmas-carol like 'Silent Night' that although sticking with the lyrics through Allan's droll delivery blossoms into a full carol version in it's outro with the choir returning to inject that little bit of Christmas merriment into the record. Much as these releases bug me there is certainly something magical in this release maybe because it's specific in it's Christmas message and not just a bunch of album off-cuts. I'm not sure really what it is but I like it and will certainly have a wee listen on Christmas day. View Glasvegas debut album review here: http://hangout.altsounds.com/reviews...gas-album.html http://www.myspace.com/glasvegas |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Man I can hear the autotune on his voice so blatantly in the "So Please Come...." They don't strike me as the band that would intentionally do that? |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Oh don't like all the quotations why have you ruined it :) It breaks it all up horribly I reckon... Hmmm autotune I Dunno could very well be a production thing as Rich Costey is producing he does some odd things. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Yeah it sounded much to blatant to be an accident. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Well who knows, I'm not to arsed about that sort of think really sometimes you can just be too picky. I remember a lecturer at Uni lovin' Muse but hated their last album purely because it sounded un-authentic! I try not to let it bother me too much. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Yeah I feel you man. I'm actually down with all that sort of stuff. If you're not willing to experiment with sound then how is anything going to progress? On one hand everyone complains everything sounds the same and on another they complain because someone has done something different haha. It was kind of more me talking out loud more than anything. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Like a mild form of Tourette's then really, you should get that checked out man. Yeah musically nobody can really when you either try and be inventive and get slaughtered for it or you sound retro and you get slaughtered for that as well, there ain't much middle ground in music anymore. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Nice review man, I can't get into this band no matter how hard i try. Biffy Clyro have got the accent just right in their songs, but Glasvegas take it way too far. As for experimenting with vocals and the lyke i think you need a good platform to start with. Glasvegas are ass-wank. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Hey they did a cover of 'Come as You Are', I never knew that. Is that a b-side? I hate it when bands only put song samples on their Myspace page though. |
Re: Glasvegas - A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) Yeah so do I. They do that to protect sales yet I tend to forget about those bands as I don't have enough to go by. On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 10:36 PM, Heron <> wrote: Quote:
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