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Post by scarredbyfallout on May 17, 2009 18:22:38 GMT
That's a great way of putting it Miyamashi, Wind In The Wires, more than any of PW's work to date, is a journey of discovery. It's an album that will continue to yield more and more secrets no matter how many times you listen to it. It's one of the deepest, most complex pieces of music made by a modern musician and it remains my favourite of his. Though, to be fair, this is not immediately obvious on the first few listens, I find that to actually be part of it's appeal.
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milla
Apparition
Posts: 4
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Post by milla on Oct 12, 2009 21:16:03 GMT
WITW is my absolute favorite one........I LOVE IT!!!!! it's allways my first pick whenever I want to listen to him.
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Post by Valapple on Oct 19, 2009 17:53:06 GMT
That's a great way of putting it Miyamashi, Wind In The Wires, more than any of PW's work to date, is a journey of discovery. It's an album that will continue to yield more and more secrets no matter how many times you listen to it. It's one of the deepest, most complex pieces of music made by a modern musician and it remains my favourite of his. Though, to be fair, this is not immediately obvious on the first few listens, I find that to actually be part of it's appeal. I do agree with everything you say. Although I've listened to it thousands and thousands of times, it still seems to me there's some secret in it I still can't get. It still seems like I don't know it completely yet. Every time I listen to it I feel a new sensation, different from all the previous and still totally deep and melanchonic.
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Post by frausorge on Oct 20, 2009 20:08:13 GMT
Yeah, deep and melancholic, well said. WITW is perfect for cold, rainy autumn, and I can't stop listening this album over and over and over... It's been couple of weeks almost. I think I've got obssesion...
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Post by vultures on Oct 30, 2009 13:13:33 GMT
so true it is. you first listen to the albums and your like hm.. cept a few songs but after a while you love it.
except the bachelor i loved that album straight away
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Post by xdamienxpelex on Nov 18, 2009 7:06:43 GMT
Wind In The Wires was the first i'd ever heard of Patrick Wolf and at first listen only a couple of tracks really jumped out (namely Tristan and The Libertine). After a while though, as i listened to the album more and more, it really started growing on me as a whole. I'm finding now that i can't bear to listen to it as anything other than a complete album, it's seems the only way to really appreciate how well put together it is. The songs mean so much more when they're played in the sequence they we're intended to be, or so it seems to me anyway. I've even found that, by playing all 3 albums together in sequence, they complement one another so well and seems to have a constant narrative running through them. Then again, maybe that's just me being pretentious, hehe. This is so so true this record has to be listened to from beginning to end and has inspired me so much in my own writing more than any one record ever...
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Post by Lawrence on Mar 11, 2010 20:55:23 GMT
This is definately my favourite record. It was the first album of his I got into, a bit late as well, I think accident and emergency was just around the corner...
I listened to it again last night for the first time in a while and noticed things that I'd never heard before like in the Libertine theres the sound of hooves that trot across your brain from one ear to the other and then back again
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