Post by blumensaat on Jan 9, 2007 11:32:30 GMT
I was writing this journal entry for my Last.fm profile:
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At one point last year a friend of mine, who I've introduced to Patrick Wolf, had "The Tragic Position" as his personal message on MSN. This was partly a response to the news that Patrick was intending for TMP to be an upbeat and more optimistic record than Lycanthropy and Wind in the Wires.
As we both appreciate the dark melancholy of WitW, the furious beats of Lycanthropy, and I personally love the sense of nostalgia of The Patrick Wolf EP and his b-sides, we were worried that he would turn away from these aspect of his act. So, ever since we've been eagerly awaiting the release of his 3rd album and we even went to see this troubadour of the modern age at a fantastic gig in a church in Islington this December.
I'm not going to review TMP per se (doesn't feel quite right to review a leaked album), but I do feel like putting forth a commentary on the individual tracks.
1) Overture is the greatest opening track ever.
I love those drums.
2) The Magic Position is a wonderful track - a perfect pop hit, which could propel Patrick deep into the mainstream of consciousness. Clapping and a brilliant chorus will get you very far.
3) Accident & Emergency was intended as an anthem from the get go and a favourite of mine even after the leak of the entire CD.
4) The Blue Bell, the first skit is very similar to some of the shorter tracks of WitW and this is where the gloom of The Magic Position sets in. TMP is not, as many suspected, a single-minded ode to bliss.
5) Bluebells... What can I say? I love this track. I love that Patrick is able to convey a story about loss and the following depression in this manner. It doesn't seem the least bit trite when it comes from his vocal chords and pen. I also really like how he put a bit of rage into the song. The vCast version was sad and melancholy and perhaps a little desperate via the piano, but the way he intones "that I'm going nowhere fast" really makes the album version come alive.
6) Magpie is musically sound, but I just don't care for the (somewhat) nonsensical lyrics and Marianne Faithfull's voice.
7) The Kiss is maybe the most anonymous track Patrick has ever made. I had to listen to it again just to remember what actually happens in it.
8) Augustine is perhaps my favourite track form TMP. A well-written story about how love transforms into desire and how that desire can take control of our life. It's about forcing a person to stay with you just because you can't bear to be alone. Patrick is at his most inspired when he let's "the long arm of the law" knock at the door deep in the mix throughout the track.
9) Secret Garden is a fantastic return to form after the dull Kiss he gave us before. The first half is a looping sample of a turning key along with Patrick's lyrics, which breaks into a sort of industrial ambience reminiscent of Akira Yamaoka. I'd like to see a lot of that on his next album
10) Get Lost is sort of an extension of the joy and exuberance of the title track set to a backdrop of lovely 8-bit beeps and bleeps. In theme it reminds me a bit of Bloodbeat.
11) DisEnchanted is what I am by track 11. I only hope Patrick was as happy as he sounds when he wrote it.
12) The Stars sounds remarkably as the live versions Patrick has been performing. The crystal-clear bells and the text bring this home. A song about looking up at the stars at two different times in your life and realizing that their seeming timelessness does not reflect on your own life - “the left the right, the death, the life”.
13) Finale is about as uneventful as The Kiss, but there’s a rather uncalled for throwback to Epilogue from Lycanthropy in that the track begins to skip at one point. Maybe Patrick wants to let us know that he hasn’t changed?
The central theme is that of the relationship and even more so the different stages of a magical, but ultimately unsuccessful relationship. The symbol of the key is used throughout the tracks and signifies both the keeping of secrets, the opening of treasure chests, the life of the disaffected recluse, the passing from different stages, and in my opinion this is where the album really comes together thematically.
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And I think we haven't really addressed this issue so far. The key is really an important symbol - in the physical, tonal, and metaphorical sense - in this work and it ties in with the name of his tour (The Major Key tour) and the necklace he's been spotted with on many occasions. Anyone want to add to the interpretation?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At one point last year a friend of mine, who I've introduced to Patrick Wolf, had "The Tragic Position" as his personal message on MSN. This was partly a response to the news that Patrick was intending for TMP to be an upbeat and more optimistic record than Lycanthropy and Wind in the Wires.
As we both appreciate the dark melancholy of WitW, the furious beats of Lycanthropy, and I personally love the sense of nostalgia of The Patrick Wolf EP and his b-sides, we were worried that he would turn away from these aspect of his act. So, ever since we've been eagerly awaiting the release of his 3rd album and we even went to see this troubadour of the modern age at a fantastic gig in a church in Islington this December.
I'm not going to review TMP per se (doesn't feel quite right to review a leaked album), but I do feel like putting forth a commentary on the individual tracks.
1) Overture is the greatest opening track ever.
I love those drums.
2) The Magic Position is a wonderful track - a perfect pop hit, which could propel Patrick deep into the mainstream of consciousness. Clapping and a brilliant chorus will get you very far.
3) Accident & Emergency was intended as an anthem from the get go and a favourite of mine even after the leak of the entire CD.
4) The Blue Bell, the first skit is very similar to some of the shorter tracks of WitW and this is where the gloom of The Magic Position sets in. TMP is not, as many suspected, a single-minded ode to bliss.
5) Bluebells... What can I say? I love this track. I love that Patrick is able to convey a story about loss and the following depression in this manner. It doesn't seem the least bit trite when it comes from his vocal chords and pen. I also really like how he put a bit of rage into the song. The vCast version was sad and melancholy and perhaps a little desperate via the piano, but the way he intones "that I'm going nowhere fast" really makes the album version come alive.
6) Magpie is musically sound, but I just don't care for the (somewhat) nonsensical lyrics and Marianne Faithfull's voice.
7) The Kiss is maybe the most anonymous track Patrick has ever made. I had to listen to it again just to remember what actually happens in it.
8) Augustine is perhaps my favourite track form TMP. A well-written story about how love transforms into desire and how that desire can take control of our life. It's about forcing a person to stay with you just because you can't bear to be alone. Patrick is at his most inspired when he let's "the long arm of the law" knock at the door deep in the mix throughout the track.
9) Secret Garden is a fantastic return to form after the dull Kiss he gave us before. The first half is a looping sample of a turning key along with Patrick's lyrics, which breaks into a sort of industrial ambience reminiscent of Akira Yamaoka. I'd like to see a lot of that on his next album
10) Get Lost is sort of an extension of the joy and exuberance of the title track set to a backdrop of lovely 8-bit beeps and bleeps. In theme it reminds me a bit of Bloodbeat.
11) DisEnchanted is what I am by track 11. I only hope Patrick was as happy as he sounds when he wrote it.
12) The Stars sounds remarkably as the live versions Patrick has been performing. The crystal-clear bells and the text bring this home. A song about looking up at the stars at two different times in your life and realizing that their seeming timelessness does not reflect on your own life - “the left the right, the death, the life”.
13) Finale is about as uneventful as The Kiss, but there’s a rather uncalled for throwback to Epilogue from Lycanthropy in that the track begins to skip at one point. Maybe Patrick wants to let us know that he hasn’t changed?
The central theme is that of the relationship and even more so the different stages of a magical, but ultimately unsuccessful relationship. The symbol of the key is used throughout the tracks and signifies both the keeping of secrets, the opening of treasure chests, the life of the disaffected recluse, the passing from different stages, and in my opinion this is where the album really comes together thematically.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
And I think we haven't really addressed this issue so far. The key is really an important symbol - in the physical, tonal, and metaphorical sense - in this work and it ties in with the name of his tour (The Major Key tour) and the necklace he's been spotted with on many occasions. Anyone want to add to the interpretation?