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Casablanca Moon/ Desperate Straights
 
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Casablanca Moon/ Desperate Straights [IMPORT]

Slapp Happy
4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews) More about this product

List Price: $12.98
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Frequently Bought Together

Casablanca Moon/ Desperate Straights + Acnalbasac Noom + Just Woke Up
Price For All Three: $56.98

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  • This item: Casablanca Moon/ Desperate Straights ~ Slapp Happy

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  • Acnalbasac Noom ~ Slapp Happy

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  • Just Woke Up ~ Peter Blegvad

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 4, 1993)
  • Original Release Date: December 28, 1999
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: EMI Import
  • ASIN: B0000073VG
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #33,918 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #92 in  Music > Alternative Rock > Indie & Lo-Fi > Chamber Pop

Listen to Samples

To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that sample. Visit our audio help page for more information.
 
1. Casablanca Moon
2. Me and Paravati
3. Half Way There
4. Michaelangelo
5. Dawn
6. Mr. Rainbow
7. Secret
8. Little Something
9. Drum
10. Haiku
11. Slow Moon's Rose
12. Some Questions About Hats
13. Owl
14. Worm Is at Work
15. Bad Alchemy
16. Europa
17. Desperate Straights
18. Riding Tigers
19. Apes in Capes
20. Strayed
See all 24 tracks on this disc

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (7)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Can one wear uncanny hats?, January 26, 2000
...And thus Desperate Straights' opener, "Some Questions About Hats," set the tone, and a marvellous tone it was. Slapp Happy's last proper album, ably backed by the Cow and various members of the Faust enclave, reminds me more than anything else of those dada-caberet-ditties apparently sung but never recorded at the Caberet Voltaire (the club in Zurich, not the band) by Hugo Ball and his band of Merry Men (and Ladies) -- naive yet erudite ("Europa" and "In the Sickbay" especially), infinitely playful ("Giants") while appallingly sentimental ("Riding Tigers"), and unlike anything else anyone has pulled off since. The arrangements fit Dagmar's voice like a pair of torn garters.

I was used to RecRec's far-less-practiced-or-produced "Acnalbasac Noom" album of Wümme/Nettleback/Faust-era demos before I heard "Casablanca Moon," the other album on this CD. I recommend the former, though CM does have its charms, especially "The Drum" and then "Haiku" -- it's just that the arrangements go a bit overboard at times, to my taste. But the songs are equally wonderful.

I've had these albums for 15 years and never tired of them. Thank [insert deity of preference here] that Polygram finally released its bizarre strangehold on "Sort Of," the first Slapp Happy album, and it's finally coming out on CD this Spring!

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars PUT ON YOUR THINKING CAPS..., June 13, 2001
Finding these two albums together on a single cd was a long-held dream of mine. These are the two albums this quirky and intelligent group recorded for Virgin Records in the early 70s -- one of them after they joined forced with the leg endary progressive band Henry Cow.

Slapp Happy were like no other band of their time -- or since, for that matter, now that they've (Sort of) reformed. The melodies are jagged but hummable -- a disconcerting type of pop music. The lyrics, always intelligent and challenging, are filled with incredible wordplay, humor and obscure philosophical references. This music will make you tap your foot, but it will also definitely make you think -- and we all know exercise is good for us, right?

I can't think of another songwriter to whom I can properly compare Peter Blegvad -- a look at the constantly-endangered life of a spy, always living on the edge; a song about reincarnation; a look at Michaelangelo through the suspicious eyes of a contemporary; a paean to French poet and enfant-terrible Arthur Rimbaud; a re-working of a section from Handel's 'Messiah'. Beginning to get the picture? There was no subject off-limits to Blegvad on these albums -- and his career has shown that this is an integral part of his songwriting ethos to this day. He has continued to amaze his listeners in the years since these albums were released.

Dagmar Krause's voice MUST be heard to be appreciated. German-born, she sounds as if she were raised on a mixed diet of Brecht-Weill-Eisler political ballads, opera, and pop music. She can coo, she can warble, she can shriek, covering all bases in between as well. Admittedly an aquired taste, her voice is one of the imminently recognizable, integral parts of Slapp Happy's 'sound'.

And then there's Anthony Moore. His keyboard work, as well as his occasional songwriting, comprise the remaining piece in the puzzle that is Slapp Happy. Never 'in your face' with his playing, he nonetheless contributes irreplacably to the overall effect. 'The owl', 'Slow moon's rose', and 'Apes in capes' are all Anthony Moore compositions, and show him to be a fine writer with his own style.

Instrumentally, the basic group of three was augmented on both of these albums. On the first by some of England's finest progressive musicians of the day, gathered together at Mike Oldfield's Manor Studio by producer Steve Morse. It's basically a re-recording of most of the songs from 'Acnalbasac noom', which is also available (for those who prefer the less-produced, earlier recording).

By the time 'Desperate straits' was recorded in 1974, Slapp Happy had begun working in tandem with Henry Cow, and the two groups merged soon after its release. Rather than the based-on-compositions improvisational style that was favored by the Cow on their lps, and to a greater extent in concert, the merger with Slapp Happy reined them in a bit for this recording -- but their roles here give it a sound that could never be mistaken for anyone else. Fred Frith's mind boggling guitar work, Chris Cutler's instantly-recognizable drumming style, Lindsay Cooper's work on oboe and bassoon, Tim Hodgkinson's keyboards and clarinet, and the impeccable bass of John Greaves, all added immeasurably to the album's personality.

Again, this is pop music for the listener who enjoys being challenged -- challenged to think and ponder the words, to appreciate the lines played by the different instruments as they wind and weave their way in and out of each other's paths...and challenged to take a step beyond -- WAY beyond -- the music that our good buddies at the major record labels would have us swallow, spoon and all (...and say, 'Thank you sir, may I have another...').

If you've never heard these folks, start here -- later, you can look back and remember where the worm at work in the core came from...

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars surreal, May 13, 2000
By "undeletablearchive" (Hove, East Sussex United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
Slapp Happy were two very arch gentlemen, Peter Blegvad and Anthony Moore, and German female vocalist Dagmar. Blegvad announced SH as 'Naive Rock; the Douanier Rousseau Sound'. While that is certainly a fine description of 'Sort Of' and 'Acnalbasac Noom', it is not so true of the two records presented here: 'Casablanca Moon' (a session-rendered reworking of 'Acnalbasac Noom', which was made, like 'Sort of', with members of Faust); and 'Desperate Straights', made with Henry Cow. Casablanca Moon features, like all SH's work, highly worked, miniature songs with dense, literate, wordplaying lyrics. It relocates the fascinatingly clunky, oompah sound of 'Acnalbasac' to a silken, string-driven Euro environment which brings to mind work like Serge Gainsbourg to produce a surreal record of psychological lounge pieces.

Did I say 'surreal'? 'Desperate Straights' goes further, toward downright WEIRD. Here, the music slides across the Art Brut continuum leftwards of Rousseau to the area inhabited by darker, weirder people like Lear and Dadd. The tracks are small chamber rock hallucinations which are deeply strange, but compulsive. Alongside pieces like 'Some Questions about Hats' - curious, even disturbing - are beautiful songs like 'In the Sickbay', a dream of convalescence on a listing sunlit ship; and 'Europa', a lost child's paean to a warstruck continent. Blegvad and Moore pull the latent umbra out of Henry Cow and also boost that group's low-level intricacy. And Dagmar finds a new way with her unique voice: witchy, but cute. Despite the untypical and lugubrious Cutler/Moore improvisation 'Caucasian Lullaby', 'Desperate Straights' is High Art, one of a handful of essential progressive rock artefacts.

This CD compilation is a fine place to start with this group. Slapp Happy are utterly unique in the history of rock, surrealists out of time who turned to sound rather than paint, and they remind us in a quiet, subversive way of just how radically self-defining and single-minded popular music can be.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Casablanca Moon is Genius
Casablanca Moon is just plain brilliant rock music with a slightly twisted pop sensibility. Desperate Straights is a little difficult to listen to unless you're into music that... Read more
Published 22 months ago by Dave Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars "Apes in Capes", the most stunning arrangement in a song of a british group!!
I have this two-in-one-cd Virgin edition since I was interested in progressive rock, about twelve years ago, and for God sake, I never get tired listening to it. Read more
Published on March 15, 2006 by PortugueseMusicFan

3.0 out of 5 stars Should be split up again
This CD, I mean, not Slapp Happy!
First, the bad news: "Casablanca Moon" does not equal "Acnalbasac Noom", even if you could play it backwards! Read more
Published on June 8, 2003 by P. Micocci

5.0 out of 5 stars Dagmar is Always Worth A Chance
After first hearing Dagmar Krause sing on Henry Cow's, In Praise of Learning, I was hooked. I went on to buy the first Art Bears album and then this 2 on one CD. Read more
Published on September 28, 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Uneasy Listening
It's been a long time since I heard an album that affected me quite like this. I consciously decided a few years ago that enthusing about music was a symptom of youth and... Read more
Published on September 5, 2000 by Mr. Colin E. Hanson

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Casablanca Moon / Desparate Straights opens new browser window by Slapp Happy opens new browser window is mainly Progressive Rock, quite Alternative Rock, with hints of Pop”

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Casablanca Moon/ Desperate Straights
81% buy the item featured on this page:
Casablanca Moon/ Desperate Straights 4.8 out of 5 stars (8)
$12.98
Acnalbasac Noom
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Acnalbasac Noom 5.0 out of 5 stars (7)
$22.00
Just Woke Up
9% buy
Just Woke Up 5.0 out of 5 stars (1)
$22.00



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