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| Song Title | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. Mysterons | 5:06 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 2. Sour Times | 4:14 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 3. Strangers | 3:58 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 4. It Could Be Sweet | 4:19 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 5. Wandering Star | 4:54 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 6. It's A Fire | 3:49 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 7. Numb | 3:58 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 8. Roads | 5:05 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 9. Pedestal | 3:41 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 10. Biscuit | 5:04 | $0.99 | |
| Play | 11. Glory Box | 5:05 | $0.99 |
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
102 of 104 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Coldly Sensual and Smoothly Retro Memories,
By
This review is from: Dummy (Audio CD)
This is definitely another five-star item from me. Every time I listen to it, no matter how long it's sat in my CD shelf (forgotten, but only temporarily and never for too long), I am constantly surprised by how great it is...ahh the joy of "rediscovering" a favorite.Dark and moody, much of the album sounds like a memory...of a place you've been once, or a movie you saw, or music you heard as you drove by an open window or door late one night in the city. Some of it is incredibly sexy (like "Numb," "Pedestal," and the awesome "Glory Box"), other parts are mournful (like "Biscuit," "Sour Times," "It's a Fire," and "It Could Be Sweet"), and still more are mysterious or just plain funky ("Mysterions" and "Strangers"). It's really hard to pick a favorite song on this album...almost all of them perfectly fit different moods I have at different times. They seem to encompass an incredibly vast range of modern urban sensitivities. "Sour Times" is, of course, wonderfully reminiscent of a moody classic spy flick while a song like "Strangers" bounces back and forth between an intense, pulsing beat like a walk through the club district of a large city and gentle, delicate interludes like the dawn over the Sea of Japan. My least favorite is "Wandering Star," which I think is a bit too repetative, but even that I'm willing to listen to without much complaint. Smoothly sexy, definitely modern, and particularly urban, *Dummy* is a classic and well worth your time and money.
70 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A perennially fresh sounding album..,
By
This review is from: Dummy (Audio CD)
If it wasn't for Portishead's vocalist Beth Gibbons, you could listen to Dummy all of the time. With tight, fresh hip-hop beats and a subtle jazz flavor, most of Dummy is danceable, although the band do have a knack for creating an especially eerie mood with moaning organs and swelling strings. But when Gibbons enters the scene, her clear delicate vibrato casts a shadow of isolation and absolute melancholy over the whole album. Portishead easily draw you into their lonely world, and their ambient trip-hop entices you to stay. Songs like "Numb" and "Biscuit" are dark trances enduced by the combination of hip-hop, mellow guitars, and a variety of samples coated by Gibbon's desperate pleas for salvation. Hearing her cry, "Nobody loves me, it's true" (from the superhit "Sour Times") is enough to tear at anyone's heart. On "Roads" - a track already enveloped in sorrowful elegant strings - Gibbon's soprano trembles with pain. However, the twisted lounge acts, "Strangers" and "Pedestal" feature very soulful and powerful vocals accompanied by some excellent jazz performances. The last track, "Glory Box", is Portishead in full blow. Over a sample from Isaac Hayes' "Ike's Rap III" and a slinky blues guitar, Gibbons duels with herself as she tries to justify a relationship. She first comes off as a contemptuous Billie Holiday and then switches back to her sweet, sad self as she pleads, "Give me a reason to love you/ I just want to be a woman." By all means, Dummy is an essential album for trip-hop fans and beginners. A definite keeper.
35 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the beginning of forever and ever.....,
By GZA "gza" (London) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dummy (Audio CD)
Portishead's miraculous debut, Dummy, is soul music in the truest sense of the word, a journey into the heart of darkness which leaves you emotionally exhausted and bewildered, but ultimately intoxicated. Beth Gibbons' voice is white light refracted through a shattered psyche: at times pure, resonant and beautiful, at others desperate, hysterical and bordering on the deranged. The music is often suffocating, the power of the bass seeping into the marrow of your bones, while the breakbeats attempt to destroy your eardrums: the sound of sanity disintegrating. Mysterons steals into your consciousness like an electronic dream, but it is Sour Times that really kicks you awake, full-on John Barryesque orchestration attacks your senses, providing Beth with a backdrop to enchant you with her siren's song, "Nobody loves me, it's true - not like you do". The album descends into the depths for much of the middle period, Wandering Star and Numb darkly funereal shards of fear and despair. Then there is Roads, the album's masterpiece. As Beth croons "Can't anybody see, we've got a war to fight" the violins slowly build into an unbearably beautiful torchsong which tries to steal your heart, and very nearly succeeds. Pedestal and Biscuit are the comedown, the 3am stoned lullabies. Then, just as you're drifting off to another world, Glorybox glides into focus, Beth in full Eartha Kitt mode, imploring someone "Give me a reason to love you, give me a reason to be a woman". A fantastically drunken guitar solo then ushers in a change of pace, a crash of drums and a promise: "This is the beginning of forever and ever..." As Isaac Hayes' strings fade into the dawn and if you've been paying attention, I defy you not to feel a little fragile.
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