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7 Reviews
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
New Sound to "Classical",
By
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
I don't know if Rachel's is considered classical music or not. The instruments are the traditional classical variety; however, there are elements of jazz, new age, rock, and who-knows-what throughout the album.Southbound to Marion and Handwriting open and close the disc with a beautiful lyrical quality while M Daguerre has a strong jazz feel. Overall the album does not have a long play time with Full On Night, more of a wandering through noise than an actual "song", being quite lengthy. In comparison to other Rachel's works, I can only compare it to Music for Egon Schiele and The Sea and The Bells. This one is less "classical" than Music for Egon Schiele, which I think is their best work I've heard. To me, Handwriting is on par with Sea and Bells, as it contains some odd samples and a few minutes of noise as opposed to music. If you are looking for something different, try Rachel's. If you enjoy classical music, start with Music for Egon Schiele instead of Handwriting.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
SORRY I'M LATE,
By
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
"Handwriting" is an excellent record, especially considering that this is the first CD by Rachel's. Most of the music features ensemble playing, but no two tracks are completely similar. Instrumental line-ups change, sometimes radically. Some pieces, restricted to strings, have an intimate, chamber feel. Some begin with solo instruments. Another, with intrusions of drums, guitar and a lovely, fuzzy bass, develops a curious structure that oscillates between two musical worlds and does so without seeming either affected or odd for the sake of being odd. At the farthest extreme, "Full on Night" is a convincing and well-constructed soundscape /noise piece that is not simply an improvised collage: there's a coherent structural quality that comes across.
And perhaps that is the over-arching, organizing principle of this music. It's foolish to just say "somehow all this holds together." But, somehow all this holds together. In addition to the structural integrity, the writing and performing style favors understatement and restraint. These factors combine to provide a deep sense of coherence across a fairly broad range of compositional types. And don't let the word "restraint" imply that the music ever drags or dead-ends. Nor should it imply that the music is strictly minimalist, because it finds some rather nice flashes of expression, unerringly in the right place and always at the right time. As for intimations of Penguin Cafe, well maybe. But probably not. Rachel's is clearly not in pursuit of the melodic, something at which Simon Jeffes excelled. There's a particularly well-developed sense of how things start and how things stop. And the music here is more inwardly directed, more concerned with the interaction of elements requiring somewhat longer development periods than PCO typically pursued. So, a better point of reference might be entry-level Gavin Bryars, because more often than not Rachel's comes down on the side of art music or good old "new music" than the more typically tuneful exhortations of ensembles that come bearing strings.
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Creeping Moonlight,
By
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
This album sounds like something you might find on the record player in a haunted mansion. It certainly does have beauty and brilliance within, but it is at times clunky and harsh. I like that. Handwriting is definitely Rachel's eeriest album, The Sea and the Bells is their most polished album, and Selenography is their most far-out. Egon Schiele is the album for hardcore fans, but I wouldn't recommend it to anyone to just wants to waltz with the poltergeists in their heads. Stick to Handwriting for that.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
this happens to be in my CD player right now.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
And it usually stays there along with "music for Egon Schiele" which I would consider to be the two best by Rachel's thus far, their newer albums being a little too sleek and calculated. (but still okay, I guess) The first album by the Rachel's, these sounds are strung together intricately and woven with attention to detail. This music is gritty and passionate, somewhat somber, beautiful, engaging, romantic. Ace!
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Handwriting,
By
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
This is a very interesting album. While I've never been a huge fan of classical, this group makes me more interested. Although Rachel's is very classical in feel, it also has a sense of mystery, which I like. This makes it very hard for me to analyze this album. I will say that if you like godspeed you black emperor! you may enjoy this album. I am in no way comparing the two, but see bits of similarity. Check out the songs "m. daguerre" and "full on night". These are the two I enjoy the most. "full on night" actually does sound a bit like godspeed! with all the train samples.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
One of the forgettable,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
The post-rock movement of the 1990s was a remarkable achievement because it managed to revitalise a music that had for the msot part gone either to ong emotionless pop songs or overblown punk and metal whose emotion was definitely there but entirely of a shallow kind. Talk Talk and Slint solved this problem by going back to the intensely emotional sound of Van der Graaf and making it much slower and sparser. the result were recordings of astounding emotional impact and depth whose capacity to surprise a listener has not been lost at all with time.
Rachel's however, are a case of taking something too far. not satisfied with embellishing a rock sound, but largely dissing rock instrumentation entirely and relying on strings and Rachel Grimes' piano. When I bought this record I had hoped for something with really deep emotional impact but much softer than any other post-rock group. As it turns out, few of the songs have any traces of the emotional impact necessary to qualify as genuuine post-rock: indeed, this is as much minimalist classical music as anything, even if it is produced on a rock label. And even as classical music goes there is nothing special at all about "Handwriting" because of its generally very poor emotional impact: the peices begin soft and even when they increase in volume it is not done in such a manner as to make one feel deeply. If even there was an overdoing of a good thing, this is it. Stick with Talk Talk or Godspeed You Black Emperor.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Out of this world,
By SWM "TGS" (Bethesda, MARYLAND United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Handwriting (Audio CD)
This CD is out of this world. Saying I was truly impressed with the music that came out of the speakerphones when I first sampled this CD at Tower Records would be the understatement of the year. This CD, together with Music for Egon Schiele are, simply put, two masterpieces.
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Handwriting by Rachel's (Audio CD - 1995)
$13.98 $12.99
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