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ARTICLES
ABOUT BETH'S ALBUM "OUT OF SEASON"
Red magazine
Out of Season is the exquisite debut
album from Beth Gibbons, the voice behind trip-hop stalwarts Portishead
whose 1994 album Dummy is generally regarded as an essential part
of any true music connoisseur's collection.
Teaming up with her friend Paul Webb of Talk
Talk (aka the eponymous Rustin’ Man), she has created a deeply moving,
semi-acoustic sound.
The moody beats Portishead made its own have
gone, but the emotions that she generates remain intact. Her voice
remains as haunting as ever. Standout tracks from the album are the
bewitchingly beautiful opening song "Mysteries", the rousing
"Tom the model", and the bluesy "Funny time of
year".
This haunting debut has a three-in-the-morning
air of calm and at the same time can raise the hair at the back of your
neck.
It has a definite feeling of
sadness, but is infused with the joy of nature ("God knows, how I
adore life/When the wind turns on the shores lies another day" -
'Mysteries'). The album's overriding mood is isolation both in time and
place. Other references to nature and seasons can be found in 'Funny
Time Of Year', 'Resolve') and 'Sand River': "Autumn leaves/beauty's
got a hold of me." But that melancholic undertow isn't far away:
"Autumn leaves / pretty as can be/everyone can see/everyone except
me."
Out of season perhaps, but totally of its time. |